Ok, so it's time for final specs & technical details on RetroMaster 4000
1. Motherboard
Starting with the most obvious component
Originally it was going to be Asus P5S800-VM/Vintage, but due to unfortunate set of circumstances & weird graphic problem on high-end AGP cards, I had to find a replacement board. Unfortunately, I couldn't find anything better without spending too much money, until I saw that P5GD1-VM/Vintage board from the previous post! It's almost the perfect choice, except for one thing ... the old board was AGP, where the "new" one is PCIE, so I had to swap out the video card. Otherwise they're both completely the same in the terms of CPU socket, expansions & RAM memory.
2. CPU
For those of you who remember, this unit started out as "Celeron D" which was then upgraded to Pentium 4, model number SL9CB.
And there was nothing wrong with that P4 chip, in fact I was going to move it onto the new board. But then, just as I was about to do it, I decided to go with this other P4 instead
Model number is SL79, and these are both running at the same clock speed (3.00GHz), except the "old", SL9CB chip has 1MB of cache and the "new" one has 2MB. So it actually makes sense to go with the best & faster, right?
3. Video card
Started out as nVidia 7600GT (AGP), which was then converted into 6600GT (AGP), and eventually into nVidia 6600LE (PCIe). That is, until I patched up my Radeon X1550 yesterday, I took the entire unit apart & swapped out the bulging caps, so now the card works perfectly fine. True, it's not 7600GT, but it's still faster than 6600 (both GT and LE), so it's a reasonable compromise between the two choices IMHO.
4. RAM
Both RAM modules are still the same, the RetroMaster 4000 features 2GB of DDR400 RAM, running in dual-channel configuration
5. Other bits & pieces
It's running Vista Ultimate, SP2 with all the latest updates & patches already downloaded & applied. It's also running the Steam, so that I can download the Source games such as Half Life 2 and/or Portal, which look (and run) absolutely amazing, with all the settings set to max without any lag. (avg. framerate is around 30-35 FPS)
Other components worth mentioning are the hard drive, Seagate Barracuda 160GB SATA unit
And D-Link AirPlus G PCI WiFi card
And there you have it guys... That's pretty much it - it's all done & fully operational!
My original benchmark scored 7816 points. However, after installing and updating all the necessary drivers (and flashing the BIOS with the latest version) I came up with 8162 points, my highest "retro" score yet!
Edit
Small update, I seem to be having a small (and somewhat annoying) problem, which I don't know how to resolve. For some reason the graphical interface (actually JUST the header, top bar) in BIOS, where it says "BIOS SETUP UTILITY" that's supposed to be displayed in gradient (see the pic below) is being displayed incorrectly, as a bar of solid colors. I might take a pic tomorrow, but really - apart from that everything else seems to be working perfectly OK!
And since the benchmark (and 3D animation, games) both check out fine, I don't think it's due to video card... Or the motherboard for that matter, either... *shrug*