First post, by wildweasel
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My dad's been collecting computer hardware over the years from a ton of computer upgrades (from the early 90's to present day), and he and I both decided it's time to let go and sell these cards off to people who will probably get better use out of them.
VIDEO CARDS
Diamond Stealth Video 2500 - PCI, don't know much about this card, but it boots and seems to display graphics properly.
Creative CT6170 - Don't remember the boxed brand of the card, but it runs on the NVIDIA Riva TNT chipset, I believe it has 16 MB of memory (whether RAM or VRAM is unknown to me), and is for AGP.
STB Lightspeed 128 - A PCI Super VGA card running on the Tseng Labs ET6000 chipset. Probably great for anything that needs VESA support.
3DFX Voodoo Banshee - PCI video card with 16 MB memory. Boots and displays graphics properly; could not test 3D rendering however.
ASUS MX440 - A Geforce 4 MX 440, with 128 MB of memory, for AGP slots. It should be stressed that this is the budget GeForce 4; its feature set does not include Pixel Shader support.
3DFX Voodoo 4 - AGP video card with 32 MB memory. Works excellently.
ELSA Erazor III Pro - AGP-based NVIDIA TNT 2, I'm guessing 32 MB of memory. Worked great in Ubuntu; should work fine in Windows with appropriate drivers (you might need to do some digging around; I'm not sure how old NVIDIA's drivers database goes). I don't have pictures of this one for some reason...
ASUS V7100 AGP - An AGP-based NVIDIA GeForce 2 (MX? GTS? I'm not sure) with 64 MB of memory on it. Ran Ubuntu quite well.
Matrox (Millenium?) - A dual-head capable video card. Has two VGA ports, bears Matrox copyright info dated year 2000. Probably a good card to piggyback onto another video card for those that want to run triple monitor setups. Worked great on testing.
ATI 3D Rage Pro - Not sure if this is the 4 MB or 8 MB version of the card; is a PCI video card. If you use this, be very careful about your monitor refresh rate settings! Seemed to work well from testing, but I can't vouch for the long-term effects of this card. I don't have any of the pack-in software that came with it anymore, sorry - this is just the card!
ATI Mach 64 GT(-B?) - PCI video card from ATI, running on the 3D Rage chipset. Could have as much as 8 MB RAM on it; never figured out how to check for that sort of thing. Works fine as tested, though.
Diamond Viper V550 - A 16 MB AGP video card running on the NVIDIA Riva TNT chipset. Still works very nicely; tested in Ubuntu to great results. This thing will slaughter any Direct3D/OpenGL-based game made before 2000.
SOUND CARDS
Sound Blaster Live! - PCI, I assume has 5.1 support, has 5 jacks on the back and a Gameport, confirmed to work (tested by booting an Ubuntu 9.04 live CD).
Sound Blaster 16 ISA - I've got three of these, and I'm unable to test them because I don't have any more computers in the house with ISA slots. I do recall them all working, however. One of these cards has the audio cable to connect it to a CD-ROM drive, in case anybody needs that.
Sound Blaster AWE64 - This card supports wavetable MIDI as an AWE32, and is for ISA interface only, so I am unable to test it, though I recall it working great the last time I used it.
Sound Blaster X-Fi - I don't remember what exact type of X-Fi this card is; it's PCI-based, has four audio jacks (two analog, one digital, one "Flexijack") and a bizarre extra port labelled AD_LINK (it should not be confused for a Gameport). It's a relatively recent sound card and supports EAX and SoundFont functions. The card works great, however drivers may be a problem.
OTHER CARDS
CH GameCard III Automatic - An ISA card bearing two Gameports, released by CH Products in 1990. Ever wonder why older DOS games ask you to calibrate Joystick 1 AND Joystick 2? Because cards like this existed! Hook up two 2-axis 2-button joysticks to your PC with this card. Unfortunately, it being ISA, I was unable to test it properly, and it might need a driver to work properly in most DOS systems.
US Robotics 56K Internal Modem Card - I believe this to be an ISA card, and I was unable to test it properly, but I don't recall this modem ever actually dying, so it may be of use to somebody.
Here's a picture gallery. Please excuse the rather amateurish quality of the photos; hopefully they're clear enough to give you the general idea.
Please let me know if you're interested in any of these and we can negotiate a price. Shipping charges will be ten dollars and I ship via UPS. Due to shipping complications, I may not be able to ship outside the United States. I'm willing to give it a try, but I cannot make any guarantees.