The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (BEYOND COOL BUT PIC HEAVY)
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Re: old lane server controller SBC + backplane
You'll have so many options you'll never be able to decide!Last edited by ratdude747; 01-17-2021, 08:46 PM.sigpic
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Re: old lane server controller SBC + backplane
...And you have the other SBC case sitting which I happen to have the backplane for coming soon. Mine has more slots than Momaka's... and no ATX connector. Which I *think* is what fits the case and PSU you got from me awhile back. Probably doesn't have the P4 power connector Momaka's SBC board needs though (but you could make an adapter if the PSU has enough +12V to float the boat?)
You'll have so many options you'll never be able to decide!<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: old lane server controller SBC + backplane
That's me every time I want to do a build with the accumulated leftover junk parts no one wants.
And the power draw of that Cedar Mill wasn't too bad either: about 55 Watts when system was idle and 90 Watts max with OCCT CPU test.
Last edited by momaka; 01-18-2021, 10:09 PM.Comment
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Re: old lane server controller SBC + backplane
And you also might be able to swap the current P4 CPU for a Core 2 Duo. I tried that yesterday with an E8400 I had on hand, but board didn't want to post with it. Then I remembered this is Q965 chipset, so it's limited to 1066 MHz FSB and likely won't work with any newer 45 nm / Wolfdale chips. But if not, even that P4 651 Cedar Mill isn't too bad. Just for fun, I did test the latest Firefox Quantum on that system, and it ran fine. Could even handle Youtube @ 480p without much sweat, if that's a metric for anything.And the power draw of that Cedar Mill wasn't too bad either: about 55 Watts when system was idle and 90 Watts max with OCCT CPU test.
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
Leave it to Momaka to completely wrench a build!!! A heavy box arrived from his neck of the woods arrived Friday....lots of really nifty extras tech goodies in it...but we'll stick to the topic of the SBC!!
I was expecting what was pictured on the previous page, the bare backplane and the SBC itself....but lo & behold it came encased in a really compact wall (or under bench) mountable lightweight aluminum housing...
Today I finally got around to testing this.... Then came the experimental part....it came with a pentium 4 @ 3.4ghz.....ok, nothing to get excited about....but the Q865 chipset is capable of 1066 FSB and C2/C2Q CPU's.....so lets look in the drawer with probably ~100 LGA-style CPU's in it....and yay! Found right on top of the pile a Q6700! Plopped it in the socket, attached the sink, and bazinga!
Booted from Hiren's.....no problemo!
...and this thread...
Now here's where this complicates things for THIS project.... I wasn't expecting this nifty little housing, just the bare boards, which was going to use for another embedded project I was working on in my head...but now I think I will incorporate this into the current build and bump/scrub the ebay score from the previous page, freeing it up for something else. This being able to run the CPU that it can, is plenty powerful for the goals I have in mind. The single core P4 would probably have struggled with it, but this C2Q, no problem!
As Momaka mentioned from the previous page with the power on functions, that's the beauty of embedded systems.... ACPI manipulation is typically very intuitive, so these systems can be fired like an old AT-style system; mechanical switch on the mains for ON/OFF function, which for my application is what would be needed. It's usually a jumper on the backplane somewhere, I'll have to dig up the manuals.
I'm not sure what PSU this thing used, I don't have anything even close to fitting the cutout in the housing.... Momaka? You wouldn't happen to have the model number from it? It's ATX but with all the negative voltages. The SBC doesn't require -5v to run (you'll notice that voltage is missing on the LED's), some of the proprietary functions for whatever the system 'duties' may require it...but the SBC does not....but I'd still like to track down a PSU that fits the housing.
Anyway, yay for making this hodgepodge of weirdness even more complicated!<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
It won't help in terms of form factor, but old Ultra PSUs all had the -5V rails... they were used for overvolting the craptastic sleeve bearing fans from 12V to 17V! This is why the fan controller was on a separate board.
Even the "nice" one like my (and formerly everell's) "old blue" bling-bling 600W ultra had this (when I re-fanned it, I re-referenced the common to 0V from -5).
I'm sure other even worse PSUs (Deer?) had this "feature" as well. Perhaps one could find one of these that was the right form factor and then rebuild it to have decent guts... with the 600W I was lucky that other than crap caps and junk overvolted fans, mine was decently built albeit built on a ineffcient half-bridge architecture. Rebuilt nicely for the most part... although it's on the shelf of testing supplies, as I only had a use for it once (and that system was rehomed; I didn't want Frankenstein out in the wild).Last edited by ratdude747; 01-31-2021, 11:30 PM.sigpic
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
I was expecting what was pictured on the previous page, the bare backplane and the SBC itself....but lo & behold it came encased in a really compact wall (or under bench) mountable lightweight aluminum housing...
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1612114620
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1612114620I actually knew that I had that case, long before I knew/remembered I had the SBC (or what an SBC was, for that matter, thanks to this thread.) When I finally dug out all the stuff and was able to piece it back together, I just had to send the whole thing as one piece. Besides, I figured the case would add good protection to the SBC and backplane... and as luck would have it, I even had the right-size box too with foam pieces inside. So perhaps it was just meant to be.
Regarding the aluminum case - I think these were custom-ordered for the company that I worked for... if not made by another division of the company (no idea, really, as all this is old stuff that got decommissioned before I even joined.) Pretty sure it was Made in the USA too.So I just couldn't let it go to waste when I saw it in the dumpster.
I thought I had swapped that with one of my E8400 CPUs to serve as a "socket protector".
On the other hand, at least this solves a mystery on my end - I was looking where I had placed that P4 Cedar Mill CPU.As it turns out, the E8400 was still sitting on the Windows sill in the room where I was packing the box. LOL! I was going to swap it after removing and packing the heatsink separately... and completely forgot.
but the Q865 chipset is capable of 1066 FSB and C2/C2Q CPU's.....so lets look in the drawer with probably ~100 LGA-style CPU's in it....and yay! Found right on top of the pile a Q6700! Plopped it in the socket, attached the sink, and bazinga!
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1612114620
So it can run C2Q.
Is that Cu heatsink I sent you even adequate for the C2Q? (Assuming you're using it and not something better.)
As Momaka mentioned from the previous page with the power on functions, that's the beauty of embedded systems.... ACPI manipulation is typically very intuitive, so these systems can be fired like an old AT-style system; mechanical switch on the mains for ON/OFF function, which for my application is what would be needed. It's usually a jumper on the backplane somewhere, I'll have to dig up the manuals.
Also, it seems from your pictures that you have the brown wire (from that 4-wire ribbon from the SBC) not connected to anything? If so, you should connect it to the Power Good (PG). The original 4-pin ribbon connector had a crappily-crimped connector on the brown wire that then plugged onto the first pin in the AT connector next to the ATX connector side (which is also a PG signal.) However, I soldered a single header pin on your backplane on the other side of the ATX connector, where you can see there are labels for ground and "PWRGD" (i.e. power good... i.e. PG again.) I then also swapped the 4-pin ribbon with the crappy crimped connector with another one I found in my junk boxes that wasn't modified. On that one, I simply removed the brown wire from the connector so that I could directly connect it to the new PG header pin I soldered on the SBC. And that's how I got the board to POST. Before that, with the brown wire floating, board was not POSTing due to missing PG signal.
That said, I'll check one of my junk PSU boxes in the garage. I think I saved another unit similar to the above PSU that, IIRC, was getting scrapped due to possible water damage. Will check and let you know what I find.
I really wish I knew sooner about these being useful to you. I picked up the scrapped controller from the work dumpster almost exactly a year ago from now (then had it cleaned and packed so I could put it in storage.) Had I knows, I probably could have saved more stuff from that place.Last edited by momaka; 02-04-2021, 12:21 AM.Comment
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
My ohh my....how this project keeps growing!!
This project already outgrew my original panel design & layout....but I'm glad I set it aside to rethink it rather than do anything permanent at this point.....because look at the introduction of this game changer!!
Room is now no longer a factor and I can add extra function into this big waste of time!! Still in the black, Brethin!!
Moved aside for now....it may go back out to the garage until I officially resume this project. It's on casters, its very easy to move......but I need to do some more homework and I know I'll need a few things to make this new design work......
The collection thus far.....several members here have had a hand in this build!
The original Dolby contraption is on top....and is still included in this 'device' so far....
Yet another member that contributed; albeit indirectly... KC8ADU gave me these 3u/4u rack rail/slides probably 12yrs ago....they've sat in the attic ever since.....I had something in mind for them, but for the life of me I can't remember what; it never materialized. I brought them down.....they'll finally be used!
Stay tuned....<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
(Looks like more PSUs for my troubleshooting pile.)
Yet another member that contributed; albeit indirectly... KC8ADU gave me these 3u/4u rack rail/slides probably 12yrs ago....they've sat in the attic ever since.....I had something in mind for them, but for the life of me I can't remember what; it never materialized. I brought them down.....they'll finally be used!Looks like all kinds of pieces from everywhere are slowly coming together into this thing.
Speaking of KC8ADU, I wonder where he is. Like PCBONEZ, he was one of the older members that always had useful knowledge to share. Hope he's alright and all, especially given the current circumstances of the last 12-13 months with Covid craziness.Last edited by momaka; 02-25-2021, 09:26 PM.Comment
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
I see you found a small TFX PSU for the machine I sent you. Well, I promised I'd look for a matching PSU when I get a chance and I did... but unfortunately, all I found in my stash of quirky PSUs is was just another TFX unit - this one was a 3YPower, and also a 5V-heavy design. Not working too, despite having good cap brands inside.(Looks like more PSUs for my troubleshooting pile.)
He has heart issues as well....I do hope he's doing ok....been concerned for a while now.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
Just a few more things that have been found and possibly added to this crazy build...
Ratdude should remember these too! One of them will for sure be added to this build, the other one I have something else in mind, for the front bench.
Just some other potential whatnots & additional rack rails I had on hand....
This is when you know you're getting bigtime!!
Yeah baby!!
Given the potential amount of kooky hardware that's going to be in this thing, the little devil on my shoulder and I have been contemplating a 220v power distribution setup....which really isn't uncommon for loaded racks....but ya'll know me....I want to make my own...<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
Here went one of the Supermicro 1U racks. These are fantastic little 1U cases, but have useless P4 motherboards in them with ATI Rage GPU's.....I need something a little stronger than this for what I have in mind....so here we go; case stripped out.
The old Supermicro P4SCE motherboard...
I don't have any SM motherboards that have a decent onboard GPU in a uATX flavor....so introduce an Intel DG41TX; a freebie from one of my EDU clients.
Test fitting:
I'm normally a stickler for IO shields....but considering the use intended for this, I skipped destroying the original IO shield for the tiny 1U opening and will just run it without it....not much is exposed....and when installed it won't be visible.
Now for a little fan mod for the squirrel cage blower, which isn't PWM and run @ an annoying ~6000RPM... I added a 50ohm 2w resistor inline with its Vcc. I tried several values, this got it where I wanted it to be speed-wise. It reduced it from ~6000rpm down to about 2200rpm and significantly quieted it.
I also utilized the Icydock 2.5 to 3.5" adapter and the Samsung 64gb SSD from the Advantech build shown earlier in this thread since what I have in mind for that system will be booting from a CF...it didn't need this SSD. 64gb will be fine for this, all it needs to hold is the OS.
Things tidied up...
Now here's where this system gets good.... The G41 chipset on this board supports 5400-series 1333FSB Xeons without any firmware mods (Intel motherboards were really good about this), the only mod needed was to the chip itself so the LGA771 configuration would fit the keying for the LGA775. The next great thing is DDR3 support. Then add in that it has a legacy floppy controller & IDE so the thin floppy & DVDROM can remain functional, which is needed for this build.
....and here we are!!
This will do what I'll demand from this system with no issues!!
I have not installed an OS yet, it was quittin' time for the day!
More later.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
Here went one of the Supermicro 1U racks. These are fantastic little 1U cases, but have useless P4 motherboards in them with ATI Rage GPU's.
...
The old Supermicro P4SCE motherboard...
[url]https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attachment.php?attachmentid=231973&stc=1&d=1615260546[/ul]
Speaking of which, I have a SM P8SCT sitting right here next to my desk. One of my colleagues at my last workplace found it in the warehouse destined for the recycling pile (it actually came from some server, and he wanted the case but not the mobo.) So kind of like a "last day" present, he gave me that board. It's socket 775, but only takes Pentium 4 5xx series CPUs (not even 6xx series, IIRC) and no Cedar Mill. And the lack of PCI-E makes it kind of useless really. Only redeeming thing about is perhaps the dual LAN and PCI-X slot (maybe.) A shame really, as the board's build quality is awesome otherwise. If it has a working CPU temperature sensor (I don't see why it shouldn't, given it's LGA775, but you never know), I might repurpose it for testing CPU heatsink performance. I'm currently doing that with an HP DC7700 Intel Maverick/Silverado board and a P4 630. It's not a super-hot CPU by any means (only 95W TDP, though it peaks close to 110W), but it can separate the boys from the men when it comes to heatsinks.
I'm normally a stickler for IO shields....but considering the use intended for this, I skipped destroying the original IO shield for the tiny 1U opening and will just run it without it....not much is exposed....and when installed it won't be visible.
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1615260546
Can tell it's the one I sent you with the SBC, as these don't come with braided wires for the fan - that's something I almost always do to my fans if they don't come with twisted or sleeved wires.
IIRC, I didn't even bother with any resistors when I was testing the SBC - I just disconnected the Vcc fan wire from the fan's connector and hooked it directly to 5V. This still pushed enough air to keep that P4 641 Cedar Mill CPU cooled well.
50 Ohms sounds about right for such a fan, though. I always try to keep a small stock of 100-Ohm resistors for this reason. 2 in parallel = 50 Ohms for a very quiet fan. 3x in parallel = 33.3 Ohms, good for pushing a bit more air, but still relatively quiet. And 4x parallel = 25 Ohms, which is better-suited for hotter cases or when more airflow is needed, but just not full blast nonesense.
Now here's where this system gets good.... The G41 chipset on this board supports 5400-series 1333FSB Xeons without any firmware mods (Intel motherboards were really good about this), the only mod needed was to the chip itself so the LGA771 configuration would fit the keying for the LGA775.
Another person I'm also concerned about is Pentium4. Can't really reveal here any details as to why, but last I spoke with him a few years ago, there were some events in his life that IMO were rather concerning. Hope he's gone through with those and well now.
BTW, have you heard from WillaWake? That's another of the long-time fellas that hasn't been here for a while.Comment
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
I do that too... 4 wire cables are the worst... but there is a 4 string braid out there, and once one learns it, it does work when practiced.sigpic
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
They wouldn't be too bad if they had an AGP or PCI-E slot... especially AGP, given the uptick in "retro" (Windows 9x, at least) PC building these days. Granted even a Radeon 9250 or a GeForce FX5200 in PCI flavor should both be enough for mid-late 90's games... but it's just silly.FWIW, I do have one of those 'gray market' FX5500 PCI cards. It actually works....I played around with it in a retro rig, but it just felt strange when the rig's GPU had more RAM than the motherboard had.
50 Ohms sounds about right for such a fan, though. I always try to keep a small stock of 100-Ohm resistors for this reason. 2 in parallel = 50 Ohms for a very quiet fan. 3x in parallel = 33.3 Ohms, good for pushing a bit more air, but still relatively quiet. And 4x parallel = 25 Ohms, which is better-suited for hotter cases or when more airflow is needed, but just not full blast nonesense.
I'm taking you cut two notches in the CPU rather than cutting off the ones on the board? I have a similar dual core Xeon CPU, but haven't been able to make it boot in any board I have... though I don't have any with G41 chipset, I don't think. Mostly Q965, G33's, and G31's. Or perhaps my 771 mod isn't working, as I didn't buy a sticker, but soldered my own.
Nice. There aren't many DDR3 boards that still have IDE/PATA support. Legacy floppy took a lot longer to disappear from motherboards (mostly when the current RGB bling-bling crap really started peaking and old legacy connectors were just too "unfashionable" to ruin the rest of the board's "image".)
Another person I'm also concerned about is Pentium4. Can't really reveal here any details as to why, but last I spoke with him a few years ago, there were some events in his life that IMO were rather concerning. Hope he's gone through with those and well now.
BTW, have you heard from WillaWake? That's another of the long-time fellas that hasn't been here for a while.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
Last edited by ratdude747; 03-10-2021, 10:35 PM.sigpic
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Re: The (now the death of) Dolby DP600 Build (OK, this one is BEYOND COOL)
I know.
What i meant to say is those SM motherboards would just have had a much better resell value in the retro community had they included AGP slots (or PCI-E for the newer ones.)
It's not like we can do retro LAN PC parties right now with Covid, lol. (Well, maybe we can outside - but good luck with that when the weather gets warm here in VA and all the mosquitoes come out.)
I mean, I do have one Dell Dimension 5150 tower that currently has a Pentium 4 in it... but I was planning on swapping that with a Pentium D830 nuclear reactor (130 Watts of TDP lol) since I have one of those 3-pipe heatsinks that go into these Dell towers. Also recently got another Pentium D from another CL motherboard which can take a C2D CPU, so I do have a spare "better-than-a-Presshot" CPU now.
IDK, I guess with a future cap order, I might have you send it. But just going to the postal office for this CPU alone... probably not worth it. And given the amount of systems that go through your shop, I'm sure you might find a use for it faster than I will, even if just one time as a test CPU.
and then rummaged though junk power supplies until I found a 50ohm 2w.
All I have in new stock is 1/2watt and lighter.....I don't think those could take the heat....so I went scavenging. I'm not sure how low one could go with wattage, but I don't think a 2w would be a factor for heating.
I just did a similar mod the other day on the stock AVC cooler of an Intel D845bg motherboard. Fan was rated for 200 mA at 12V, but was pulling substantially less at lower voltages. A 100-Ohm resistor ended up being perfect, dropping down the voltage to about 6V, with the fan running around 1900 RPM. But since it was a smaller 70 mm fan, I added a 470-Ohm resistor in parallel with the 100-Ohm resistor, which increase the voltage a bit and sped it up to about 2500 RPM - a little loud, but kind of needed for the Pentium 4 CPU it was cooling.
In regards to power rating of the resistor, it's pretty easy to calculate how much you will need - just put the resistor on the fan and measure the voltage drop across the resistor. In my case with the 100-Ohm resistor, the drop was 6V across the resistor (and 6V left for the fan) when running at 12V. Thus, P = (V^2)/R = (6^2)/100 = 36/100 = 0.36 Watts
Since my 100-Ohm resistor was a 1/2 Watt, it was adequate for the task.
I got one better... one of these (Geforce 6200 256MB), recapped awhile back in Nichicon HN. Kept for testing things more then anything., this is what I have: A PNY GeForce 8400GS PCI. Haven't installed it into anything yet, but I plan this to be the last upgrade to my aging Dell Optiplex 170L (and still) main PC, along with a 3.2 GHz P4 from the current 2.8 GHz. I just don't feel like taking the PC out of its current nuk, as I'll have to move and disconnect a bunch of towers and other stuff to get it out. And when I do that, I know I'll find a bunch of dust there and that would likely prompt a cleaning parade once I'm in the zone for it.
Last edited by momaka; 03-18-2021, 08:37 PM.Comment
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by momakaI know I've been a little scarce lately (like the last 2-3 years), but I'm still here and still doing my thing with fixing PSUs.
For today's considerations, I have a Seasonic B12 BC-550 [A551bcafh] 550 Watt ATX power supply for you (click on links for full size images).
https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=3591771
https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=3591772
It's a modern ATX unit with fixed (non-modular) cables and an 80-plus bronze certificate. Here's the label:
https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=359177... -
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Steps i done and results:
I exported a clean bios from update file via pfs extract.
1. Build clean bios with clean ME, PMC, PCH in flash image tool.
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