Reply 25100 of 56677, by Thermalwrong
wrote:Slightly more than a DB50XG/DB60XG in a box, because with certain editors you can do more with it than with some of the other MU-units as certain parameters can be modified more extensively than on later MU-units.
That's excellent, I wasn't aware of that, I'll have to look into it although I wonder if it's a bit wasted on me in that case?
wrote:Case in point: my idiot Packard Bell system, with MS-6168 (yep, you triggered me 😉 ), active fan on the Voodoo replaced by a big-ish passive heatsink, CPU fan replaced by a Zalman CNPS6000, Zalman's original small 80mm fan replaced by a 120mm Noctua, and the 80mm in the PSU also replaced by a quiet Noctua 80mm. Oh, and an SSD instead of a HDD. So now it's almost silent - except for some coil whine I couldn't hear before 🙁
Nice find. That looks like the rev.1.0 with i440ZX chipset. The power regulation circuitry is different to the rev.2.0, which is bad news if you want to run a Coppermine (at least in theory), but good news that they didn't use the suicidal caps on the rev.2.0. Your pic isn't good enough to be completely sure, but it looks a lot better than my two rev.2.0 boards did when I got them.
Interested to hear if you could get a Coppermine running on this baby.
Yep it's a v1.0 from the pictures I've seen so far - somehow i keep ending up with the 440ZX chipset instead of the BX 😀 That's useful to know that it might not be so good even with the coppermine - I've wanted to have a play with this board since I spotted it for sale (and missed it) for £10 back in around 2002 so even if I can't do much with it, it should be fun. I've been a little jealous of all the ones you've found, but thankfully persistence keeps paying off 😁