- Joined
- Jan 1, 2015
- Messages
- 1,800 (0.50/day)
- Location
- EU
System Name | Adison "Open Space" 19 |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Pentium II, 350MHz |
Motherboard | Chaintech 6BTM, Slot 1 |
Cooling | SECC Cartridge |
Memory | 1x 64MB, PC100 |
Video Card(s) | ATI Rage IIc AGP, Diamond Monster 3DII 12MB |
Storage | BTC BCD-40XH, Quantum Fireball 3.5 Series, EX6.4 GB |
Display(s) | LG StudioWorks 57M |
Case | Adison Midi Tower, ATX |
Audio Device(s) | Creative SoundBlaster 128 |
Power Supply | Codegen 300W |
Mouse | Genius SlimStar 110, PS/2 |
Keyboard | Genius SlimStar 110, PS/2 |
Software | Microsoft Windows 98 |
This system here was donated to a good cause (charity), in fact it's been made only for this particular purpose. It was the best I could do at the moment, I gave it the fastest CPU I could find & loaded it with RAM, combining both with Asus mobo which I personally find very reliable & durable. Besides, it was one of those "3 for the price of one" deals, so I've kept other 2 to feed my retro obsession (Pentium 2 350 and Athlon 750, I think) You can see these boards all together, on the 2nd pic. I considered donating all 3 of them, but let's be honest - most people nowdays wouldn't know what to do with 350MHz system
The rest of the parts are (and were) my own stock, gathered over time. I know it looks impressive, but this huge stack of ODDs and floppy drives has been entirely used by dozens of systems assembled over time, they've all been mounted, thrown into the trash (because they didn't work) or given away to someone. Speaking of defective components, ABIT VH6 was put into the chassis, just so I would realize straight away it doesn't work. Of course, I've tried to have it fixed but eventually had to get rid of it and so it got replaced by the same, S370 Matsonic board instead (pics of both boards down below)
These next pics were actually part of the instruction guide (by myself, made for one particular person), to show them how easy it is to make your own computer system. Whenever it's a socket 775 or Slot 1, it all pretty much comes down to the same thing (sooner or later), which is why I documented every step in the entire process. Obviously (for the sake of repeating myself & spamming TPU), I removed some of the pics in between, otherwise there was a pic to show everything you need to know This also gave me an opportunity to make yet another retro system, so I turned it into Voodoo2 SLI rig. It's been a while, so I've done quite some changes since then. In fact, you might remember few months back when I got that SoundBlaster AWE card... It actually ended up inside this system, here!
These ones are just random pics of my collection...
I once scored this Slot 1 system here for almost nothing and the best part is that it had a Voodoo2 card inside! Frankly speaking, that was pretty much the only reason I bought it... The case was nice & mostly clean, but it was missing those 5.25" rails for mounting optical drives, so after fiddling with alternative solutions, I've stripped it apart & kept all the components which (oddly enough, especially for the given price) all tested OK!
Sealed copy of Windows 95, OEM version (on CD-ROM). I got 3 or 4 of these, one package has been opened, so I used it for "display" purpose. Other ones are in the safe place
Don't really remember what's this one here, but it looks like a Voodoo card, Diamond Monster 3D. If this is what I think it is, then it's the card with pretty weird problem. Apparently it works perfectly fine under Glide (and maybe OpenGL?), but hangs & freezes with entirely black screen if it's a DirectX. I can only assume that something somewhere went terribly wrong, but since it does seem to be working, I decided to hang onto it...
Speaking of Voodoo cards, this one is yet another Diamond - except this one is Voodoo2, aka Diamond Monster 3DII. This one is entirely dead, it doesn't even power up. Just a single glance at the card itself & you can see why, doesn't take much experience to figure it out Too bad actually, these are becoming more & more difficult to find, and their prices went up through the roof!
More stuff...
Overall, you guys can probably tell how much I like my retro stuff Of course, most of these systems have been upgraded in the meantime, especially graphics! I used to have a "model" for building old systems and so every time I would use Voodoo2 card, I would (for the sake of authenticity, staying as true as possible to the original recipe) use an old AGP card, something like S3 Virge, SIS 6326 or similar. In other words, just a plain old AGP card to provide the system with essential 2D graphics. However, I've realized over time that 3dfx is not the answer to every requirement, so therefore having a secondary, 3D-capable card along with existing Voodoo2 helps a lot! Especially with games such as Half-Life: Blue Shift for example, which has some serious issues with 3dfx! In fact, I got more than several GeForce2 and Geforce4 cards since then, so most of these standard ones have been replaced with those. ATI, too... Just because I didn't want to repeat myself, I've used "Rage 128" in two different rigs! You know, gotta keep things interesting somehow
The rest of the parts are (and were) my own stock, gathered over time. I know it looks impressive, but this huge stack of ODDs and floppy drives has been entirely used by dozens of systems assembled over time, they've all been mounted, thrown into the trash (because they didn't work) or given away to someone. Speaking of defective components, ABIT VH6 was put into the chassis, just so I would realize straight away it doesn't work. Of course, I've tried to have it fixed but eventually had to get rid of it and so it got replaced by the same, S370 Matsonic board instead (pics of both boards down below)
These next pics were actually part of the instruction guide (by myself, made for one particular person), to show them how easy it is to make your own computer system. Whenever it's a socket 775 or Slot 1, it all pretty much comes down to the same thing (sooner or later), which is why I documented every step in the entire process. Obviously (for the sake of repeating myself & spamming TPU), I removed some of the pics in between, otherwise there was a pic to show everything you need to know This also gave me an opportunity to make yet another retro system, so I turned it into Voodoo2 SLI rig. It's been a while, so I've done quite some changes since then. In fact, you might remember few months back when I got that SoundBlaster AWE card... It actually ended up inside this system, here!
These ones are just random pics of my collection...
I once scored this Slot 1 system here for almost nothing and the best part is that it had a Voodoo2 card inside! Frankly speaking, that was pretty much the only reason I bought it... The case was nice & mostly clean, but it was missing those 5.25" rails for mounting optical drives, so after fiddling with alternative solutions, I've stripped it apart & kept all the components which (oddly enough, especially for the given price) all tested OK!
Sealed copy of Windows 95, OEM version (on CD-ROM). I got 3 or 4 of these, one package has been opened, so I used it for "display" purpose. Other ones are in the safe place
Don't really remember what's this one here, but it looks like a Voodoo card, Diamond Monster 3D. If this is what I think it is, then it's the card with pretty weird problem. Apparently it works perfectly fine under Glide (and maybe OpenGL?), but hangs & freezes with entirely black screen if it's a DirectX. I can only assume that something somewhere went terribly wrong, but since it does seem to be working, I decided to hang onto it...
Speaking of Voodoo cards, this one is yet another Diamond - except this one is Voodoo2, aka Diamond Monster 3DII. This one is entirely dead, it doesn't even power up. Just a single glance at the card itself & you can see why, doesn't take much experience to figure it out Too bad actually, these are becoming more & more difficult to find, and their prices went up through the roof!
More stuff...
Overall, you guys can probably tell how much I like my retro stuff Of course, most of these systems have been upgraded in the meantime, especially graphics! I used to have a "model" for building old systems and so every time I would use Voodoo2 card, I would (for the sake of authenticity, staying as true as possible to the original recipe) use an old AGP card, something like S3 Virge, SIS 6326 or similar. In other words, just a plain old AGP card to provide the system with essential 2D graphics. However, I've realized over time that 3dfx is not the answer to every requirement, so therefore having a secondary, 3D-capable card along with existing Voodoo2 helps a lot! Especially with games such as Half-Life: Blue Shift for example, which has some serious issues with 3dfx! In fact, I got more than several GeForce2 and Geforce4 cards since then, so most of these standard ones have been replaced with those. ATI, too... Just because I didn't want to repeat myself, I've used "Rage 128" in two different rigs! You know, gotta keep things interesting somehow
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