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TPU's Nostalgic Hardware Club

Joined
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Location
Tel Fyr
System Name Purple Haze | Vacuum Box
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D (-30 CO) | Intel® Xeon® E3-1241 v3
Motherboard MSI B450 Tomahawk Max | Gigabyte GA-Z87X-UD5H
Cooling Dark Rock 4 Pro, P14, P12, T30 case fans | 212 Evo & P12 PWM PST x2, Arctic P14 & P12 case fans
Memory 32GB Ballistix (Micron E 19nm) CL16 @3733MHz | 32GB HyperX Beast 2400MHz (XMP)
Video Card(s) AMD 6900XTXH ASRock OC Formula & Phanteks T30x3 | AMD 5700XT Sapphire Nitro+ & Arctic P12x2
Storage ADATA SX8200 Pro 1TB, Toshiba P300 3TB x2 | Kingston A400 120GB, Fanxiang S500 Pro 256GB
Display(s) TCL C805 50" 2160p 144Hz VA miniLED, Mi 27" 1440p 165Hz IPS, AOC 24G2U 1080p 144Hz IPS
Case Modded MS Industrial Titan II Pro RGB | Heavily Modded Cooler Master Q500L
Audio Device(s) Audient iD14 MKII, Adam Audio T8Vs, Bloody M550, HiFiMan HE400se, Tascam TM-80, DS4 v2
Power Supply Rosewill Capstone 1000M | Enermax Revolution X't 730W (both with P14 fans)
Mouse Logitech G305, Bloody A91, Amazon basics, Logitech M187
Keyboard Redragon K530, Bloody B930, Epomaker TH80 SE, BTC 9110
Software W10 LTSC 21H2
You mean, this keyboard right here? :)


Yes I actually had one, myself! :) As you can probably tell from the photo, it was used in parallel with the other BTC keyboard, the one I recently found & restored.
Seems that BTC doesn't exist anymore. And the "BTC" naming makes it even harder in web search. I was wrong though, it's actually a dome with sliders keyboard. Any particular info about BTC I should know about? BTW I like your setup, and the mentioned KB seems to be used a lot, I can see the silver paint stripped under the arrow keys. :laugh:

Edit: Found the website


And a wiki:

 
Last edited:
Joined
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Messages
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Location
Mexico
System Name Dell-y Driver
Processor Core i5-10400
Motherboard Asrock H410M-HVS
Cooling Intel 95w stock cooler
Memory 2x8 A-DATA 2999Mhz DDR4
Video Card(s) UHD 630
Storage 1TB WD Green M.2 - 4TB Seagate Barracuda
Display(s) Asus PA248 1920x1200 IPS
Case Dell Vostro 270S case
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Dell 220w
Software Windows 10 64bit
I have just bought this Asus P8H61-MX with a i5 2400 and a want to update the CPU at a later date.What i want to ask is the difference between a CPU with s. at the end of the CPU?I managed to get another £1 off on top of the £4 he had offered me. :)


View attachment 278182
The S means it's a 65w CPU. Regular 95w 2400 runs at 3.1GHz while the s-version runs at 2.5Ghz.

There's also T versions which are rated at 35w.
 
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Messages
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The S means it's a 65w CPU. Regular 95w 2400 runs at 3.1GHz while the s-version runs at 2.5Ghz.

There's also T versions which are rated at 35w.

So that is the only difference why they say the s is better than the non s version.Lower power.Mind you in the energy crises we have in the UK the lower the better. :)Thanks for your answer TRWOV . :)eBay i just put on a refund for something i have not received.The Postal service here in the uk have been striking, so post has been taking longer.But i have given this seller two months before i asked for a refund.But he has only given me a partial refund of £9.94 the full amount should be £15.94.If that was Amazon i would have got a full refund.It is not my fault i have not received it. :(
 
Last edited:
Joined
Jan 1, 2015
Messages
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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
Seems that BTC doesn't exist anymore. And the "BTC" naming makes it even harder in web search. I was wrong though, it's actually a dome with sliders keyboard. Any particular info about BTC I should know about? BTW I like your setup, and the mentioned KB seems to be used a lot, I can see the silver paint stripped under the arrow keys. :laugh:

Edit: Found the website


And a wiki:

Yes, BTC was a huge company back in a day, known for their optical drives. I already mentioned their CD-ROM drives in this very thread countless of times, and from what I can tell they're not exactly known (and remembered) kindly by most of the folks. In fact, most of them refer to BTC as junk & low budget crap which (in my opinion) isn't fair or even accurate to begin with.


But yes, BTC (Behavior Tech Computer) also made & designed some of the other components such as mice, keyboards & sound cards. Some of these were just simply re-labeled BTC by them (but actually made by someone else), while some components (keyboards & optical drives in particular) were made specifically by them, but they were hugely popular some time between the early 90s and early 2000s. Soon after ... around 2006, 2007 it would seem they've given up & disappeared from the scene never to be seen or heard from again. Of course, if you Google for "BTC" nowdays you're only going to find BitCoin stuff, as if BTC corporation never existed which is kinda sad if you ask me :(

As for the keyboard from my photo, yes - it was already pretty worn around the arrow keys in 2004 and was eventually replaced with cheap, generic keyboard in 2006. It really looked kinda cool (I'll give you that), but it didn't have anything "special" to it, which would make me want to buy the same one, again. Where on the other hand, "8110" (that ergonomic keyboard from the previous page) had ... and still has quite unique layout which isn't exactly common or standard nowdays, and is considered pretty rare.
 
Last edited:
Joined
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Messages
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Location
Connecticut, USA
System Name Desktop // Laptop
Processor R9 5900X (VRM-B2) @ 180W/160A/140A | Mfg Wk03/2022 // i7-13620H 90W-50W | Mfg Wk25/2024
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Pro V2 // Dell 006JN2
Cooling Thermalright PA120 w/ 3x P12, MX-6 // Stock (4x heatpipes, 2x Elepeak radial fans) w/ MX-6 GPU & CPU
Memory 2x16GB Ballistix 8Gbit Rev.E @ 3800C15, 1:1 FCLK // 2x16GB Kingston Fury Impact H16A @ 4800C36
Video Card(s) PowerColor Red Devil 6600XT @ C2800MHz/M2300MHz (Samsung), 216W, MX-6 TP-3 // RTX 4060 Mobile (70W)
Storage SK Hynix Gold P31 1TB, TeamGroup MP33 Pro 2TB, Seagate Ironwolf HDD 4TB // Patriot VP4300 Lite 2TB
Display(s) 1x Gigabyte M27Q, 1x MSI Optix G274, 1x Dell E152FPg // Dell AUO30A5
Case Phanteks P500A (non-digital) w/ 4x 140mm Arctic P14 PWM PST CO fans // Dell Inspiron Plus 7630
Audio Device(s) FiiO E10K-TC (USB) -> Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro (80ohm)
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex III Gold 750W // Lite-On 130W
Mouse Logitech G203
Keyboard Kingston HyperX Core RGB
Software W10 Pro // W11 Pro
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/user/machinelearning/ https://hwbot.org/team/warp9_systems/
Hi everyone
:)

I don't know why, but I have a strange obsession with mediocre motherboards. Especially Foxconn and Intel boards, which enthusiasts largely ignored even in their heydays. After playing around with the Bad Axe 2, I was hooked, because I really had low expectations for the board and it exceeded them - Bonetrail had to be next. Smackover 1 & 2 are in the future... and that will make my Intel board collection complete.

Teased at IDF 2007, Bonetrail in the form of the DX38BT was the successor to the aforementioned D975XBX2/KR. Despite nearly a two years' gap, the layout of Bonetrail is strikingly similar to the Bad Axe.
Bonetrail:


Bad Axe 2:


In my opinion, Bonetrail looks far more organized and finished than the Bad Axe, except for the barren rear I/O spot.

Looking closer, there have been numerous additions and omissions, most notably the absence of floppy or PS/2 connectors on Bonetrail. Also, a lot of minor components have been shifted around, such as the 4-pin molex, EPS, & ATX 24-pin. The northbridge uses a far better retention system in my opinion, using screws and a small metal bracket instead of flimsy plastic U-bars.

It sort of looks like a mini socket 370 / 462 heatsink + bracket. I like the rear metal retention plate.
PWM cooling may now be removed, Intel decided to use push-pins (albeit weird ones with a throughpin) instead of thermal adhesive.

CPU power delivery is a true 5-phase PWM controlled by an ADP3189, on both boards. However, while I haven't removed the Bad Axe's VRM heatsinks to see what makes up each phase, I can guarantee it's organized differently than Bonetrail. On the Bad Axe, the MOSFETs are double the height - plus, Bonetrail has 4 MOSFETs/phase while Bad Axe only has 3 FETs per phase.


Per phase: 2x Infineon 79N03S (40A) & 2x OnSemi 4835N (104A).

Capacitors are from:
- Rubycon
- Nichicon
- Fujitsu
- Panasonic / Sanyo
- SamXon

The northbridge was produced Wk36/2008, and the southbridge Wk31/2008. The PCB date code is a surprise - it's nearly a full year before either other component (Wk50/2007). Just as with the Bad Axe, I can't find a PCB layer count, but I assume it's a 6-layer.


I replaced both the NB & SB paste with MX-4, and gave each phase its own 1.0mm Arctic APT2560 (now TP-2) thermal pad. I also attached a 40mm Noctua which I had on-hand to the NB.

IMG_20230105_152550617.jpg


Overclocking
--- 555.98 MHz,
#1 for board, top 100 X38
hwbot.org/submission/5163725_
Memory:
~ 1800 DR Dual-channel
~ 1900 SR Dual-channel
~ 2050+ SR Single-channel
Will POST 2200MHz 1/3 times, but will never get into windows.
--- 2080 MHz DDR3 (SR, Single-channel, slot #0)
hwbot.org/submission/5165540_

This motherboard does significantly better than I assumed it would. The 556MHz FSB makes it the top Intel-branded motherboard in that regard. The DX38BT and DX48BT2 are identical except for the chipset, so I thought the DX38BT would just be inherently worse due to Intel handicapping it. Surprisingly, it seems that's not the case, and any issues with the board are probably due to ineptitude rather than sabotage. In fact, both boards use the exact same BIOS, with the only assumed difference being different internal MCH timings.
I discovered that at 550MHz, there is a wall for 1333MHz FSB CPUs. Macsbeach98 recommended BCLK modding the CPU, and it worked like a dream. This is because the clockgen (SLG505YC256BT) will only allow ~ 550MHz - 720MHz to be selected if it believes there's a 1600MHz FSB CPU socketed. However, 550 MHz is already close to the board's maximum - at least with the 1.7v limit in BIOS. I fully intend on modding the NB voltage (controller: Intersil ISL6545) after I learn from GTX 260 modding.
:)
Also, I gave a random Q9550 a go - it became unhappy at around 480MHz... Well, it's surely no Gigabyte P45.
:D

Intel Integrator Toolkit 4.x still works with this board just like the Bad Axe 2. So of course, I made a custom BIOS that makes OC go a bit more smoothly. Loading Optimal Defaults will make the board ready for OC, including disabling watchdog timer, eSATA / IDE, and other unnecessary onboard devices. However, I didn't bother making a changelog this time around, since I don't think it's all that important here. If anyone is interested in all my changes, opening up the supplied .ITW file in ITK will show what has been changed from default.


Links:
- Warp9 Intel Bonetrail BIOS (works for both DX38BT & DX48BT2)
- Intel Integrator Toolkit 4.0.1.258
- Intel Desktop Control Center 4.2.0.769
- All stock Bonetrail BIOSes

It may take me a massive amount of time, but I do eventually intend on taking a look at:
- Abit AN7
- Abit IS7-E
- ASUS A8N32-SLI Deluxe
- MSI K8N Neo3-F
- *Potential* DX58SO, DX58SO2
 
Last edited:
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
Here's (even) more BTC-related material ... since you guys seem to enjoy it so much :D
A "stack" of BCD XH drives (Hitachi Loader), imported from the USA:


The loading tray for XH series uses one of the most complicated (yet extremely durable) parts & arrangements:

A brand new, never-used BTC optical mouse & still inside its original box. I'm saving this one for a VERY special occasion which may (or may not) happen some time in 2023 ... mostly depending on my financial situation:
 
Joined
Jun 14, 2021
Messages
2,426 (1.92/day)
Location
UK
Can i use a Rev NO. on a E1 motherboard?All though someone had used a REV NO on a 61.-mx board on user benchmark site.
This one i5 3570 REV NO all though i5 3570k is E1 is a supported cpu for my motherboard.

The first ever GeForce GPU in 1999​

 
Last edited:
Joined
Feb 9, 2018
Messages
162 (0.07/day)
Location
Turkey
Hi everyone
:)

I don't know why, but I have a strange obsession with mediocre motherboards. Especially Foxconn and Intel boards, which enthusiasts largely ignored even in their heydays. After playing around with the Bad Axe 2, I was hooked, because I really had low expectations for the board and it exceeded them - Bonetrail had to be next. Smackover 1 & 2 are in the future... and that will make my Intel board collection complete.

Teased at IDF 2007, Bonetrail in the form of the DX38BT was the successor to the aforementioned D975XBX2/KR. Despite nearly a two years' gap, the layout of Bonetrail is strikingly similar to the Bad Axe.
Bonetrail:


Bad Axe 2:


In my opinion, Bonetrail looks far more organized and finished than the Bad Axe, except for the barren rear I/O spot.

Looking closer, there have been numerous additions and omissions, most notably the absence of floppy or PS/2 connectors on Bonetrail. Also, a lot of minor components have been shifted around, such as the 4-pin molex, EPS, & ATX 24-pin. The northbridge uses a far better retention system in my opinion, using screws and a small metal bracket instead of flimsy plastic U-bars.

It sort of looks like a mini socket 370 / 462 heatsink + bracket. I like the rear metal retention plate.
PWM cooling may now be removed, Intel decided to use push-pins (albeit weird ones with a throughpin) instead of thermal adhesive.

CPU power delivery is a true 5-phase PWM controlled by an ADP3189, on both boards. However, while I haven't removed the Bad Axe's VRM heatsinks to see what makes up each phase, I can guarantee it's organized differently than Bonetrail. On the Bad Axe, the MOSFETs are double the height - plus, Bonetrail has 4 MOSFETs/phase while Bad Axe only has 3 FETs per phase.


Per phase: 2x Infineon 79N03S (40A) & 2x OnSemi 4835N (104A).

Capacitors are from:
- Rubycon
- Nichicon
- Fujitsu
- Panasonic / Sanyo
- SamXon

The northbridge was produced Wk36/2008, and the southbridge Wk31/2008. The PCB date code is a surprise - it's nearly a full year before either other component (Wk50/2007). Just as with the Bad Axe, I can't find a PCB layer count, but I assume it's a 6-layer.


I replaced both the NB & SB paste with MX-4, and gave each phase its own 1.0mm Arctic APT2560 (now TP-2) thermal pad. I also attached a 40mm Noctua which I had on-hand to the NB.

View attachment 278224

Overclocking
--- 555.98 MHz,
#1 for board, top 100 X38
hwbot.org/submission/5163725_
Memory:
~ 1800 DR Dual-channel
~ 1900 SR Dual-channel
~ 2050+ SR Single-channel
Will POST 2200MHz 1/3 times, but will never get into windows.
--- 2080 MHz DDR3 (SR, Single-channel, slot #0)
hwbot.org/submission/5165540_

This motherboard does significantly better than I assumed it would. The 556MHz FSB makes it the top Intel-branded motherboard in that regard. The DX38BT and DX48BT2 are identical except for the chipset, so I thought the DX38BT would just be inherently worse due to Intel handicapping it. Surprisingly, it seems that's not the case, and any issues with the board are probably due to ineptitude rather than sabotage. In fact, both boards use the exact same BIOS, with the only assumed difference being different internal MCH timings.
I discovered that at 550MHz, there is a wall for 1333MHz FSB CPUs. Macsbeach98 recommended BCLK modding the CPU, and it worked like a dream. This is because the clockgen (SLG505YC256BT) will only allow ~ 550MHz - 720MHz to be selected if it believes there's a 1600MHz FSB CPU socketed. However, 550 MHz is already close to the board's maximum - at least with the 1.7v limit in BIOS. I fully intend on modding the NB voltage (controller: Intersil ISL6545) after I learn from GTX 260 modding.
:)
Also, I gave a random Q9550 a go - it became unhappy at around 480MHz... Well, it's surely no Gigabyte P45.
:D

Intel Integrator Toolkit 4.x still works with this board just like the Bad Axe 2. So of course, I made a custom BIOS that makes OC go a bit more smoothly. Loading Optimal Defaults will make the board ready for OC, including disabling watchdog timer, eSATA / IDE, and other unnecessary onboard devices. However, I didn't bother making a changelog this time around, since I don't think it's all that important here. If anyone is interested in all my changes, opening up the supplied .ITW file in ITK will show what has been changed from default.


Links:
- Warp9 Intel Bonetrail BIOS (works for both DX38BT & DX48BT2)
- Intel Integrator Toolkit 4.0.1.258
- Intel Desktop Control Center 4.2.0.769
- All stock Bonetrail BIOSes

It may take me a massive amount of time, but I do eventually intend on taking a look at:
- Abit AN7
- Abit IS7-E
- ASUS A8N32-SLI Deluxe
- MSI K8N Neo3-F
- *Potential* DX58SO, DX58SO2
If you allow me, I would like to support your work.
How will this be?
I can prepare a Bios file that supports NVMe SSD drives for the 2 motherboards you listed below.
All I need is the hardware credentials of the NVMe SSD drive you are using.
I can inject NVMe SSD modules into the motherboard's bios file.
It will be very interesting and surprising.:D:D:D

ASUS A8N32-SLI Deluxe
MSI K8N Neo3-F
 
Joined
Nov 15, 2020
Messages
591 (0.40/day)
Location
Connecticut, USA
System Name Desktop // Laptop
Processor R9 5900X (VRM-B2) @ 180W/160A/140A | Mfg Wk03/2022 // i7-13620H 90W-50W | Mfg Wk25/2024
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Pro V2 // Dell 006JN2
Cooling Thermalright PA120 w/ 3x P12, MX-6 // Stock (4x heatpipes, 2x Elepeak radial fans) w/ MX-6 GPU & CPU
Memory 2x16GB Ballistix 8Gbit Rev.E @ 3800C15, 1:1 FCLK // 2x16GB Kingston Fury Impact H16A @ 4800C36
Video Card(s) PowerColor Red Devil 6600XT @ C2800MHz/M2300MHz (Samsung), 216W, MX-6 TP-3 // RTX 4060 Mobile (70W)
Storage SK Hynix Gold P31 1TB, TeamGroup MP33 Pro 2TB, Seagate Ironwolf HDD 4TB // Patriot VP4300 Lite 2TB
Display(s) 1x Gigabyte M27Q, 1x MSI Optix G274, 1x Dell E152FPg // Dell AUO30A5
Case Phanteks P500A (non-digital) w/ 4x 140mm Arctic P14 PWM PST CO fans // Dell Inspiron Plus 7630
Audio Device(s) FiiO E10K-TC (USB) -> Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro (80ohm)
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex III Gold 750W // Lite-On 130W
Mouse Logitech G203
Keyboard Kingston HyperX Core RGB
Software W10 Pro // W11 Pro
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/user/machinelearning/ https://hwbot.org/team/warp9_systems/
If you allow me, I would like to support your work.
How will this be?
I can prepare a Bios file that supports NVMe SSD drives for the 2 motherboards you listed below.
All I need is the hardware credentials of the NVMe SSD drive you are using.
I can inject NVMe SSD modules into the motherboard's bios file.
It will be very interesting and surprising.:D:D:D

ASUS A8N32-SLI Deluxe
MSI K8N Neo3-F
Thank you kindly, Ismail. :D I sincerely appreciate your efforts and support.

The two modules will be:
PCI\VEN_10EC&DEV_5763
PCI\VEN_144D&DEV_A804
What an interesting experiment for those two boards! I will report back with photos and results ASAP.

- Additionally, you can expect the X58 Classified3 NVMe results by the end of this week. :)
 
Joined
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Messages
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Location
Turkey
Thank you kindly, Ismail. :D I sincerely appreciate your efforts and support.

The two modules will be:

What an interesting experiment for those two boards! I will report back with photos and results ASAP.

- Additionally, you can expect the X58 Classified3 NVMe results by the end of this week. :)
Ok, the information has been received and the files will be ready as soon as possible..
What I'm most curious about here is the NVMe SSD drive speeds for the MSI K8N Neo3-F motherboard.
It is interesting that this motherboard has both a PCIExpress slot and an MSI AGR (Advance Graphics Riser) slot.
 
Joined
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Messages
591 (0.40/day)
Location
Connecticut, USA
System Name Desktop // Laptop
Processor R9 5900X (VRM-B2) @ 180W/160A/140A | Mfg Wk03/2022 // i7-13620H 90W-50W | Mfg Wk25/2024
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Pro V2 // Dell 006JN2
Cooling Thermalright PA120 w/ 3x P12, MX-6 // Stock (4x heatpipes, 2x Elepeak radial fans) w/ MX-6 GPU & CPU
Memory 2x16GB Ballistix 8Gbit Rev.E @ 3800C15, 1:1 FCLK // 2x16GB Kingston Fury Impact H16A @ 4800C36
Video Card(s) PowerColor Red Devil 6600XT @ C2800MHz/M2300MHz (Samsung), 216W, MX-6 TP-3 // RTX 4060 Mobile (70W)
Storage SK Hynix Gold P31 1TB, TeamGroup MP33 Pro 2TB, Seagate Ironwolf HDD 4TB // Patriot VP4300 Lite 2TB
Display(s) 1x Gigabyte M27Q, 1x MSI Optix G274, 1x Dell E152FPg // Dell AUO30A5
Case Phanteks P500A (non-digital) w/ 4x 140mm Arctic P14 PWM PST CO fans // Dell Inspiron Plus 7630
Audio Device(s) FiiO E10K-TC (USB) -> Beyerdynamic DT770 Pro (80ohm)
Power Supply Super Flower Leadex III Gold 750W // Lite-On 130W
Mouse Logitech G203
Keyboard Kingston HyperX Core RGB
Software W10 Pro // W11 Pro
Benchmark Scores https://hwbot.org/user/machinelearning/ https://hwbot.org/team/warp9_systems/
Ok, the information has been received and the files will be ready as soon as possible..
What I'm most curious about here is the NVMe SSD drive speeds for the MSI K8N Neo3-F motherboard.
It is interesting that this motherboard has both a PCIExpress slot and an MSI AGR (Advance Graphics Riser) slot.
I will run CrystalDiskMark on all three boards so we can see how they do. :)

Something else important, is if the AGR slot & PCIe x16 slot may be used in tandem. I don't have any PCIe x1 graphics-cards, but I can try a PCI one. Otherwise, I run out of slots on the Neo3-F.
 
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Location
Bacau, Romania
System Name Star Platinum
Processor Intel Core i5-3470 3.20GHz
Motherboard Gigabyte B75M-D3H
Cooling EKL
Memory 16GB DDR3-1600
Video Card(s) Gigabyte GTX650 1GB GDDR5
Storage 2x Seagate ST31000340NS 1TB SATA II
Display(s) Samsung 43 inch
Case Delux MG760
Audio Device(s) Realtek High Definition Audio + X-Fi XtremeGamer SB0730
Power Supply FSP Bluestorm II 500W
Mouse ASUS RoG Cerberus mouse
Keyboard Marvo KM400 keyboard
Software Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 1809
Another set of oldies but goldies I took out from the storage. ASUS P5B, a HD4850 (also by ASUS, lol) and a Q6600.

20230105_174042.jpg
 
Joined
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Messages
846 (0.21/day)
Location
Bacau, Romania
System Name Star Platinum
Processor Intel Core i5-3470 3.20GHz
Motherboard Gigabyte B75M-D3H
Cooling EKL
Memory 16GB DDR3-1600
Video Card(s) Gigabyte GTX650 1GB GDDR5
Storage 2x Seagate ST31000340NS 1TB SATA II
Display(s) Samsung 43 inch
Case Delux MG760
Audio Device(s) Realtek High Definition Audio + X-Fi XtremeGamer SB0730
Power Supply FSP Bluestorm II 500W
Mouse ASUS RoG Cerberus mouse
Keyboard Marvo KM400 keyboard
Software Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 1809
Honestly, not a fan of it either - but considering I had the Plus variant that was dead, having a vanilla P5B alone was something. That, and it's probably among the most modded boards I could ever think of.
 
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Honestly, not a fan of it either - but considering I had the Plus variant that was dead, having a vanilla P5B alone was something. That, and it's probably among the most modded boards I could ever think of.
Oh of course! It's a badass board. It's just ugly. It was their stupidly ugly hallmark colour.
 
Joined
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Location
Bacau, Romania
System Name Star Platinum
Processor Intel Core i5-3470 3.20GHz
Motherboard Gigabyte B75M-D3H
Cooling EKL
Memory 16GB DDR3-1600
Video Card(s) Gigabyte GTX650 1GB GDDR5
Storage 2x Seagate ST31000340NS 1TB SATA II
Display(s) Samsung 43 inch
Case Delux MG760
Audio Device(s) Realtek High Definition Audio + X-Fi XtremeGamer SB0730
Power Supply FSP Bluestorm II 500W
Mouse ASUS RoG Cerberus mouse
Keyboard Marvo KM400 keyboard
Software Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 1809
Oh of course! It's a badass board. It's just ugly. It was their stupidly ugly hallmark colour.
Some DFI and Winfast-branded Foxconns also had this color scheme, more or less as well. I have a Infinity NF4 SLi in storage (which I might ressurect out of storage if I can find at least a cheap 939 x2 chip as well) that's about the same color as the ASUS.

For a fact, ASUS kept that gold colour to a degree, while DFI's take seems to have some slight green tinge to it in some places (where there aren't any traces running.)

As for Foxconn, the only I've seen to bear that colour were usually Winfast boards from the 462 and 754/939 era. Their 478 and 775 mobos were blue and the few AM2s I've seen from Winfast (of which I have one waiting for parts) had a orange-ish PCB.

Another option would have been a G41+DDR3 based ECS. Unfortunately, it's so severely crippled that any RAM I throw at it runs at 800MHz, and the BIOS is an obscenely lackluster AMIBIOS implementation. Maybe I'll try to trade it for a MSI G41T-P23, who knows. Also have a GB G41 Combo which has DDR3 and DDR2, but yet again, it's crippled by poor VRM design (originally had a Q8300 that was burning the FETs from too much power draw - you can imagine how crappy of a board it is if even as much as a 65nm C2D has troubles running on it.)
 

stinger608

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if I can find at least a cheap 939 x2 chip as well

Dang, wish you were in the US. I still have 3 or 4 939 x2 chips and I'd just send ya one. :oops:
 
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Welp, got the P5B up and running.
p5b 4850.png


Note to self: never ever use a 2004 Raptor as main OS drive ever again. I feel like even a laptop drive would've been a faster choice than this Raptor, despite being 10k RPM. Will probably keep them for the DFI nF4 machine that I'm gonna build. At best, if I can't find any x2 (the only I found so far are complete kits on a rather barren Gigabyte mobo, and the price doesn't seem worth it for me), I still seem to have a pair of 3500s. No idea where they came from, but I guess they'll do just fine with a HD4650 and a random run of 512MB sticks.
 
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To continue in the the LGA 775 spirit, I found this on the market, all quite cheap:

Screenshot(3).pngScreenshot(6).pngScreenshot(9).pngScreenshot(11).png

Luckily my wallet is empty ATM. :laugh: Any thoughts? I know the first one is a must buy though.

Edit: left photos only of the suggested ones, for my own future reference.
 
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stinger608

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Oh man @Veseleil , the Rampage Formula's are hard to find. That would be awesome if you can pick that one alone.
 
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I still used my Rampage Formula with a q9650 & a GTX 970 for folding@home until I switched to the RX6800XT in my primary rig. That was a fun system when it was my gamer.
 
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Rampage Formula, EP35-DS4, and P5E3 Deluxe are the good ones there IMO. P5E3 Deluxe can be flashed to the X48 Premium.
 
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Rampage Formula, EP35-DS4, P5B Deluxe and P5E3 Deluxe would be my choices too.
 
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Actually there are 2 rampage formulas, it's just a different sticker on the south bridge (the second one)?
@stinger608 @MachineLearning @MaxiPro800 thanks for the info, I'll keep that in mind (and buy a few as soon as i can).
 
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