If there is any to keep it's gotta be a Adeptec
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Your wish is my command! No, seriously!
I would never remove (original) SCSI controller, even if I'm not planning to use it, altogether! With that being said, I've decided to keep the SCSI equipment, but I'm probably going to add yet another, 3rd (ATA) hard drive which is going to be the main storage, while the two SCSI are going to be additional storage, just for "fun" & nostalgia. My only worry is the power consumption, 3 hard drives are going to pull a LOT of juice from the PSU...
It's not a sealed box by any means. It was just very rarely used I guess. I got it from someone else that put it in a system way back when then scored a much better card. It sat in its box in his closet for years.
Ah, OK then!
Nevertheless, if I were you, I'd keep that MX (as it is) just for the sake of nostalgia! There are hundreds (and thousands) of MX400 out there, without boxes and/or any documentation. But that's just my personal opinion, I like it when the retro hardware (or software) is fully preserved & untouched
Doesn't necessarily has to be sealed, as long as the packaging is in perfect condition & has all the documentation & instruction manuals included.
I'm use to dealing with SCSI from using Macintosh then Power Macintosh systems so I don't find SCSI to be a PITA for me. I remember trying to get a external UMAX flat-bed scanner to play along with a external Iomega Jaz Drive via Adaptec Ultra SCSI PCI card.
Found the card I had in a Power Mac Clone.
Adaptec AHA-2940/2940U PCI
I first came across SCSI that been custom-added into a Pentium 2 machine, long time ago. Someone sold it as just standard Pentium 2 (350MHz) unit, but either forgot or didn't care to mention the Adaptec PCI SCSI controller & WD Enterprise had drive. Obviously I took it out & kept the entire SCSI kit for some other project, so it eventually ended up inside old Pentium MMX 233 machine, it was a perfect combo IMHO since the Enterprise drive was pretty small in the terms of capacity. However, the motor (and seek) noise was terrible, I could NEVER get used to SCSI racket!
I still have it inside, and no I'm not going to change anything but after my initial experience with SCSI drives I've decided never to use this thing again. And I didn't ... until I got my hands on a Pentium Pro machine, which once again came with Adaptec SCSI controller & two Seagate Barracuda drives. True, I considered to swap them out for ATA units & remove the controller (and cables) altogether, but in the end decided to keep them. God knows why, that Pentium Pro is loud enough to wake the dead
Not to mention these drives take a long time to spin down, twice more than your average 7200RPM hard drive. And yet, despite my feelings towards SCSI, now I have yet another unit with two more drives ... what a joy!
But I'm all about originality & preserving the history, so therefore it stays! In fact, I might even be able to source yet another, identical Adaptec controller card if needed and could probably get it for free. In fact, I was offered to strip all the remaining parts from other HP Visualize unit, but decided not to take it. To be honest, I wouldn't know what to do with it...
So with that being said, here are more pics & final conclusion
Remember this card from way, way back? GeForce4 Ti4800SE, the most powerful GF4 out there AFAIK. Initially it was paired up with S478 Pentium 4, running @ 2GHz, but due to HP Visualize & the fact I could only use AGP 1x/2x interface, I pulled it out & swapped for ATI Radeon 9550. Yeah, I know... In the terms of performance, this is definitely a downgrade for Pentium 4 machine, however I DID end up with 4800 "extra". Which needless to say, ended up inside my HP Visualize system right away & was a perfect match!
With all the internal cables lined up & properly organized (as much as I could, considering the terrible case design without any "pockets" & empty bays) & Ti4800 set up, I would say this one is finished for now. Perhaps I'll add additional hard drive in the future, but 1st I need to source a pair of 5.25 to 3.5" conversion rails, since I'm all out of 3.5" drive bays.
3DMark 2001 benchmark results, running at 1024x768, 32bit color (24bit buffer) and 4x AA
Visualize is running Win2k, latest SP (again, for the sake of originality), but I might eventually change it to XP Professional, SP3. Again, we'll see...
Edit
Now that I'm comparing benchmark results with other numbers, these 4431 points seem to be awfully low... Wonder what's the catch, I should be getting a lot more with 1GB of RAM, 2GHz CPU(s) and SCSI drive *shrug*