best cheap/free scores 1.1

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  • Topcat
    The Boss Stooge
    • Oct 2003
    • 16955
    • United States

    #4141
    Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

    Originally posted by momaka
    That. Is. NICE!

    Hitachi really did make some great CRT monitors.

    Are you sure it's a Trinitron tube, though? Because I have the bigger version of that: the CM814 (21"), which uses shadow mask. Nevertheless, I easily think that is my best CRT monitor - yes, I consider it even better than the 24" widescreen Sony's. It's just much sharper with deeper and more vivid color. The big Sony CRTs tend to not have good contrast/color, even on max settings (and if maxed out, their focus goes a little softer.)

    Anyways, thank you for saving it!

    I don't think you'll be disappointed with it.

    **EDIT**
    Did a search on that model. It IS a shadow mask (or "ErgoFlat", as Hitachi calls it.) Link:
    http://www.hitachidisplays.com/products/19_771.htm

    And you get all of the "pro" settings/menus, just like the big 21" pro monitors. That is a real gem!
    Try setting the contrast fairly high, with brightness just enough to make the monitor barely visible in a completely dark room (might need to adjust the individual color temperature too, for tint-free image.) Then try watching a movie with lots of moving lights or something similar. I think you will like what you see.
    You're correct, it is not a Trinitron CRT....I ASSumed when I saw the totally flat screen, before I really examined it.

    Here's afew of it apart when I repaired the CRT interface. I blew the dust out as well.







    I haven't had it connected to a PC yet, I dialed it in with my signal generator....which IMO I can get a more precise 'tune' than just eyeballing a PC desktop or other image from a PC. I'm saving this one for a certain retro build; albeit it's about ~2yrs too new to be truly period-specific.....but it's close enough!
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    • Curious.George
      Badcaps Legend
      • Nov 2011
      • 2305
      • Unknown

      #4142
      Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

      Early XMAS! (great time of year as businesses do "housecleaning!")

      Fifteen, 12 drive SANs, each populated with 24T of media (i.e., 360T of rust!)

      Ten 256G 2.5" SSDs.

      Eight 128G 2.5" SSDs.

      Thirty-two sticks of 32G PC4-17000.

      Thirty-two sticks of 16G PC4-17000.

      Thirty-two sticks of 16G PC3-12800.

      Thirty-two sticks of 8G PC3-12800.

      Looks like I'll be "busy" well into the New Year!

      (@TC: I will make an effort to get your stuff to the Post Office, RSN -- lest the other half decide it needs to be "housecleaned"!)

      Comment

      • Topcat
        The Boss Stooge
        • Oct 2003
        • 16955
        • United States

        #4143
        Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

        I didn't know you were preparing another one....but I'm most appreciative that you are! If a few of those SSD's fall into the box that would be spiffy!! I need 4 ATM...
        <--- Badcaps.net Founder

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        • momaka
          master hoarder
          • May 2008
          • 12164
          • Bulgaria

          #4144
          Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

          Originally posted by Topcat
          You're correct, it is not a Trinitron CRT....I ASSumed when I saw the totally flat screen, before I really examined it.
          Yeah it can be tricky sometimes.

          Both shadow mask and Trinitron tubes from the last gen CRTs can have a flat screen, so it can be hard to tell without either opening the monitor or powering it on. The Trinitrons will have those two horizontal tension wires visible at 1/3 from the top and bottom of the screen (best visible with a light background displaying). On the neck of the tube, Trinitrons also tend to have more and bigger deflection coils... and two "Focus" knobs on the flyback.

          Originally posted by Topcat
          Awesome!

          Looks pretty well built. I imagine most (if not all) electro caps were Japanese branded.
          Seems a lot easier to take apart than my CM814, which is built more like the high-end Sony's, with an intricate metal casing holding everything. I do have to take my CM814 apart, though, because it probably has bad solder joints as well. Although it works OK, the degauss has been going in and out of operation. The last time this happened, degauss cut out in the middle of degaussing and messed up / magnetized the entire screen in different hues. Had to connect the degauss coil to another CRT to fix that. And that still doesn't help much, because CRTs tend to be very sensitive to stray magnetic fields. As soon as I moved my CM814 after externally degaussing it, it went back to crazy colors. The degauss really needs to run every time the monitor is moved. It probably doesn't help that I have big 8" "bookshelf" speakers close by my monitors.

          Originally posted by Topcat
          I haven't had it connected to a PC yet, I dialed it in with my signal generator....which IMO I can get a more precise 'tune' than just eyeballing a PC desktop or other image from a PC.
          It depends... though there is nothing "precise" about tuning a CRT monitor.

          I have a set of test images made for various resolutions that I know exactly what to look for when adjusting colors and geometry. Alternate black & white horizontal lines are particularly helpful for moire reduction tuning. And I also have some black & white crosshatch patterns that can really show areas of the screen with poor focus. The alternating black & white pixels is my favorite one, though: no CRT will ever display it right (though some CRTs are severely worse than others), and it's great for showcasing how bad CRTs are at displaying square pixels.

          As for color... I think that one is a little more subjective. I tend to prefer neutral color balance (neither too cool nor too warm), so "eyeballing" my colors works better for my needs.

          Originally posted by Topcat
          I'm saving this one for a certain retro build; albeit it's about ~2yrs too new to be truly period-specific.....but it's close enough!
          Nice!

          A CRT that is "too new", though? - now that's a funny oxymoron.

          Originally posted by Dan81
          On topic of laptops - momaka, how's a HP G6065EM? I just found one at my friend's workplace - it's missing a LCD,DVD-RW, HDD etc. Do you think it's worth ressurecting? Or should I look for something else (like Acer, Packard Bell, Dell or Toshiba)
          Not sure.
          I can't find any specs on that model, so that laptop doesn't ring any bells for me.
          Last edited by momaka; 12-13-2019, 10:13 PM.

          Comment

          • Dan81
            SNES-powered
            • Oct 2013
            • 1865
            • Romania

            #4145
            Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

            It's from the G6000 series, if that helps. Similar board to DV6000 series laptops.

            On topic, scored a free Aspire 5536G from a friend. Won't post (was never opened beyond removing the keyboard) so a reflow is in order.
            Main rig:
            Gigabyte B75M-D3H
            Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
            Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
            16GB DDR3-1600
            Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
            FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
            120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
            Delux MG760 case

            Comment

            • linuxguru
              Badcaps Legend
              • Apr 2005
              • 1564

              #4146
              Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

              Not free, but cheap:

              Biostar 945GZ Micro775 SE mobo: ~$2 from local E-waste recycler
              Allendale Core 2 Duo E4400: ~$1.5 from another local E-waste recycler

              I had to recap 5x VRM caps (2 polymers installed) and straighten out 8+ slightly bent pins in the LGA775 socket. Board now POSTs and OCs like a champ.

              https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showpo...2&postcount=11

              Not too bad for ~$3.5 and ~45 minutes of work - I haven't had this much fun since the Tualeron era.
              Last edited by linuxguru; 12-21-2019, 04:49 PM. Reason: spelling typo

              Comment

              • Dan81
                SNES-powered
                • Oct 2013
                • 1865
                • Romania

                #4147
                Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                One of my friends who's now in college sent me his old laptop for free - a Dell Latitude E6400.

                Did I tell you this laptop LITERALLY is made like a swiss army knife? Like seriously, everything is just laid out perfectly.
                Main rig:
                Gigabyte B75M-D3H
                Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
                Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
                16GB DDR3-1600
                Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
                FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
                120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
                Delux MG760 case

                Comment

                • Curious.George
                  Badcaps Legend
                  • Nov 2011
                  • 2305
                  • Unknown

                  #4148
                  Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                  Originally posted by Topcat
                  Now for one of the systems....goofy ass HP 500-424 AMD based tower....

                  ...but look closer:

                  Yea, mini ITX with an external PSU in this big ass case!
                  My candidate for most oversized case: 3U "server" with a dinky SM motherboard tucked inside. Figure that case is 5Hx17Wx24D (note that "blank" area up top houses the drive bays)...
                  Attached Files

                  Comment

                  • Curious.George
                    Badcaps Legend
                    • Nov 2011
                    • 2305
                    • Unknown

                    #4149
                    Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                    Originally posted by Topcat
                    I didn't know you were preparing another one....but I'm most appreciative that you are! If a few of those SSD's fall into the box that would be spiffy!! I need 4 ATM...
                    Yeah, I've had a box packed, sitting here, for quite some time. I don't recall if it has SAS, SCSI or SCA inside so it'll be a surprise to both of us! :>

                    I've just never made it to the post office during daylight hours <frown> Today would have been a great day to go -- save for the obvious "problem"

                    Hoping to score another box so I can get the "on deck" drives out of here, too, before she complains (actually, before she complains MORE! ) I'm not sure how many others are lurking in/behind/under "stuff", here. Big push to get everything sorted out and cleaned up before the New Year...

                    Can't help with the SSDs; we don't have a procedure in place to ensure they are wiped (secure erase is known to be buggy on some SSDs) so I have to certify that they never leave my custody as the safeguard for their existing data. (Ultimately, they'll go to the shredder, but I can play with them until then)

                    Comment

                    • momaka
                      master hoarder
                      • May 2008
                      • 12164
                      • Bulgaria

                      #4150
                      Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                      More crap from work...

                      - PASO T3130BGM PA system amplifier... has bulging main cap and the whole PCB inside looks overheated and charred. But it looks good on the outside and case seems decent, so bad comes to worse, I might just rip its guts out and put something of my own inside there.

                      - a box of female(?) BNC connectors of several different kinds made for various LMR cable sizes. Anyone need any BCN connectors for a project?? But hurry! I have a limited supply of... too many!

                      - one industrial controller/embedded system of some kind. It's an x86/x64 PC with a LGA775 (I think) Pentium 4 CPU and slots for DDR2 RAM. Only PCI and ISA expansion slots, and it's not a standard ATX layout or anything like that. No built-in VGA, but two built-in network controllers (possibly gigabit?) I'll take pictures and see if anyone cares to figure out, once I get to it (I have two actually.)

                      - one or two Banner Mac-10 light curtain "mini" controllers.

                      - a box of mixed cables and crap. Haven't gone through it yet. Seems there is also some fibre jump leads / cables there. Will check specs and post back when I get through them. Don't think they are anything special or that worthwhile. But if some of you chaps here might have a use for them... better than going to our company dumpster or me trying to figure out what to do with them.

                      Originally posted by Dan81
                      One of my friends who's now in college sent me his old laptop for free - a Dell Latitude E6400.
                      I don't mean to sound like a complete A-hole... and I know I will
                      ... but finally you got a GOOD and worthwhile laptop.

                      Originally posted by Dan81
                      Did I tell you this laptop LITERALLY is made like a swiss army knife? Like seriously, everything is just laid out perfectly.
                      Welcome to the Dell business line of laptops (namely Latitude and Precision.)

                      They are indeed built like Swiss knives.

                      The C series Latitudes were the first and they were... OK-ish in terms of how easy it was to take them completely apart.

                      Then came the D series... and those were just great. I can't remember of many people complaining about the D-series being unreliable or hard to service (save for laptops with the bumpgate nVidia GPUs.) They were well-designed.

                      Then came the first E series (Core 2 Duo and Quad era), and those pretty much just built on the successful design of the D series. The last E series with the i3/-5/-7 CPU didn't change that much either. I have an E6350 for work (IIRC the model number.)

                      Regarding your particular laptop, the E6400... I bought the same thing (but refurbished/re-certified) for my uncle 3 or 4 years ago now. It's been rock-solid. I expect yours will be as well. Put a cheap SSD with Windows 7 in it, and watch it go. That's what I did for my work laptop, and it's just a pleasure to use every time. The Symantec AV we have does slow it down a bit, but it's still pretty fast. Cold boot to a fully loaded desktop ready to work takes a few tens of seconds (maybe 20, if even that.)
                      Last edited by momaka; 12-26-2019, 06:47 PM.

                      Comment

                      • Topcat
                        The Boss Stooge
                        • Oct 2003
                        • 16955
                        • United States

                        #4151
                        Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                        Originally posted by Curious.George
                        Can't help with the SSDs; we don't have a procedure in place to ensure they are wiped (secure erase is known to be buggy on some SSDs) so I have to certify that they never leave my custody as the safeguard for their existing data. (Ultimately, they'll go to the shredder, but I can play with them until then)
                        No worries! I appreciate all the stuff that shows up.
                        <--- Badcaps.net Founder

                        Badcaps.net Services:

                        Motherboard Repair Services

                        ----------------------------------------------
                        Badcaps.net Forum Members Folding Team
                        http://folding.stanford.edu/
                        Team : 49813
                        Join in!!
                        Team Stats

                        Comment

                        • Dan81
                          SNES-powered
                          • Oct 2013
                          • 1865
                          • Romania

                          #4152
                          Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                          Originally posted by momaka
                          I don't mean to sound like a complete A-hole... and I know I will
                          ... but finally you got a GOOD and worthwhile laptop.


                          Welcome to the Dell business line of laptops (namely Latitude and Precision.)

                          They are indeed built like Swiss knives.

                          The C series Latitudes were the first and they were... OK-ish in terms of how easy it was to take them completely apart.

                          Then came the D series... and those were just great. I can't remember of many people complaining about the D-series being unreliable or hard to service (save for laptops with the bumpgate nVidia GPUs.) They were well-designed.

                          Then came the first E series (Core 2 Duo and Quad era), and those pretty much just built on the successful design of the D series. The last E series with the i3/-5/-7 CPU didn't change that much either. I have an E6350 for work (IIRC the model number.)

                          Regarding your particular laptop, the E6400... I bought the same thing (but refurbished/re-certified) for my uncle 3 or 4 years ago now. It's been rock-solid. I expect yours will be as well. Put a cheap SSD with Windows 7 in it, and watch it go. That's what I did for my work laptop, and it's just a pleasure to use every time. The Symantec AV we have does slow it down a bit, but it's still pretty fast. Cold boot to a fully loaded desktop ready to work takes a few tens of seconds (maybe 20, if even that.)
                          Mine runs fast with just a 500GB HGST (SATA3 6Gbps) installed. Thank god it uses a G98 GPU (Quadro NVS 160M 256MB) which doesn't dissipate as much heat as a 128MB G86 chip I have does. None can beat a MXM2 Radeon X1400 tho, that thing runs fiery hot.

                          As for the CPU and RAM, it came with a P8700 but no RAM. It was DDR2 though (I expected DDR3 as the GM45/PM45 chipsets support it just fine) so 2x 2GB sticks and a HDD later and I was booting Windows 7 just fine. Needs a new CMOS battery tho.

                          As for my other laptops - they aren't that bad! My Aspire 5536 and 5738 are pretty okay - both have HD4570 512MB, both have exchangeable parts. The only difference is the 5536 is a AMD Athlon X2 QL-64 based unit, while the 5738 is the Intel counterpart, with a C2D T9400. The others are a 5520 w/ MXM (which isn't very useful in its current state), a iGPU 7520, an ASUS X59SL with a HD3470 and two i945 based Travelmates which I really can't find a use for.

                          Then there's the dead i3-330M based Aspire 5740 - I need to find either a working board (JV50-CP) or a working EC chip.
                          Last edited by Dan81; 12-27-2019, 01:54 AM.
                          Main rig:
                          Gigabyte B75M-D3H
                          Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
                          Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
                          16GB DDR3-1600
                          Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
                          FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
                          120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
                          Delux MG760 case

                          Comment

                          • momaka
                            master hoarder
                            • May 2008
                            • 12164
                            • Bulgaria

                            #4153
                            Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                            Originally posted by Dan81
                            Mine runs fast with just a 500GB HGST (SATA3 6Gbps) installed.
                            Yes, if it's a clean install with minimum startup junk (which I'm sure it is), it would indeed run fast. In my case, it's a company laptop with some junk security software on there, so the difference between SSD and regular HDD is substantial.

                            Originally posted by Dan81
                            None can beat a MXM2 Radeon X1400 tho, that thing runs fiery hot.
                            Yup, right from the ATI "red flames" -themed era.

                            Originally posted by Dan81
                            As for my other laptops - they aren't that bad!
                            Oh no, I wasn't implying that they are. Just saying that compared to the Dell Latitude and Precision laptops of that area, they just weren't built as well.

                            Hell, my next laptop looks like it's going to be that HP Pavilion DV6000 I posted about some pages ago. The Compaq Presario V6000 I found and fixed (via reflow) a few years ago still works. It just doesn't feel like a reliable laptop I want to move to, though. And my Dell Latitude C600 is... how to say it? "A little" past expiry? I would have kept using it for typing, datasheets, and some basic audio output (for testing) if its HDD didn't go corrupt. Ever since, I just haven't had time to re-install it and put all my files and configurations back onto it. I think I got it back in 2009 or 2010 and put Windows XP SP2 on it then. It served me until summer 2018... so a good 8 years, at least. I just can't ask it for more anymore.
                            Last edited by momaka; 12-28-2019, 06:34 PM.

                            Comment

                            • Curious.George
                              Badcaps Legend
                              • Nov 2011
                              • 2305
                              • Unknown

                              #4154
                              Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                              Originally posted by Topcat
                              No worries! I appreciate all the stuff that shows up.
                              Well, we've got to come up with a policy/strategy for dealing with solid state storage, "eventually". It's just too damn wasteful to shred it all!

                              The AI in my disk sanitizer could be taught how to handle specific make/model drives so it will just be a "learning experience" for it.

                              [But, the tougher part will be selling folks as to how knowledgeable it will be at deciding how to process each specific make/model drive. The audit will be far more skeptical than it was for the spinning rust media!]

                              Comment

                              • Dan81
                                SNES-powered
                                • Oct 2013
                                • 1865
                                • Romania

                                #4155
                                Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                                Just got a Sempron 145 AM3, which I dropped into a untested Gigabyte GA-880GM-UD2H board I had around. Posts just fine, will make good for a HDD testing unit. I'll have to add a small HDD w/ Win7 or 8.1 with HDD tools (HDD Sentinel, PuTTY for Seagate drives) as well as adding a DVD drive for Seagate DOS Tools, just in case I need it.
                                Main rig:
                                Gigabyte B75M-D3H
                                Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
                                Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
                                16GB DDR3-1600
                                Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
                                FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
                                120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
                                Delux MG760 case

                                Comment

                                • Dan81
                                  SNES-powered
                                  • Oct 2013
                                  • 1865
                                  • Romania

                                  #4156
                                  Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                                  Originally posted by momaka
                                  Yup, right from the ATI "red flames" -themed era.
                                  Ironic, as the card PCB is green. Apparently came from an Advent laptop. I'd take a 8400MG over it any day. Heats less and has DX10 support.
                                  Main rig:
                                  Gigabyte B75M-D3H
                                  Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
                                  Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
                                  16GB DDR3-1600
                                  Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
                                  FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
                                  120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
                                  Delux MG760 case

                                  Comment

                                  • Dan81
                                    SNES-powered
                                    • Oct 2013
                                    • 1865
                                    • Romania

                                    #4157
                                    Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                                    Since I can't edit my previous post, I'll have to make a new one.

                                    Originally posted by momaka
                                    Hell, my next laptop looks like it's going to be that HP Pavilion DV6000 I posted about some pages ago. The Compaq Presario V6000 I found and fixed (via reflow) a few years ago still works. It just doesn't feel like a reliable laptop I want to move to, though.
                                    DV6000? Oh boy, prepare to experiecnce LOTS of heat.

                                    I just bought one yesterday - Turion 64 TL-58 + GF Go 7200 256MB. GPU needed a reflow, otherwise laptop did power on but wouldn't detect the GPU lol. Reflowed, repasted, and removed the stupid aluminium foil that HP placed over the GPU and CPU sections, and over copper at that. Yikes.

                                    Right now I managed to get it to boot just fine, got a battery for it (when I got it, 'twas just the laptop without battery or charger), made a charger from a Acer 65W charger + a PS2 slim charger DC cable, replaced the tired GSA-4084N DVD-ROM with a TSST TS-L632D DVD-RW drive, and ultimately added a 80GB Hitachi HDD I had around from an long thrown away Acer Extensa.

                                    Believe me, just after ONE minute of powering it on, the laptop is blowing hot air. I'm not sure what causes that - either GPU or CPU. Anyways, I'm planning on replacing the TL-58 CPU soon. If it supports a TL-60, that is.
                                    Last edited by Dan81; 12-31-2019, 02:27 AM.
                                    Main rig:
                                    Gigabyte B75M-D3H
                                    Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
                                    Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
                                    16GB DDR3-1600
                                    Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
                                    FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
                                    120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
                                    Delux MG760 case

                                    Comment

                                    • TechGeek
                                      Computer Geek
                                      • Jan 2015
                                      • 2254
                                      • USA

                                      #4158
                                      Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                                      Originally posted by Dan81
                                      --snip--

                                      long thrown away Acer Extensa.

                                      --snip--
                                      Reminds me of something from a Garret Claridge video posted years ago...

                                      Originally posted by Garret Claridge
                                      Let's see if it can take the extensa our damage!
                                      Don't buy those $10 PSU "specials". They fail, and they have taken whole computers with them.

                                      My computer doubles as a space heater.

                                      Permanently Retired Systems:
                                      RIP Advantech UNO-3072LA (2008-2021) - Decommissioned and taken out of service permanently due to lack of software support for it. Not very likely to ever be recommissioned again.
                                      Asus Q550LF (Old main laptop, 2014-2022) - Decommissioned and stripped due to a myriad of problems, the main battery bloating being the final nail in the coffin.


                                      Kooky and Kool Systems
                                      - 1996 Power Macintosh 7200/120 + PC Compatibility Card - Under Restoration
                                      - 1993 Gateway 2000 80486DX/50 - Fully Operational/WIP
                                      - 2004 Athlon 64 Retro Gaming System - Indefinitely Parked
                                      - Main Workstation - Fully operational!

                                      sigpic

                                      Comment

                                      • Dan81
                                        SNES-powered
                                        • Oct 2013
                                        • 1865
                                        • Romania

                                        #4159
                                        Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                                        Originally posted by TechGeek
                                        Reminds me of something from a Garret Claridge video posted years ago...
                                        lol

                                        Yeah, I saved whatever was worth saving (HDD, LCD screen, DVD-RW, CPU and for no reason the front panel buttons too) and then threw the rest away. The laptop was totally dead, so not a big loss.

                                        HDD is currently in use in my HP DV6356EU (and the HDD has at least 4-5 years since I saved it).

                                        The LCD currently resides in a Frankenstein-built ASUS X59SL laptop (C2D T5450, 2GB RAM, ATI HD 3470 256MB) - bottom is from a X59SL I repaired, keyboard + LCD frame both come from a F5RL I gutted

                                        DVD-RW went into another HP DV6000 I fixed a month ago.

                                        I still have the CPU (Celeron M 440) as I couldn't find a use for it.
                                        Main rig:
                                        Gigabyte B75M-D3H
                                        Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
                                        Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
                                        16GB DDR3-1600
                                        Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
                                        FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
                                        120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
                                        Delux MG760 case

                                        Comment

                                        • momaka
                                          master hoarder
                                          • May 2008
                                          • 12164
                                          • Bulgaria

                                          #4160
                                          Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1

                                          Originally posted by Dan81
                                          DV6000? Oh boy, prepare to experiecnce LOTS of heat.
                                          Yeah, probably.
                                          It's the same thing internally as my Presario V6000, cooler-wise. However, the CPU and chipset are completely different. My DV6000 has Intel Core 2 Duo CPU and Intel chipset (forgot which one). NO nVidia shitset!
                                          So I imagine it may actually run cooler... but we will see.

                                          Gotta put an HDD in it one of these days and install Windows. Been too lazy, though. (And busy playing video games. )
                                          Last edited by momaka; 12-31-2019, 06:35 PM.

                                          Comment

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                                            ITE IT8390 (IT8390E-256) programmer "ITE Download Board 4" user manual + firmware, flashing ITE ECs on the cheap
                                            by H34TO
                                            Recently I've gotten into EC flashing due to my broken laptop(s) and started frantically searching methods for flashing the IT5571E-128 chip on the cheap(due to me beaing a student and not having a job) and noticed that ITE newer chips can be flashed via ISP (In-System Programming) either via SMBus or the KBC (EPP - Enhanced Parallel Port) interface. While these can be achieved with programmers like SVOD4/3 or the RT809H/F those options are WAYYY out of my budget so I was horrified. But recently I stumbled uppon some programmers on aliexpress that claim they can program a variety of ITE chips...
                                            06-17-2025, 07:17 AM
                                          • evilkitty
                                            When your mom is complaining about her new cheap lights
                                            by evilkitty
                                            My Mom bought some cheap motion sensor lights on wish... then complains about about batteries and this thing chews though them, well it uses 4 AAA batteries and a pack of rechargeable ones is about 13 USD

                                            well since it uses 4 AAA and rechargeable are 1.2v and non-recharge at 1.5 this thing must work with 4.8-6v, I'll shove a USB cable on it, infant i will use a broken phone charge cable... dam this thing uses 430 mA and they made it battery powered...


                                            lets ignore the fact that i thought the board fit both ways... and the wire color is reversed going to the board...
                                            07-23-2024, 01:27 PM
                                          • aaronkatrini
                                            Recommend a decent Multimeter on the cheap
                                            by aaronkatrini
                                            Hi all,

                                            I was looking to upgrade my main multimeter (Asita MD591) with something that has more features. I'll use it mostly for board diagnostic and diy repairs. I've been eyeing out many of those multi-function ones from Aliexpress but can't seem to make my mind up. Here are the features that I'm looking after:

                                            - Autorange
                                            - DC volts up to 30V
                                            - Accurate Resistance
                                            - Diode test (Beep mode)
                                            - Frequency up to 200MHz
                                            - Capacitanze up to 5000uF
                                            - as cheap as possible

                                            Other functions are not needed but those which are needed...
                                            05-06-2024, 09:54 AM
                                          • Dan81
                                            The Cheap Duo - Two SiS machines
                                            by Dan81
                                            Just as the title states. Two cheap SiS machines, surprisingly stable.

                                            What I will tackle in the near future (the build will be slightly postponed due to slight stomach issues - am still recovering and my physical power (sorry if it sounds weird,English isn't quite my primary language) isn't the best at the moment. Especially with the diet I have to take at the moment.) are two SiS based machines.

                                            The first one is a IPC rebranded Mitac 7521T. Why did I feel the need to tackle this machine? Well, just look at the specs:

                                            CPU - P3 1100MHz Coppermine...
                                            04-16-2022, 12:28 PM
                                          • eccerr0r
                                            Caseless Cheap Chinese electronic tools
                                            by eccerr0r
                                            "Caseless Cheap Chinese electronic tools" I mean things you get from banggood, ali, fleabay, Am-Zon, etc. like AVR-Transistortester, miscellaneous signal generators, frequency counters, (variable) power supplies, oscilloscopes, low resistance meters, etc., etc. that comes optionally with a case, or comes only with a cheap piece of plastic that barely provides protection to the PCB.

                                            Just wondering what of these (generally flimsy) tools you actually find use (almost) everyday and find indispensable for the price, compared to buying a Fluke or whatnot, if there is an expensive...
                                            11-23-2021, 03:44 PM
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