best cheap/free scores 1.1
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
The workhorse of the office back in the day, I remember.
Still decent office machines with a high-end Core 2 Duo or Quad. Onboard GPU is a little weak and can't help the CPU with modern browsers.
But with Mypal Quantum / beta, I find these machines still work very well on the web with Windows XP. Hard to believe a 20 YO OS is still capable of coping with the modern web, but it does.
Also got an old time BCN favorite from back in the day; the legendary GX270 full tower! I've recapped thousands of these back in their glory days....now they're pretty extinct. The P4 is at the threshold of retrodom!! This one has some kind of upgraded GPU and sound card in it and 2gb RAM (max it can take). I'll probably resto that just for old times.
I still see these and similar Optiplexes and Dimensions on my local Craigslist every once in a while. But too many people are asking ridiculous prices for them right now for being "retro" - like $50-100. Untested too - the nerve some "sellers" have!
And yet, there are newer Core 2 Duo machines for $30 complete, tested, and working... that don't even sell for this little. Go figure.
If there's anything to get right now for cheap, it's the C2D / C2Q and 1st and 2nd gen i-series Intel machines. They are literally at scrap prices these days... well, for the most part.
P4 + SATA and/or PCI-E GPU... hmmm
I really see no reason to build an ultra-powerful Win9x PC, when in reality it can't handle all of those resources. Anything more than a P4 and 512 MB or RAM is kind of a waste of time. Perhaps just to show that it's possible?
The only benefit behind Win9x, particularly 98SE or ME, is that it has native DOS which can be handy if trying to get many older 90's games to run or late 90's software/games that just doesn't like NT kernel. But anything after 2000-2001 is pretty much better of with Win2k/XP.
So to answer your question: nope, I haven't tried installing 98 on a SATA drive and don't plan to either.Already have a good chunk of my hair missing on top.
I do have a 4Core-DualSATA board and a 939Dual-SATA2 board that both technically support 98 & ME. But I don't think I'll try it on these. The newest I tried on was an Intel d845bg mobo with a 2 GHz P4 + 512 MB of RAM and 80 GB IDE HDD... and it ran beautifully.
Interior. This is the first clamshell style AIO I've ever seen that needed a hydraulic lift arm to open!
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1691881751
Not for IKEA desks... or worse, Amazon Basics
Last month I had to take apart my desk to move it. Even after having 2x 21" CRTs and a 19" CRT on it for the last 10 years (was only a 19" and a 21" before that for another 5 years), it hasn't bowed or budged a single bit. The funniest part is that when I started taking it apart, I found that the screws holding the top piece were never tightened. Yet it held fine for so many years.
Saw a few Dells back in 2017 like that and they had overheating issues. What a surprise.
I'm guessing the one with the slightly different dust cap was the one sold for parts?
The JVC amp looks decent too. Early/mid 90's?Last edited by momaka; 08-17-2023, 06:20 AM.Comment
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Mega EDU score.
Probably ~20 or so 4th gen I-series towers, most I7's.
3x HP Pro 4300 AIO's, all 3 work, one has a cracked screen.
Tons of high end gigabit network gear.
Of course boxes full of the usual shit that breeds; cords, keyboards, mice, etc....<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
P4 + 120GB SATA HDD (Hitachi pull from a Xbox 360) + AGP GPU was the combo (ASRock 775i65G was the MB, GPU was some random Palit FX5500 256MB I had around).
I surprisingly got it working. But I wouldn't recommend it for the impatient.I have another one that I need to get going, a MSI 865PE Neo3-V + Radeon 9550. Same stuff.
Last edited by Dan81; 08-18-2023, 02:18 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
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Those were the upper end of the Finnish hifi in the late 70's. Seas and Audax elements. Seas changed the dust cap (in ~1977) but the model is the same. The saved unit is the only in mint condition(!), even the grille cloth is like new.Comment
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
It's definitely workstation class as noted in my original post mentioning it. Entire body is metal; not sure if it's aluminum or magnesium....but it's a friggin tank!! Entire unit weighs 50+ pounds. The foot on the base is 18" deep. Has a MXM slot for GPU upgrades, socketed for 1155 CPU's, 2nd or 3rd gen I's or E3 v1 or v2 Xeons. Long DIMM's and ECC support. RAID support. The build quality of this is reminiscent of what HP used to be. I am going to do a little build with this just for the fun of it....so hang in there!!<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Sadly they're just scrap now....I can't give them away.....and I would if someone wanted them.
Ha, nice!
I still see these and similar Optiplexes and Dimensions on my local Craigslist every once in a while. But too many people are asking ridiculous prices for them right now for being "retro" - like $50-100. Untested too - the nerve some "sellers" have!
And yet, there are newer Core 2 Duo machines for $30 complete, tested, and working... that don't even sell for this little. Go figure.
P4 + Win98: OK
P4 + SATA and/or PCI-E GPU... hmmm
I really see no reason to build an ultra-powerful Win9x PC, when in reality it can't handle all of those resources. Anything more than a P4 and 512 MB or RAM is kind of a waste of time. Perhaps just to show that it's possible?
The only benefit behind Win9x, particularly 98SE or ME, is that it has native DOS which can be handy if trying to get many older 90's games to run or late 90's software/games that just doesn't like NT kernel. But anything after 2000-2001 is pretty much better of with Win2k/XP.
No, this is not for a pressed-wood desk. My dad has been drooling over a 27" iMac that Apple forced obsolescence on....I did a native Win10E install on it and will give that to him. Large screen, decent build quality, but nowhere near as intimidating to man-handle. He's 82.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Scored these last Sunday:
- Vortex LED-V32C02D TV - your average cheapo P.R.C-made 32incher - $54
- Xbox 360S "Trinity" - $32, came with AC adapter and a wireless controller too
- prebuilt "DAVIO GAMER" machine w/ JNC case, DEER PSU, Sempron LE-1300 and a 9400GT, 2GB DDR2 - $10, got gutted and a 1st gen 1155 i3 resides inside it at the moment w/ HD6670
- Intel 520 Series 120GB SSD - $4, all it was missing were the casing screws on the top(I did test it - 100% healthy, no issues whatsoever!)
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
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
My ohh my....the beauty I got today!! Dell Precision 610!! These are circa ~2000; dual slot 2 workstations.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
More scores:
- 2x Xbox 360. The irony - beaten up Jasper boots fine, Trinity RRODs.
- Luckytech/SYE P6VBX7 - nice lil' baby-AT mobo, VIA693 (non-A) + Celeron 433. Needs new caps and DIN socket, but it POST'd fine w/ a GF2 MX400 and 128MB SDRAM.
- a large delicious pizza, a cold Pepsi and a cold Fanta - gotta keep cool during the summer here somehowLast edited by Dan81; 08-27-2023, 04:09 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
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Received yet another of those HP Z1 27" workstations and some smaller more 'normal' HP AIO's along with about 20 random I-series towers.
This Z1 workstation actually had the upgraded GPU and the HDD caddy. Nice condition....think this one will go on wife's desk.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
This has been a good week for retro stuff being dropped.
First up is a complete Dell Dimension 4100 system Little old lady bought it new.....with the upgraded 19" monitor, Altec Lansing speaker system with sub.
All the paperwork, including the invoice and the service contract. She paid $1650 for this. It's a pentium3 800eb, 128mb RAM, TNT2 32mb, and a 20gb HDD.
Boxes full of software and blank media.....tons of new old stock 3.5" floppies still in the shrinkwrap.
The HDD had been wiped apparently, OS and all data was gone. Reinstalled Win2k after kicking the RAM up to 512mb. Optical was strugging to read, so just hung another long enough for the install.
The speakers, keyboard, and mouse.... That is oneof the recycle center junk bins....I'll pull these out before taking a load on Monday. The little devil on my shoulder really wants to stick a VP6 in this case, great period-specific sleeper.....but it's so complete and minty, I haven't talked myself into this yet; despite the fact that otherwise this is a pretty worthless system. Because of the CRT, I was paid to take this system.
Next up is a 14" triniton monitor; again, paid to take. It has Vaio on it in several places....so yea, was originally with some old sony vaio system. It's dirty and has a couple small flea bites on the screen....but it works well. As per the usual for a Trinitron, it has a fabulous picture on it.....I hate to scrap it....but the decision hasn't been made yet.
Now for the pick of the litter. A Dell Precision 610 dual slot-2 workstation!
I've never seen one of these, but knew they existed. They are impossible to find now. I have it's baby brother; the Precision 410 which is a dual slot-1 in the same case.
This unit only has one of the CPU's installed and 512mb ECC RAM. There's two 18gb SCSI HDD's in it with a Win2k install. Not sure what the GPU is. I tracked down the second CPU for 15 bucks with the heatsink (proprietary dell), stroke of luck there! It's not here yet though. The classic GX chipset can take 2gb RAM....but I haven't ordered any for it yet. The floppy doesn't work. ODD's do. The DAT drive is untested as of now.
Win2k install has a password....and my utilities wouldn't see the SCSI HD which surprised me (common AIC-78xx)....so I couldn't clear the password off it....but I'll play around with this a little more later when I have some more time.
That was the notable stuff for the week.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Have you tried chntpw to reset the Win2K password?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!
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
This has been a good week for retro stuff being dropped.
First up is a complete Dell Dimension 4100 system Little old lady bought it new.....with the upgraded 19" monitor, Altec Lansing speaker system with sub.
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1693623668
Oooo, so that's the system this monitor could come with.
I can tell you for a fact that this is truly an amazing score, particularly the CRT monitor. How I know? - I have this exact same Dell 19" CRT monitor. I can't remember the M/N right now, but it's easily the best-looking (picture-wise) CRT monitor I've ever had. Previously, I used to think this title was held by my 21" Hitachi CM-814. But after the deguass coil went out on it, I started using this 19" Dell for gaming. That's when I discovered that this is truly the best-looking monitor, color-wise: natural gray and black levels (not hued by a strong/weak CRT gun like on many Sony's), and I can set it where it reaches much brighter whites without touching the complete ultra inky black levels. At full black screen, one cannot tell the monitor is turned on, even in a completely dark room (I've tried it.) And at full white screen, it's blinding... and all of that without the focus or convergence getting soft, like it does on many Sony's and other CRTs too. Resolution-wise, it can do up to 1600x1200... though I think it looks absolutely perfect at 1280x960 @ 85 Hz. It's my "single-player" gaming monitor, because the colors make games much more vivid and lively.
That said, check the caps on yours if you do open it up. IIRC, these were built by/for Philips and then re-branded by Dell. So caps are not going to be premium Japanese brands like they are on Sony CRTs. Shame, because the tube is made by NEC, if I recall.
By far the worst thing about these... or least mine... is the case plastic - it could be quite fragile at this point. Yours looks pristine and not yellowed... but mine looks pretty close to that too. Yet, its plastic has become super brittle. I took it apart a few months ago to inspect why a crack was starting to develop on upper right corner of the front bezel. While taking it apart, I managed to snap a 2x6" piece of plastic from the side of the back cover as I was taking it off... and I wasn't man-handling it in any way. In disbelief that the plastic could be in such a bad shape, I checked on some of the plastic tabs on the front bezel and gently tried flexing each. 2 of them broke off with barely any pressure at all!So beware about that!
All the paperwork, including the invoice and the service contract. She paid $1650 for this. It's a pentium3 800eb, 128mb RAM, TNT2 32mb, and a 20gb HDD.
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1693623668
By "blank media", I'm guessing early CD-Rs. Should still be good to record on, though, if not better than any modern no-name CD-R.
The software might be worth uploading to archive.org if some of it is not on there already.
Next up is a 14" triniton monitor; again, paid to take. It has Vaio on it in several places....so yea, was originally with some old sony vaio system. It's dirty and has a couple small flea bites on the screen....but it works well. As per the usual for a Trinitron, it has a fabulous picture on it.....I hate to scrap it....but the decision hasn't been made yet.
A lot of retro PC builders actually prefer 15" or smallr CRTs, simply because they are easier to carry, store, and set up (less desk space.) Also usually cheaper to ship if local pickup is not possible. The smaller screen + lower resolution is also better for DOS-era and mid-late 90's games.
Should try ebay or some similar place where you get more exposure to your stock. I did monitor a few CRT monitor auctions / listings a while back, and CRTs do sell - not at the crazy prices that you see with many sellers now. For example, I regularly see 17" CRTs with asking prices for $100+, and 19" and 21" for $200-400 respectively. But I haven't seen many of these sell, if at all. Just price it right (maybe like $20-30 max, without shipping... which would probably add another $40-50 for most places in the US), and it should sell a lot quicker.
Now for the pick of the litter. A Dell Precision 610 dual slot-2 workstation!
I've never seen one of these, but knew they existed. They are impossible to find now. I have it's baby brother; the Precision 410 which is a dual slot-1 in the same case.
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...1&d=1693623668
Really wish I took these and many other things that IT dept. director offerend me. They wanted the space back then, and I had the space at home too. I just didn't because at the time, everyone of my friends (and especially family members) kept making fun of me / my "retro" PC hobby and how it was "super lame". Should have not listened, but I was young and a whole lot more naive back then. Ah well, live and learn. :\
But yeah, these old Precisions are super cool and have tank-like PSUs. I particularly remember the one in the Precision I took, because it had a rating on the 5V rail for 40 Amps. And it wasn't a fake rating like on some cheap gutless wonder PSU with a bogus label. Not, the thing was super heavy and had 2x 40 Amp rectifiers for the 5V rail.
I'd probably save all of the mice and KBs you scrap regularly too, lol - at least the older USB ones from the likes of Dell, HP, and Lenovo. Anything past about 2015 or so is garbage. Went to a friend's house a few months ago to show their kids how to do something on the computer... and boy did I absolutely hate it. Should have anticipated it and brought my own KB. No wonder kids don't think there's a difference between tablet, laptop, and desktop when it comes to typing... hence why they see no benefit of moving away from their tablets/phones. I can confirm that new ultra-flat USB keyboards are about as bad as typing on a touchscreen. Well, enough of that rant on this topic... but my point is that the quality of newer stuff is just not there, even if they offer more features and power.
White socket P4's OTOH have crossed the threshold IMHO but inspite of that are not really all that valuable.....still a lot of them around. It'll take another decade or two of them being destroyed before they're more sought-after by the goofballs that collect this stuff.....but they're a long way from Pentium Pro status.
I was goofing around on eBay the other day and somehow eBay's suggested auctions started throwing some old P4 OEM towers at me. Saw one for an Optiplex 170L with pretty much the same specs as my main XP rig, but without an HDD. Price: $60. I laughed and thought, who'd buy that for this price?! Turns out, 8 sold and only 3 left in stock.:wft: So I guess people do buy these. Granted S&H was included in the price, and these older towers are somewhat heavy, so I imagine at least half of that will go towards the shipping. But surely, even $20 is not bad for such an old piece, especially without an OS and HDD. Basically a no-effort sale for a PC just tested to boot to BIOS.
Funny thing, a gen-1 I-series is still perfectly usable. Heck, my office machine is a Westmere Xeon setup....which is just a fancy first gen I-series with more cores and bigger caches. My Harpertown Xeon system is still in use; albeit it's been demoted to the service bench....but it gets used every day...it's the only Win7 system remaining in my fleet.
It didn't take much to bring it down. However, it did have much lower overhead on the old hardware at the time. So for games, it just made better sense, at least until more powerful CPUs and systems came out.
Well, clearly you haven't dealt with any Amazon Basics furniture.You'd be lucky to get any real pressed-wood pieces.
Most of it is more like a mix of OSB with recycled cardboard material in it. Many pieces can barely hold under their own weight... and they don't even weight that much to begin with!
Last edited by momaka; 09-03-2023, 01:17 PM.Comment
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Moar stuff:
- Gigabyte GTX1050 2GB GDDR5 - $22 - working fine, just needed cleaning
- XFX Radeon HD7970 3GB GDDR5 - $6.60 - working fine, needs fans
- Chaintech 5IFM1-M202/430HX - unfortunately dead from what I can tell... no POST or beeps with three different CPUs (P166 classic, P233 MMX and Cyrix 6x86) - $1
- Xbox 360 controller - $11
*prices roughly converted from RON to USD.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
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Want to sell the 7970? I've got fans and need a spare card...Originally posted by PeteS in CARemember that by the time consequences of a short-sighted decision are experienced, the idiot who made the bad decision may have already been promoted or moved on to a better job at another company.Comment
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Oooo, so that's the system this monitor could come with.
I can tell you for a fact that this is truly an amazing score, particularly the CRT monitor. How I know? - I have this exact same Dell 19" CRT monitor. I can't remember the M/N right now, but it's easily the best-looking (picture-wise) CRT monitor I've ever had. Previously, I used to think this title was held by my 21" Hitachi CM-814. But after the deguass coil went out on it, I started using this 19" Dell for gaming. That's when I discovered that this is truly the best-looking monitor, color-wise: natural gray and black levels (not hued by a strong/weak CRT gun like on many Sony's), and I can set it where it reaches much brighter whites without touching the complete ultra inky black levels. At full black screen, one cannot tell the monitor is turned on, even in a completely dark room (I've tried it.) And at full white screen, it's blinding... and all of that without the focus or convergence getting soft, like it does on many Sony's and other CRTs too. Resolution-wise, it can do up to 1600x1200... though I think it looks absolutely perfect at 1280x960 @ 85 Hz. It's my "single-player" gaming monitor, because the colors make games much more vivid and lively.
The whole system.....
By far the worst thing about these... or least mine... is the case plastic - it could be quite fragile at this point. Yours looks pristine and not yellowed... but mine looks pretty close to that too. Yet, its plastic has become super brittle. I took it apart a few months ago to inspect why a crack was starting to develop on upper right corner of the front bezel. While taking it apart, I managed to snap a 2x6" piece of plastic from the side of the back cover as I was taking it off... and I wasn't man-handling it in any way. In disbelief that the plastic could be in such a bad shape, I checked on some of the plastic tabs on the front bezel and gently tried flexing each. 2 of them broke off with barely any pressure at all!So beware about that!
Nah, IMO you should leave it as-is. Indeed too minty and you'd have to swap out the PSU too. The original is probably one of those proprietary Dell ones with the non-standard wire ordering on the ATX connector. They are really good quality PSUs, though. The ones from LiteOn were always an all-Japanese cap affair inside. Bulletproof!
A lot of retro PC builders actually prefer 15" or smallr CRTs, simply because they are easier to carry, store, and set up (less desk space.) Also usually cheaper to ship if local pickup is not possible. The smaller screen + lower resolution is also better for DOS-era and mid-late 90's games.
Really wish I took these and many other things that IT dept. director offerend me. They wanted the space back then, and I had the space at home too. I just didn't because at the time, everyone of my friends (and especially family members) kept making fun of me / my "retro" PC hobby and how it was "super lame". Should have not listened, but I was young and a whole lot more naive back then. Ah well, live and learn. :\
But yeah, these old Precisions are super cool and have tank-like PSUs. I particularly remember the one in the Precision I took, because it had a rating on the 5V rail for 40 Amps. And it wasn't a fake rating like on some cheap gutless wonder PSU with a bogus label. Not, the thing was super heavy and had 2x 40 Amp rectifiers for the 5V rail.
desktop when it comes to typing... hence why they see no benefit of moving away from their tablets/phones. I can confirm that new ultra-flat USB keyboards are about as bad as typing on a touchscreen. Well, enough of that rant on this topic... but my point is that the quality of newer stuff is just not there, even if they offer more features and power.
Can't blame you. Anything on the NT kernel is a lot more stable and harder to crash. In contrast, 9x was like biking... naked... on a dirt road... with skinny road tires.It didn't take much to bring it down. However, it did have much lower overhead on the old hardware at the time. So for games, it just made better sense, at least until more powerful CPUs and systems came out.
Well, clearly you haven't dealt with any Amazon Basics furniture.You'd be lucky to get any real pressed-wood pieces.
Most of it is more like a mix of OSB with recycled cardboard material in it. Many pieces can barely hold under their own weight... and they don't even weight that much to begin with!
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
Thanks but I'll keep it. I already found a donor XFX card that is heavily artefacting that comes with the complete heatsink.
I'll order it sometime this week and transplant its HSF onto my 7970, then it'll be a good replacement for the already tired 7870 I have from Gigabyte (which already went through a reflow once - that card has had a rough life way before I got 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
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Re: best cheap/free scores 1.1
I didn't. I just did a quick reinstall of Windows without formatting; leaving all the data there. Wasn't much on it. Some MP3's, but nothing I liked or didn't already have. No naughty pics. I think someone wiped it shortly before taking it out of service. The 'last accessed' data on all of the files I checked were ~2007. Apparently it's been sitting a long time.
I added the second CPU, no issues. It's running the fastest CPU's it can take; Tanner (or earlier) cores only. It apparently won't run a Cascades, unit wouldn't even power up with them installed....apparently Cascades support didn't come along until the Precision 620 although the GX chipset technically did support them. The Tanner 550MHz 512K L2 is what it's got. The only CPU upgrade would be the same speed but the 2MB L2 caches....not really worth it IMO....just going to run with what I've got.
Still need to get some RAM for it. 512mb will get it by....but I'll max it @ 2gb. The GPU has been identified as a Dell branded (made by visiontek) Geforce 2 GTS 32mb. Looking through the drivers for this system at Dell's site, this card isn't listed....I wonder if it was offered as some 'unofficial' upgrade over the FireGL and some of the other cards offered with this system..... I had a heck of a time tracking a driver down for it....the legacy Forceware driver wouldn't work it.....but I did finally find one from visiontek on archive.org.
I haven't decided if I'm going to stick a 3DFX card in this or not, I already have a bunch of them already. May keep this one more 'workstation' oriented. It can also take an Adaptec ARO-1130 zero channel RAID upgrade; which essentially turns the onboard SCSI into a RAID controller. Those can be had pretty cheap, may grab one.... The HDD's are not a matching pair. One is an 18gb 10k RPM Quantum Atlas U2 SCSI...and lives up to the memories I have of them...when accessing data, it sounds like it's full of gravel....very noisy drive. The other is a 9.1gb cheetah. I'll probably pull those in favor of a matching pair and a RAID. When I get time to build this one up, I'll create it's own thread.<--- Badcaps.net Founder
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by H34TORecently 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
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by evilkittyMy 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...-
Channel: General Computer & Tech Discussion
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by aaronkatriniHi 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... -
by Dan81Just 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...-
Channel: General Computer & Tech Discussion
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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... - Loading...
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