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A scad of 486s on Ebay

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First post, by snorg

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If you were sad you got rid of your 486 system or you always wished you had one back in the day, there seem to be a ton of motherboards on E-bay right now. Most have motherboard, cpu and RAM. They aren't cheap, but then 486 systems seem to be unobtainium out in the wild these days.

Reply 1 of 11, by Stojke

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Its fairly simple to obtain an 486 system for cheap.

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Reply 2 of 11, by jesolo

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I've also noticed quite a number of 486 motherboards for sale.
386 and older motherboards seem to be getting more scarce.
I guess the latter are now so old that most people who had them, had by now gotten rid of them.

Reply 3 of 11, by PeterLI

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Last edited by PeterLI on 2016-12-17, 19:45. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 4 of 11, by sliderider

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OEM 486 systems are usually a better deal than building one yourself if you don't mind the possibility of getting one with a lot of proprietary parts inside that won't be as easy to find replacements for if something major stops working.

Reply 5 of 11, by PeterLI

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When they break there is always the next one.

Reply 6 of 11, by PhilsComputerLab

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Don't forget PS/2 mouse ports.

Such motherboards can often cost as much, if not more, than an entire OEM 486 that comes with PS/2 😊

Funny how people overlook this.

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Reply 7 of 11, by snorg

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Maybe there aren't any more than normal, it just seems to me like there is a glut now.
$100 or $200 for an OEM 486 (best price I've seen) is not exactly cheap but I guess it is better than "not obtainable at any price". And then it is a great deal cheaper than spending ten hours trying to get a box built from parts working.

Reply 8 of 11, by PeterLI

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Last edited by PeterLI on 2016-12-17, 19:45. Edited 2 times in total.

Reply 9 of 11, by ynari

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Have to admit, when I started work one of my first machines was an AST Advantage with a DX2-50 in it. It was an absolute rock running OS/2 - slow, but would not die, whatever I did to it.

Reply 10 of 11, by sliderider

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snorg wrote:

Maybe there aren't any more than normal, it just seems to me like there is a glut now.
$100 or $200 for an OEM 486 (best price I've seen) is not exactly cheap but I guess it is better than "not obtainable at any price". And then it is a great deal cheaper than spending ten hours trying to get a box built from parts working.

You can pay that much for a VL bus or PCI 486 motherboard by itself, which is why the OEM systems are such a good deal. It'll probably cost you another $70 or $80 for a case with a power supply and you still have to buy RAM, a CPU, video and sound cards, a hard drive, network card, and other odds and ends that are going to push the price of your homebuilt system up over $400.

Reply 11 of 11, by Skyscraper

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My tip if you do not want to pay much for a motherboard, memory and CPU bundle, go for a "5V CPU only" VLB motherboard bundle, they often go really cheap.

I just bought a nice VLB motherboard with memory and a DX2 CPU on Ebay 10 minuts ago, the price was £25.99 = 35 euro add a video card (10-15 euro), an I/O card (5-15 euro), a floppy drive (1-5 euro) and use some old ATX case from your basement with a 5 euro adapter and you are still below 100 euro even with the shipping costs.

If you go for the most attractive parts its not hard to spend 200+ euro on a computer that does the same thing a P100 woud do even better for less than half the price. I buy both the cheap end expensive though but I really like old hardware and the challange of taking aging tech as far as possible.

New PC: i9 12900K @5GHz all cores @1.2v. MSI PRO Z690-A. 32GB DDR4 3600 CL14. 3070Ti.
Old PC: Dual Xeon X5690@4.6GHz, EVGA SR-2, 48GB DDR3R@2000MHz, Intel X25-M. GTX 980ti.
Older PC: K6-3+ 400@600MHz, PC-Chips M577, 256MB SDRAM, AWE64, Voodoo Banshee.