- 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 |
Earlier today, I had a surprise visit & was given (back) something I didn't see for quite some time... You guys remember that Asus A7M266 board with the keyboard issue, right?
I picked it up long time ago hoping to make a Duron build around it, featuring the (in)famous Savage4 Pro card. Obviously, my plans didn't quite work out, so in the end (after going through 3 different motherboards & eventually swapping the video card for nVidia's M64) I ended up with Asus A7A266. Close to what I had in mind, but not quite. Has a Duron 950 & 256 of DDR RAM. This particular build is still here in my collection, although I never really used it for anything apart from testing purposes.
But no, this isn't about A7A model... As I said, earlier today I was given back A7M board, which (last time I had it) would randomly lock out in BIOS, freeze the keyboard and/or mouse resulting with no way to control the system, DOS or even the BIOS. Whenever it's PS/2 or USB, it didn't make any difference whatsoever. And so, I was going to dump it. Seriously, what's the point of keeping non-functioning hardware around, especially since I got tons of S462 boards laying around? But no, to my surprise when I hooked everything up & plugged in the new CPU and RAM it booted up perfectly fine. It DID however lock out several times, but whenever I restarted the system afterwards, it worked OK & would keep working perfectly OK until shutdown.
So I took the liberty of building a quick AMD system based on A7M board, featuring Athlon 1333 with Radeon 7500 and 512 MB of RAM, in 2x 256MB config. And I'm happy to report that everything seems to be working perfectly fine, now that I have the XP up & running. Even if the "peripherals" don't work upon the boot, they DO get recognized & work fine under Windows, which is obviously most important I didn't take any pics (and no, I'm not planning to keep this system, it was already given away to someone), but it only shows (and proves) that you better check twice before discarding old hardware components, even if they appear to be beyond repairs.
I picked it up long time ago hoping to make a Duron build around it, featuring the (in)famous Savage4 Pro card. Obviously, my plans didn't quite work out, so in the end (after going through 3 different motherboards & eventually swapping the video card for nVidia's M64) I ended up with Asus A7A266. Close to what I had in mind, but not quite. Has a Duron 950 & 256 of DDR RAM. This particular build is still here in my collection, although I never really used it for anything apart from testing purposes.
But no, this isn't about A7A model... As I said, earlier today I was given back A7M board, which (last time I had it) would randomly lock out in BIOS, freeze the keyboard and/or mouse resulting with no way to control the system, DOS or even the BIOS. Whenever it's PS/2 or USB, it didn't make any difference whatsoever. And so, I was going to dump it. Seriously, what's the point of keeping non-functioning hardware around, especially since I got tons of S462 boards laying around? But no, to my surprise when I hooked everything up & plugged in the new CPU and RAM it booted up perfectly fine. It DID however lock out several times, but whenever I restarted the system afterwards, it worked OK & would keep working perfectly OK until shutdown.
So I took the liberty of building a quick AMD system based on A7M board, featuring Athlon 1333 with Radeon 7500 and 512 MB of RAM, in 2x 256MB config. And I'm happy to report that everything seems to be working perfectly fine, now that I have the XP up & running. Even if the "peripherals" don't work upon the boot, they DO get recognized & work fine under Windows, which is obviously most important I didn't take any pics (and no, I'm not planning to keep this system, it was already given away to someone), but it only shows (and proves) that you better check twice before discarding old hardware components, even if they appear to be beyond repairs.