Putting together a retro PC (at least 2000-2002 period-accurate). So far I have:
- P4 Northwood 2.4 GHz non-HTT, pure 32-bit, 533 FSB
- ASUS P4V8X-MX (this board has VIA's most powerful/latest IGP chipset for s478, including support for 800 FSB Prescotts, dual-channel DDR, and AGP 8X).
- 2x 1 GB DDR-333
What I need:
- An s478 CPU cooler that's on its way
- One of those IDE-to-CF adapters
- An IDE CD-ROM
- A 3.5-inch FDD wouldn't hurt
- Currently haggling with an eBayer for a Radeon 9800 Pro
Initially I'll be using this contraption for Win9x gaming by underclocking the CPU as much as I can, using a single 1 GB memory stick, and using the S3 Graphics IGP (that's fairly powerful by 2000 standards since it was designed around 2003-05). I'll throw in an SB Live PCI sound card that has pure-DOS (Adlib-compatible) drivers.
Later I'll upgrade this to a Windows XP machine to play 2000-2007 (pre-Crysis) games, with that second memory stick, the Radeon 9800, and taking advantage of the board's SATA ports.
The reason I went with P4 (and not older), has to do with power. Older platforms power the CPU from 5V and 3.3V power rails, and modern PSUs flat-out won't work as they have weaker 5V/3.3V rails. I don't want to take a chance with a used older-gen PSU that has fat 5V rails (think >30 A). The P4 platform is the first to use 12V to power the CPU, and I'll be able to use a modern PSU.
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