Reply 25120 of 29370, by Repo Man11
- Rank
- l33t
Last fall I bought an assortment of old stuff that was quite a haul, and I've been working my way through it. It included two Socket 370 boards; one had a bad BIOS flash and the other needed new capacitors. After fixing both, I wanted to try to use one of the Tualatin CPUs that were included. I found a Lin Lin adapter on Ebay for a non ridiculous price, but it had a missing pin (even though it was NOS and had never been opened so it was a factory defect) so I sent it back for credit. I then decided to try one of those PCB Tualatin adapters, so I bought one and only today did I give it a shot. I have no idea if either of these CPUs are any good (they were going to be scrapped so they weren't stored carefully - most have been okay, but the Palomino Socket A was dead) since the boards don't natively support Tualatins, so I picked one, did my best to follow the instructions, and I gave it a try. The resulting CPU will not POST in either of the boards, and at this point it seems like a lost cause. I can't be sure if I did something wrong, or if the CPU was dead before I started, or if neither board can POST with a Tualatin without BIOS support. I think I'm going to buy one of his CPUs that has the modification already done and see how that turns out.
After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?