Reply 5780 of 40006, by Robin4
- Rank
- l33t
wrote:That NEC is U-G-L-Y but awesome! 😎
It like it.. Is having a real Pentium 1 area period look.. 😘
~ At least it can do black and white~
wrote:That NEC is U-G-L-Y but awesome! 😎
It like it.. Is having a real Pentium 1 area period look.. 😘
~ At least it can do black and white~
wrote:Great find especially when it's manufactured by NEC. What kind of computer is that?
NEC Ready 9840. Comes with Windows 95. This one has USB support. 😀
wrote:ReeseRiverson: Where did you found that? How is it possible that it's still boxed, that's cool anyway 😀
Ebay, actually. $60, and I couldn't resist. 😎
wrote:wrote:Looks like some Pentium I non-MMX.
sticker looks like a Pentium 1 MMX though.
cool looking machine!
It's definitely a MMX Pentium 1. 233MHz.
wrote:Yeah, I agree, the sticker looks like a Pentium MMX, and the 24x cd-rom drive dates it around late 1997 or early 1998 if I recall correctly, so that seems realistic.
Looks like a cool system. I personally don't mine that waffle pattern so much. Grats with getting a new-in-box NEC system 😀
Yeah, it comes with Microsoft Word 97, and Encarta 98.
wrote:I also like the NEC pc, it's looking really really nice! nice find!
Thanks! I'm even going to leave the specifications sticker right on the front too. 😎
wrote:wrote:That NEC is U-G-L-Y but awesome! 😎
It like it.. Is having a real Pentium 1 area period look.. 😘
I find machines from this era and even the 286 ~ 486 era to be awesome. 😀
I bought a Pentium 4 Prescott system today, not really that retro but its a really nice system.
I did my P4/Vista test a few weeks back and found it less of a pain than I would have thought.
Fujitsu SCALEO E, 43 Euro (With Vista key and disc).
The system I bought has a Nvidia Geforce 6600 as Video card and a Prescott 630 as CPU.
The chipset is i915 so it is not possible to upgrade the CPU beyond a faster Prescott.
I will replace the video card with a newer card that can decode H264 and the DVD with a Blu-ray.


Main PC: Dual Xeon X5690@4.6ghz, Evga - SR-2, 48gb memory, Intel X25-M g2 SSD and a Nvidia GTX 980 ti.
Retro PC #3: K6-2 450@500mhz, PC-Chips m577, 256mb sdram, AWE64 and a Voodoo Banshee.
nice, a PC that looks like a early 90's VCR
wrote:nice, a PC that looks like a early 90's VCR
Yea exactly, it even has a small 90's style LCD display.
This unit actually looks exactly like the one I bought, the unit pictured above was a slightly different version.

Main PC: Dual Xeon X5690@4.6ghz, Evga - SR-2, 48gb memory, Intel X25-M g2 SSD and a Nvidia GTX 980 ti.
Retro PC #3: K6-2 450@500mhz, PC-Chips m577, 256mb sdram, AWE64 and a Voodoo Banshee.
I'm intrigued by these HTPC systems. I think you'll have trouble replacing the video card though, looks like it's onboard and has a lot of additional circuitry for analog video in-/output. Kind of nice that it has these, as well as HDMI and eSATA (!), while being a P4 Prescott, which dates it to pretty much exactly 2006 😀
I take it these were only sold in Europe? at least that's where they all seem to be on Ebay.
wrote:I'm intrigued by these HTPC systems. I think you'll have trouble replacing the video card though, looks like it's onboard and has a lot of additional circuitry for analog video in-/output. Kind of nice that it has these, as well as HDMI and eSATA (!), while being a P4 Prescott, which dates it to pretty much exactly 2006 😀
The system uses both the onboard Intel video and a PCI-E low profile card.
It should not be a problem as long as the replacement video card is low enough, or so I hope.
Main PC: Dual Xeon X5690@4.6ghz, Evga - SR-2, 48gb memory, Intel X25-M g2 SSD and a Nvidia GTX 980 ti.
Retro PC #3: K6-2 450@500mhz, PC-Chips m577, 256mb sdram, AWE64 and a Voodoo Banshee.
soviet conscript,
Yes. 486 PCI boards with the UMC chipset have all the usual front side bus settings for Intel chips plus 40, 50, 60, and 66. The Shuttle HOT-433 is one of the best 486 motherboards for doing flat out speed runs but the M919 actually isn't all that bad if you can overlook the shoddy build quality and can source a cache RAM stick, which isn't that easy on it's own unless you get lucky and find one in a bulk memory lot or that has been misidentified by the seller as a Pentium COAST module. It was easier (and cheaper) for me to just buy a whole M919 with the cache stick installed than to try to buy one separately. wiredforservice was trying to sell one for like 5 years, but at his prices he can keep it.
wrote:soviet conscript,
Yes. 486 PCI boards with the UMC chipset have all the usual front side bus settings for Intel chips plus 40, 50, 60, and 66. The Shuttle HOT-433 is one of the best 486 motherboards for doing flat out speed runs but the M919 actually isn't all that bad if you can overlook the shoddy build quality and can source a cache RAM stick, which isn't that easy on it's own unless you get lucky and find one in a bulk memory lot or that has been misidentified by the seller as a Pentium COAST module. It was easier (and cheaper) for me to just buy a whole M919 with the cache stick installed than to try to buy one separately. wiredforservice was trying to sell one for like 5 years, but at his prices he can keep it.
I actually have the cache stick. picked it up separately off the vintage computer forums maybe a year ago for about $40, I lucked out on that though and the seller was nice enough to sell the stick separate. Its is a nice board but it has its oddities like the cache stick refused to work for me as long as EDO RAM was installed regardless of size. took me forever to figure out that was the issue. Also I have a Cyrix 120mhz chip in it now and I like how the BIOS supports some of its features but at 40mhz it does something odd with the bus slots. I forget exactly but there speed is cut so I had to rig the turbo button to the 40mhz jumper. boot the machine at 33mhz then after post hit the turbo button to get the full speed from my video card.
I don't know yet what I want to do with the hot-433, maybe try OCing the AMD 5x86. I also considered just making tossing in a Intel 66mhz 486 and making it my day to day 486 machine. It has some advantages over the VLB rig I use now like PCI slots, more L2 cache and that ps/2 mouse option but in a way I feel like I'm doing the board a disservice by doing that. like I need to hot rod it. Its like buying a Porsche and never driving it over 40mph.
wrote:wrote:soviet conscript,
Yes. 486 PCI boards with the UMC chipset have all the usual front side bus settings for Intel chips plus 40, 50, 60, and 66. The Shuttle HOT-433 is one of the best 486 motherboards for doing flat out speed runs but the M919 actually isn't all that bad if you can overlook the shoddy build quality and can source a cache RAM stick, which isn't that easy on it's own unless you get lucky and find one in a bulk memory lot or that has been misidentified by the seller as a Pentium COAST module. It was easier (and cheaper) for me to just buy a whole M919 with the cache stick installed than to try to buy one separately. wiredforservice was trying to sell one for like 5 years, but at his prices he can keep it.
I actually have the cache stick. picked it up separately off the vintage computer forums maybe a year ago for about $40, I lucked out on that though and the seller was nice enough to sell the stick separate. Its is a nice board but it has its oddities like the cache stick refused to work for me as long as EDO RAM was installed regardless of size. took me forever to figure out that was the issue. Also I have a Cyrix 120mhz chip in it now and I like how the BIOS supports some of its features but at 40mhz it does something odd with the bus slots. I forget exactly but there speed is cut so I had to rig the turbo button to the 40mhz jumper. boot the machine at 33mhz then after post hit the turbo button to get the full speed from my video card.
I don't know yet what I want to do with the hot-433, maybe try OCing the AMD 5x86. I also considered just making tossing in a Intel 66mhz 486 and making it my day to day 486 machine. It has some advantages over the VLB rig I use now like PCI slots, more L2 cache and that ps/2 mouse option but in a way I feel like I'm doing the board a disservice by doing that. like I need to hot rod it. Its like buying a Porsche and never driving it over 40mph.
These cache sticks you guys are discussing, are they they same as the ones that stuck in to some of the early pentium motherboards, or are you referring to something else? Because I have about 4-5 of those pentium era cache sticks that stuck in the brown slots in the other room I've been saving for a few years now. I think all of mine are 512KB too. Are they worth selling on their own some day?
wrote:I bought a Pentium 4 Prescott system today, not really that retro but its a really nice system. I did my P4/Vista test a few wee […]
I bought a Pentium 4 Prescott system today, not really that retro but its a really nice system.
I did my P4/Vista test a few weeks back and found it less of a pain than I would have thought.Fujitsu SCALEO E, 43 Euro (With Vista key and disc).
The system I bought has a Nvidia Geforce 6600 as Video card and a Prescott 630 as CPU.
The chipset is i915 so it is not possible to upgrade the CPU beyond a faster Prescott.
I will replace the video card with a newer card that can decode H264 and the DVD with a Blu-ray.
You'll have trouble finding another card that will support the SCART connections, on machines with those, it's usually a weird OEM card
Bought today PCI USB-card for my dual-Athlon. But that isn´t very interesting. Grab this from pile of junk:

Rocky 4786EV-RS-R40 industrial motherboard with 2.6 GHz P4. Actually there´s some caps missing and God knows whatelse but I think it´s kind of neat... What is that bus? Looks like VLB but think it isn´t
wrote:These cache sticks you guys are discussing, are they they same as the ones that stuck in to some of the early pentium motherboards, or are you referring to something else? Because I have about 4-5 of those pentium era cache sticks that stuck in the brown slots in the other room I've been saving for a few years now. I think all of mine are 512KB too. Are they worth selling on their own some day?
it looks the same and does the same thing but the m919 cache stick is specifically for that 486 motherboard any other cache stick like the ones you have for Pentium machines can damage the m919 if used in it. thats why its kind of valuable and sought after. the sticks you have are far more common and were for Pentium machines and I think a lot of 90's macs used them to. I don't know how much a generic COAST module goes for but i'm guessing not a ton.
wrote:Bought today PCI USB-card for my dual-Athlon. But that isn´t very interesting. Grab this from pile of junk: […]
Bought today PCI USB-card for my dual-Athlon. But that isn´t very interesting. Grab this from pile of junk:
Rocky 4786EV-RS-R40 industrial motherboard with 2.6 GHz P4. Actually there´s some caps missing and God knows whatelse but I think it´s kind of neat... What is that bus? Looks like VLB but think it isn´t.
That would be PCI. Nice find!
WANTED - Manuals/drivers for:
My lastest buys

Cheap priced VLB controller With promise / UMC chips.

4pieces black gummy feet for my V20 NEC XT system case.

Full boxed Bocaram AT Plus memory board (cheap)

2 X Seagate Barracuda ST320011A 7200 RPM 20GB IDE harddisk drive (usable for my pentium 1 build)



Aztech double speed CDROM, CDA 268-03I, with driver disk

Authentic coin battery holders.
~ At least it can do black and white~
wrote:wrote:Bought today PCI USB-card for my dual-Athlon. But that isn´t very interesting. Grab this from pile of junk: […]
Bought today PCI USB-card for my dual-Athlon. But that isn´t very interesting. Grab this from pile of junk:
Rocky 4786EV-RS-R40 industrial motherboard with 2.6 GHz P4. Actually there´s some caps missing and God knows whatelse but I think it´s kind of neat... What is that bus? Looks like VLB but think it isn´t.That would be PCI. Nice find!
I dont think that is PCI.. But more a special connector type to connect on a backplane board.
~ At least it can do black and white~
Looks like PCI And PCI-E
On second thought, one connector has too many pins for PCI but the smaller one definitely looks like pci-e
jwt27 is correct - that's a PCI connector to activate the PCI slots on the host backplane... don't overthink it because of it's non-standard looks 😉