Well... This took me longer than I expected, but at least I've done it the RIGHT way (as in, from scratch)
So yeah, just like I expected ... the old SCSI drive, one of the two drives to be exact got to the point where every single read or write cycle would result with I/O errors and repeated clicking over & over (until the system would either crash or report random problem)
It's a shame really, as much as I dislike SCSI technology, these old SCSI drives have that old charm ... especially the spin-up & spin-down cycles, it sounds almost like the jet engine on a 747!
However, with that being said, this unit here was overheating (among other problems), to the point where I burned my hand just from touching the outer cage, case support frame. It had to be AT LEAST 131F, which means the actual drive(s) inside the cage had to be even higher, I would say around 140, 150F which is pretty bizarre for a hard drive IMHO.
Either way, I replaced it with standard IDE ATA unit from IBM. Not only it doesn't run as hot, but it's also a LOT more quieter, and holds 7GB more storage than Seagate, so it was definitely a perfect choice. Best of all, I didn't even have to add (or remove) any cables, since I already have IDE CD-ROM inside, so all I had to do was to make CD "slave" and hook the IBM as "master". Meanwhile, the other Seagate SCSI drive is still inside, and it's been remapped through both Adaptec SCSI integrated utility and Windows 95 itself, so that all the bad sectors are removed. Ironically, I converted it into a backup drive, which now holds the entire Acronis True Image restore image, of the IBM drive.
Once I took care of the storage solutions, I resumed with all the games & testing the Pentium Pro in action. Games such as Tomb Raider 2 & 3 for example, along with both "Gold" additions
Despite using Voodoo Rush on a Pentium Pro system I didn't have much problems with recognizing the hardware most of the time. As you can tell from the pic, Need For Speed II SE immediately recognized 3dfx hardware, along with Need For Speed III Hot Pursuit, which seems to be working perfectly OK even on maximum settings! (even though recommended values were all set to low by default)
However, not all the games worked straight out of the box, some of them didn't work at all! Quake 2 was one of them, no matter which driver I picked from the menu it either showed garbled image or crashed the entire game. I even tried with newer title Unreal Gold, just to see if it would work. Everything installed properly, and it even detected Glide hardware, but 1st it warned me about "Not having MMX-supported CPU", and then it crashed the entire game. The actual crash was due to graphics, Voodoo Rush not being recognized or configured properly, where the MMX message was just a warning. Apparently Pentium Pro was either not recognized and/or supported by the game, so I removed it.