Yesterday I got a hold of 486 from local high school, they wanted to throw it to trash. Does this count? 😀
Too bad I didn't knew sooner they still had some, last year they were renovating and threw away a bunch of them. It would be interesting to get a hold of few PCs I meddled on 20+ years ago when I went there 😁. If I remember correctly they were K5-133, we got them in about 1996 if I remember correctly 🤔.
This one is from 1994, AMD 486DX2-66 (3V), 2x 4MB FPM ram, Abit AB-PW4 ISA/VLB motherboard (luckily I found it on ultimate retro, MB itself doesn't have any model or manufacturer markings...), 425MB WD Caviar, VLB S3 805 graphics card, VLB UMC based I/O controller and ISA Winbond based I/O controller.
I dont' know why it had two I/O boards, HDD and FDD were plugged in VLB one. Maybe they needed additional serial or parallel ports....
Now, the problem is that motherboard had that accursed Varta barrel battery and of course it leaked... I've clipped the battery off, cleaned MB with vinegar, toothbrush and water so at least it shouldn't progress more. But there is damage. Some of the RTC socket contacts were "eaten", luckily RTC legs are fine. And most of the jumpers on that MB edge are either "eaten" or corroded so bad that you can't take them off the pins without pliers...
When I get back home with it there's going to be a lot of scratching to remove corroded copper, continuity testing and de/resoldering of pins and sockets. Hopefully there aren't any damage under RAM sockets. ISA slots I have and can replace, annoying, but workable. 30pin RAM sockets are a different story...
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Case was somewhat rusty, especially where battery juice ended up at the bottom, but after a bit of sanding and respraying, it looks really good. I left it in a shed overnight for paint to dry, tomorrow I'll reassemble it. Unfortunately I didn't take any "before" pictures 😀.
It also had no name AT 200W PSU
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I tried to turn it on without anything attached and it turned on, fan spun ok (a bit farty, but OK for it's age 😁). Nothing blew up...
Although I wouldn't dare use it to power anything...
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What's the verdict on PSU capacitor replacement? Would it be reliable if I replaced them? Visually PSU board looks fine, no scorch or burn marks. So I'd guess it wasn't very hot working that it would leave marks.