If I remember rightly I was using some AMD XP 2000 CPUs or something near to that, I remember having the XP-M CPUs and they used to overclock like crazy!! I've got to go now and dig out some pics!! lol
If I remember rightly I was using some AMD XP 2000 CPUs or something near to that, I remember having the XP-M CPUs and they used to overclock like crazy!! I've got to go now and dig out some pics!! lol
Ah... I remember getting into PC's about the 1998 mark, my Amiga 1200 that I had was upgraded to PPC 603e+ with a BlizzardVision PPC and it was a monster.. The shame of it was when I had sent it away to get upgraded they didn't upgrade the PSU in it at all and the bodge that came back tripped the house out and then killed everything :'( I was in pieces having just spent £1600 on it to get it done.. God I loved that system.. I still have a few Amiga's here to this day but nothing spec'd even close to that... What I got back from the company after claiming through the house insurance was sold off and I got into PC's.. God I wish I could find something similar like it today, if I had the cash, I'd have bought it in a flash.. But that said, I'm wanting to grab myself a Amiga 4000T, if I can find one upgraded, I'm going for it...
Ah... I remember getting into PC's about the 1998 mark, my Amiga 1200 that I had was upgraded to PPC 603e+ with a BlizzardVision PPC and it was a monster.. The shame of it was when I had sent it away to get upgraded they didn't upgrade the PSU in it at all and the bodge that came back tripped the house out and then killed everything :'( I was in pieces having just spent £1600 on it to get it done.. God I loved that system.. I still have a few Amiga's here to this day but nothing spec'd even close to that... What I got back from the company after claiming through the house insurance was sold off and I got into PC's.. God I wish I could find something similar like it today, if I had the cash, I'd have bought it in a flash.. But that said, I'm wanting to grab myself a Amiga 4000T, if I can find one upgraded, I'm going for it...
Seriously though, nice rig(s)! Especially the keyboard, reminds me of my own BTC keyboard from 1998, 1999 & Pentium II machine, while it still had the original case Which (I'm sorry to say) replaced for much cheaper, generic one in 2006 because I thought the old one was too banged up & noisy. And it was ... but it was also highly unique!
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Same system today
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I take it that AC "5NV Silencer" GPU cooler is aftermarket mod?
Seriously though, nice rig(s)! Especially the keyboard, reminds me of my own BTC keyboard from 1998, 1999 & Pentium II machine, while it still had the original case Which (I'm sorry to say) replaced for much cheaper, generic one in 2006 because I thought the old one was too banged up & noisy. And it was ... but it was also highly unique!
Edit2
I take it that AC "5NV Silencer" GPU cooler is aftermarket mod?
I believe so, it came with the card, I believe it was an eBay buy, wished I had kept hold of it all really but there's so much stuff I'd have no where to put it!
They are just pictures of the kit I used to have, I have some of the hardware but I'm over run with it at the moment! My PC room is fulling up and there's no way I'm going to be able to afford a house extension or a bigger house at this rate lol !!
Here's one pic of some graphics cards I was very happy to have taken
Wish I never sold the Rampage but the EVGA 759 I have still
I'm going to say that the FB-DIMM's I bought with my D5400XS won't be showing up since it's been over a month.
The board seems to work okay though from what I can tell. I ordered some more, Genuine IBM Elpida 2x1GB PC2-5300F kit. Hopefully I get these ones.
The same seller had a set of 2x512MB Buffalo Firestix PC2-8000 CL5 for sale too so I snapped them up as well. Should be Micron D9GKX on them. Already have a few nice kit's of Crucial Ballistix D9's but having more D9 never hurts.
Yeah GTAIII are pretty easy on the hardware. I got it running on very slow 66MHz FSB Celeron 600MHz with intel i810 IGP abeit at very slow framerate (It was Dell Optiplex GX100 without AGP slot). So slow in fact I can admire the exhaust fumes coming out when accelerating. It might sounds funny but 3D was big thing back then and a huge jump from GTA2 which I played massively before.
Yeah GTAIII are pretty easy on the hardware. I got it running on very slow 66MHz FSB Celeron 600MHz with intel i810 IGP abeit at very slow framerate (It was Dell Optiplex GX100 without AGP slot). So slow in fact I can admire the exhaust fumes coming out when accelerating. It might sounds funny but 3D was big thing back then and a huge jump from GTA2 which I played massively before.
Right, I got two GX110 myself (both "PizzaBox" Desktop & Tower models), but to tell you the truth, I never really tried to run GTA3 on those two It's kinda funny actually (especially because of your avatar), since the tower GX110 came with Max Payne CD inside the NEC CD-ROM drive lol. Not original, it was just a standard Traxdata, home-made copy but I've decided to keep it afterwards & gave Max Payne a try since I never played the game before!
And yes, seeing Kuruma parked on the Callahan bridge during the opening cutscene was just breathtaking. I actually remember my initial thought from back in a day, I was absolutely sure that I'm (still) seeing cutscene and that (once the actual gameplay takes over) the camera would go back up, "topdown" mode like it did in both GTA, GTA London & GTA2 TBH, this is probably why Kuruma is my favorite car in GTA3...
I'm going to say that the FB-DIMM's I bought with my D5400XS won't be showing up since it's been over a month.
The board seems to work okay though from what I can tell. I ordered some more, Genuine IBM Elpida 2x1GB PC2-5300F kit. Hopefully I get these ones.
The same seller had a set of 2x512MB Buffalo Firestix PC2-8000 CL5 for sale too so I snapped them up as well. Should be Micron D9GKX on them. Already have a few nice kit's of Crucial Ballistix D9's but having more D9 never hurts.
I think I remember the stuff.. I used to have some Crucial ram, PC5300, used to clock like a crazy man, went to 1066Mhz without any issue!! Wish I had some of that but then I don't have any DDR2 systems I don't think so best not go down that route!! Please let us know how it goes??!
Yeah GTAIII are pretty easy on the hardware. I got it running on very slow 66MHz FSB Celeron 600MHz with intel i810 IGP abeit at very slow framerate (It was Dell Optiplex GX100 without AGP slot). So slow in fact I can admire the exhaust fumes coming out when accelerating. It might sounds funny but 3D was big thing back then and a huge jump from GTA2 which I played massively before.
Right, I got two GX110 myself (both "PizzaBox" Desktop & Tower models), but to tell you the truth, I never really tried to run GTA3 on those two It's kinda funny actually (especially because of your avatar), since the tower GX110 came with Max Payne CD inside the NEC CD-ROM drive lol. Not original, it was just a standard Traxdata, home-made copy but I've decided to keep it afterwards & gave Max Payne a try since I never played the game before!
And yes, seeing Kuruma parked on the Callahan bridge during the opening cutscene was just breathtaking. I actually remember my initial thought from back in a day, I was absolutely sure that I'm (still) seeing cutscene and that (once the actual gameplay takes over) the camera would go back up, "topdown" mode like it did in both GTA, GTA London & GTA2 TBH, this is probably why Kuruma is my favorite car in GTA3...
I think I've got to see if I can get a small PC together and get GTA running on it with XP or something.. All this talk of retro games, it needs a retro system for it to run on!!
Right, I got two GX110 myself (both "PizzaBox" Desktop & Tower models), but to tell you the truth, I never really tried to run GTA3 on those two It's kinda funny actually (especially because of your avatar), since the tower GX110 came with Max Payne CD inside the NEC CD-ROM drive lol. Not original, it was just a standard Traxdata, home-made copy but I've decided to keep it afterwards & gave Max Payne a try since I never played the game before!
And yes, seeing Kuruma parked on the Callahan bridge during the opening cutscene was just breathtaking. I actually remember my initial thought from back in a day, I was absolutely sure that I'm (still) seeing cutscene and that (once the actual gameplay takes over) the camera would go back up, "topdown" mode like it did in both GTA, GTA London & GTA2 TBH, this is probably why Kuruma is my favorite car in GTA3...
Haha that's really unexpected with cracked copy of Max Payne I kinda miss the GX100 because it's the 'proper' early PC for me since my original PC was Pentium 166MHz non MMX. Some stories about my early PC on spoiler if you wanted to read further
I tried to run Red Alert 2 on it and it doesn't go well. Took 15 minutes to load a level and another 5 minutes just to build power plant Harddisk was too small to install it and need to compress it so that's the major reason for the slowdown. The GX100 seems like a speed demon compared to it.
The i810 graphics is unique since it have dedicated framebuffer (I remember there is a couple of RAM chips besides the northbridge) but can't remember how much. The Intel driver is a major letdown. I remember to properly play Return To Castle Wofenstein I need to load one specific level (where you get the elusive 'Snooper' rifle and play stealth entire level) in that level there is one tunnel that I need to run through and turn left to the exit for the texture to load properly. If not the entire game is just white texture. So everytime I wanted to play it I need to load this section first . Other Quake3 engine title like Medal of Honor Allied Assault don't exhibit this problem though
You nailed it. That opening scene is very nostalgic. The green Kuruma and when you enter the car the radio turns on and starts with' This is head radio...' near the end of the radio intro people saying 'thank you' it feels like the devs thanking me instead. A proper way to start a game IMO.
Haha that's really unexpected with cracked copy of Max Payne I kinda miss the GX100 because it's the 'proper' early PC for me since my original PC was Pentium 166MHz non MMX. Some stories about my early PC on spoiler if you wanted to read further
I tried to run Red Alert 2 on it and it doesn't go well. Took 15 minutes to load a level and another 5 minutes just to build power plant Harddisk was too small to install it and need to compress it so that's the major reason for the slowdown. The GX100 seems like a speed demon compared to it.
The i810 graphics is unique since it have dedicated framebuffer (I remember there is a couple of RAM chips besides the northbridge) but can't remember how much. The Intel driver is a major letdown. I remember to properly play Return To Castle Wofenstein I need to load one specific level (where you get the elusive 'Snooper' rifle and play stealth entire level) in that level there is one tunnel that I need to run through and turn left to the exit for the texture to load properly. If not the entire game is just white texture. So everytime I wanted to play it I need to load this section first . Other Quake3 engine title like Medal of Honor Allied Assault don't exhibit this problem though
You nailed it. That opening scene is very nostalgic. The green Kuruma and when you enter the car the radio turns on and starts with' This is head radio...' near the end of the radio intro people saying 'thank you' it feels like the devs thanking me instead. A proper way to start a game IMO.
Yes, exactly. When I was given the 1st GX110, I kept thinking (and expecting) the onboard graphics to be a bunch of crap, just like most of the other "all in one" systems from around the same time. You know, just enough power to run Win98 in 1024x768 mode with 32bit color, but without 3D acceleration support. So instead of trying the onboard chip, I immediately picked up a PCI TNT2 M64 card to provide me with 3D environment. In fact, I still have that same setup inside Desktop (Pizza Box) GX110 today.
2 or 3 years later, one of the guys from the local forum asked me if I'd want to take a free GX110, this time tower case design because he was ready to throw it out into the bin. Apparently because he wasn't using it any longer, and also because the old hard drive, Quantum Fireball was shot & wasn't showing any signs of life. This is the system which had a copy of Max Payne inside, I even messaged the guy afterwards & asked him if he wants the CD back, but he told me to keep it However, I couldn't find a PCI card for this other GX110, so I took one of the spare Voodoo2 cards I've had laying around & put it inside GX110. Obviously, it was working just fine, but when I tried to do a benchmark test in 3DMark 99, comparing single Voodoo2 (12mb) against the onboard video chip I've ended up with almost the same results. Okay, so the 3dfx card was just barely faster in some areas, but they were almost equal. Certainly not something I would expect to see (and find) inside Dell system from back in a day, especially since most of these units were made for corporate usage, offices, banks & similar. In fact, I'm planning to take the Voodoo2 out eventually & put it inside other, dedicated Voodoo2 system because having the Voodoo2 inside Optiplex GX110 is just a waste of resources IMHO.
And guys, I had the unexpected score today! I'll be honest, none of the 3 key components shown in the pictures below are in good condition (in fact, some of them are in really, REALLY bad & sorry state), but with that being said, they MIGHT still work OK, IDK.
Starting with Quantum's Bigfoot drive, appears to be 2nd "CY" series product line. Yes, it's really that rusty on the outside, and the PCB board seems to be in pretty bad state, but with that being said I'm going to hook it up next time I get the chance & see if it boots up! Fingers crossed ... I don't even know the capacity of this thing!
Followed by this lovely S370 VIA C3 processor. You might have noticed that it's missing couple of letters, right? That's because some idiot (and I repeat, IDIOT) glued one of those tiny, small GPU heatsinks across the CPU, to cool it down. You know, like the ones on nVidia M64 & Vanta cards... This thing melted to the heatsink, so when I pulled the heatsink off the CPU, it tore off the letters from the heat spreader! Guess I'm lucky it didn't tore off the entire CPU, exposing the chip underneath Sooo, once again I have NO IDEA if it works or not. It came from a non-working system, with blown PSU & bulging motherboard, which is never a good sign to begin with! I know you can't read the specs, but this model appears to be VIA C3 1.0AGHz, in 100 x 10.0 configuration. I would appreciate more info on this chip here, is it compatible with ALL standard S370 boards, or does it require a "special" one? And what about the voltages, does it share the socket with Coppermine series or Tualatin ones?
And last ... this GeForce2 MX card. Quite frankly, don't know why I took this one, but I'm sure it'll come in handy some day These cards are very much powerful & provide more than enough gaming power for ALL the retro games, up to 2003, 2004. Including previously mentioned GTAIII, this thing here (assuming it's not fried), SHOULD run the game on max settings without any problems, whatsoever. Interestingly though, it is missing a GPU fan/heatsink. So I'm wondering if maybe someone removed it from the card in order to cool down the VIA CPU?!
Well, okay... Although I didn't get any feedback on the VIA processor, I'm somewhat closer to finding the right board & parameters. Seems to be Ezra-T core, where apparently "T" stands for Tualatin. Therefore, this board will only work on Tualatin-certified boards, and NOT the Coppermine/Mendocino ones.
Sadly, I only got ONE Tualatin system in my collection, and that's a Celeron 1000, running Win2k & 512MB of SD-RAM (with onboard graphics). Which means this VIA chip is next to useless unless I can find the appropriate board... There's always that original one which came with the CPU, but I wasn't going to keep it. About the same as Asus TUSI-M, mATX without the AGP interface & couple of blown caps. In fact, the system wasn't powering up to begin with, so I'm not too optimistic but I'm willing to give it a try... In the words of Star Trek, "To Be Continued..."
6.4GBmax. But it could be config'd for a legacy system which would give 4.3GB. It even had an AT mode which would render 2.1GB. It all depended on the C/H/S settings the bios is question supported. Quantum's drive config's were very flexible, which is why they were so popular among certain circles.
That card desperately needs cooling. It will fry without it. You can get a good kit for a decent price these days. Definitely slap on a temp H/S and boot test it before investing any money into it..
6.4GBmax. But it could be config'd for a legacy system which would give 4.3GB. It even had an AT mode which would render 2.1GB. It all depended on the C/H/S settings the bios is question supported. Quantum's drive config's were very flexible, which is why they were so popular among certain circles.
So, what you are saying is that ALL Bigfoot drives in this (CY) series are up to 6.4GB in storage (depending on a jumper & BIOS config)? Because I assumed that some units were 4.3 or less, due to hardware (physical capacity), where the better ones would have been 6.4GB
That card desperately needs cooling. It will fry without it. You can get a good kit for a decent price these days. Definitely slap on a temp H/S and boot test it before investing any money into it..
I would agree on this one, but I think you're over reacting These things usually had a passive cooler and/or a small heatsink fan, nothing more. In fact, these things usually have the same kind of cooling as TNT2 Pro, even M64 so I don't think it would fry without one. It certainly wouldn't help running the GPU without one, that's for sure but for as long as you're not using it 24/7 and/or playing games, it should run OK without the heatsink. With that being said, I got couple of those small, GPU heatsinks laying around, so I might give them a try
Here you can see two GeForce2 MX cards, MX200 & MX400 both with their original heatsinks & fans.
Yup, that's the one. Except according to online database, mine claims to be Ezra-T, and not Nehemiah which has the bus speed of 133MHz (mine is 100MHz)
So, what you are saying is that ALL Bigfoot drives in this (CY) series are up to 6.4GB in storage (depending on a jumper & BIOS config)? Because I assumed that some units were 4.3 or less, due to hardware (physical capacity), where the better ones would have been 6.4GB
Was referring to the 6.4GB model. If it were less then the printed information would be reflected as such, IIRC. So if it were one of the 3.2GB models it would be 3.2GB then 2.1GB and then 1.6GB respectively in the C/H/S configs. I might be remembering wrong(it's been 20 years after all), but I'm pretty sure that's the way it worked. I bought a pair of those drives back then and in my system the full 6.4GB was available, but in my wife's system only 4.3 because her system was an older one with an older bios. Later when we upgraded her system and reformatted all of it was there. Old school systems were often squirrelly like that. Ah the memories..
Was referring to the 6.4GB model. If it were less then the printed information would be reflected as such, IIRC. So if it were one of the 3.2GB models it would be 3.2GB then 2.1GB and then 1.6GB respectively in the C/H/S configs. I might might be remembering wrong(it's been 20 years after all), but I'm pretty sure that's the way it worked. I bought a pair of those drives back then and in my system the full 6.4GB was available, but in my wife's system only 4.3 because her system was an older one with an older bios. Later when we upgraded her system and reformatted all of it was there. Old school systems were often squirrelly like that. Ah the memories..
Wait, are you saying there's a printed capacity info on the unit itself? Because I looked all over for anything that could help me with capacity &/or model number & couldn't come up with anything. Just that it's CY model, "Quantum Bigfoot, 5.25" series"
Wait, are you saying there's a printed capacity info on the unit itself? Because I looked all over for anything that could help me with capacity &/or model number & couldn't come up with anything. Just that it's CY model, "Quantum Bigfoot, 5.25" series"
So, what you are saying is that ALL Bigfoot drives in this (CY) series are up to 6.4GB in storage (depending on a jumper & BIOS config)? Because I assumed that some units were 4.3 or less, due to hardware (physical capacity), where the better ones would have been 6.4GB
Was referring to the 6.4GB model. If it were less then the printed information would be reflected as such, IIRC. So if it were one of the 3.2GB models it would be 3.2GB then 2.1GB and then 1.6GB respectively in the C/H/S configs. I might be remembering wrong(it's been 20 years after all), but I'm pretty sure that's the way it worked. I bought a pair of those drives back then and in my system the full 6.4GB was available, but in my wife's system only 4.3 because her system was an older one with an older bios. Later when we upgraded her system and reformatted all of it was there. Old school systems were often squirrelly like that. Ah the memories..
The CY Bigfoot were series #2 and had 2gb platters. So came in 2gb, 4gb, or 6gb models. Triple platter added extra weight and put more stress on the bearings. Big reason the 6gb were so delicate.
The forth and final series, TS, were known to be loud and came in sizes up to 19gb. They had a shock protection system in an attempt to make them less delicate. By that time data densities had allowed 3.5" drives to reach ever larger capacities making 5.25" obsolete. Which is why the CY series was basically height of Bigfoot popularity.
Remembering the very first HDD that I ever owned back in late 1998. A 3.5" IBM 12.9gb. Friends were amazed at the size and transfer speeds. Still works.
Wait, are you saying there's a printed capacity info on the unit itself? Because I looked all over for anything that could help me with capacity &/or model number & couldn't come up with anything. Just that it's CY model, "Quantum Bigfoot, 5.25" series"
Right, I saw that but figured it was a "general" info which applies to all 3 models of Bigfoot drives, 2.4, 4.3 & 6.4GB models. It never occurred me that it's the SAME drive, but in different configuration... Thanks!
The CY Bigfoot were series #2 and had 2gb platters. So came in 2gb, 4gb, or 6gb models. Triple platter added extra weight and put more stress on the bearings. Big reason the 6gb were so delicate.
The forth and final series, TS, were known to be loud and came in sizes up to 19gb. They had a shock protection system in an attempt to make them less delicate. By that time data densities had allowed 3.5" drives to reach ever larger capacities making 5.25" obsolete. Which is why the CY series was basically height of Bigfoot popularity.
Remembering the very first HDD that I ever owned back in late 1998. A 3.5" IBM 12.9gb. Friends were amazed at the size and transfer speeds. Still works.
Right, got that. In fact, "CY" marking was the only specific name/value I could find, other than company name & product line Guess I'm used to modern drives where it specifically says something like "Capacity: 40.00GB" or something along those lines. And to tell you the truth, I don't have ANY expectations for this thing, it's most likely going to be dead or full of bad sectors. But I'm probably going to keep it anyway as it makes interesting display & conversation piece, even in this sorry & rusty state
One thing I've noticed is that Bigfoot drives are much thinner than what I expected. In fact, they appear to be thin enough for TWO units to fit inside ONE 5.25" bay, with one drive mounted on upper level & one mounted on the lower.
I don't think it's mold, because I tried cleaning the drive & it didn't work. In fact, I only ended up erasing, wiping off "CY" label, so I guess you could say I only made it even worse lol. But yeah, this thing is just banged up & very rusty. It was probably abandoned & left in some garage or storage over the last 20-ish years so I'll be VERY surprised if this thing boots up & loads anything!
Wow, this is just great... They've buried the car underground hoping it wouldn't rot or rust, because it was wrapped into a huge plastic bag?! Such a waste
Wow, this is just great... They've buried the car underground hoping it wouldn't rot or rust, because it was wrapped into a huge plastic bag?! Such a waste
If the reinforced concrete vault hadn't sprung a leak from ground water it's possible. Hard to believe the concrete was suppose to be capable of withstanding a nuclear blast.
Are you kidding me?! This thing probably wouldn't withstand even a smaller surface detonation, not to mention a full nuclear blast! In fact, I had a basement storage room in my old apt. building that was built deeper underground than Belvedere!
As for the concrete alone, it can NOT keep the water out ... or in! Something they obviously didn't take into consideration when they designed this time capsule (even though ppl obviously had swimming pools back then & were facing the similar problem when constructing one, so you would expect them to know this)