First post, by leonardo
- Rank
- Oldbie
Nickname: Oswald
- Case: AT of unknown origin
- Power supply: BTC PSC-200A 200w AT
- Motherboard: MSI MS-4132G
- Processor: Intel 80486DX2 66MHz
- Memory: 16MB FPM
- Video card(s): Cirrus Logic GL-5428 1MB VLB
- Monitor(s): Packard Bell PB8528SVEL 14" CRT
- Sound card(s): Media Vision Jazz 16 (SoundBlaster Pro-compatible)
- Storage: Seagate ST3660A 540 MB IDE HDD
- Removable(s): ~ 1.44 MB 3.5" + Toshiba XM-6002B PATA CD-ROM
- Connectivity: 3Com EtherLink III 10Mbit ISA
- HIDs: BTC AT-keyboard and Logitech M-M35 serial mouse
Brief description
This one was definitely done purely for nostalgia and for not wanting to throw away good working parts. I had only one rule for this build: All the parts acquired must be paid for with income from other parts sold. No extravagant purchases or extra-rare finds - just practical solutions and components that one likely would have. Even so, this one ended up being everything my 7~8-year-old self would have wanted rather than actually had. It runs DOS+Windows 3.1 very well, and Windows 95 surprisingly comfortably. It's purely a DOS-gaming set up though, there isn't enough oomph for anything but light desktop use in Windows.
Build log / hardware & software updates
As the result of a recent salvage, I'm left with the question in the topic for a few computers that were headed to the dumpster.
In today's post I'm dealing mostly with a philosophical dilemma, as the computer is - in a way - perfect as it is:
- BTC 200W AT power supply
- MSI MS-4132G motherboard
- Intel 80486DX 33 MHz CPU
- ~4 MB of RAM
- multi-I/O-board with serial- and parallel-ports + IDE and floppy interface
- Trident TVGA8900D-R 1MB ISA video card
- 1.44 MB 3.5" floppy disk drive
- ~520 MB 3.5" IDE hard disk
- 16x IDE CD-ROM-drive
When the computer came to me it had been stripped of all storage devices, but I was lucky enough to have come into those without having to invest. The CD-ROM drive is perhaps newer than what one might expect, but it passes as it's not too over-the-top. The case is also fairly tidy so I only ended up having to fix the front-case LED (which incorrectly reported the CPU speed as 25 MHz / 50 MHz when toggled):
I also removed the barrel battery from the motherboard, as everyone knows should be done:
For the time being, booting up the system requires entering the date and time settings, as well as the hard disk parameters if unplugged from the wall outlet.
It's a nice clean early 486-system, but now I'm tempted to fix it up some more... Obvious possible upgrades include the following:
- A faster 80486DX2 or AMD clone, 50 or 66 MHz perhaps - I'm not clear exactly if the motherboard will support going over 50 MHz
- Increase RAM to 8 or 16 megabytes (I don't see much point going above this, even if supported).
- A sound card of some sort!
- An external CMOS-battery enclosure to keep the settings stored
- Ethernet adapter for easier file transfers or playing local area network games
I'm contemplating if I should do specific upgrades or go all out... or leave it as it is.
I'm concerned that if I go too far with the upgrades, the system will start to look more like an inferior version of what I've already got, rather than the timepiece it is now. Some upgrades clearly only make sense with others... for example I could do the sound card thing without other upgrades, but upgrading the CPU would just beg the memory and sound card upgrades as well...
I'm also not the kind of person to spend a hundred $ just to end up with a system that won't sell for the money I put in if I decide to let it go...
What would you do - or not do?
Upgraded the RAM from 4 MB to 16MB (for comfort) and installed a Creative SoundBlaster 32 soundcard!
Installed 3Com EtherLink III ISA and swapped the ISA video card (Trident TVGA8900D-R) for a VLB video card (Cirrus Logic GL-5428) based on strong recommendations from the community. The video card was a little less impressive than all the noise led me to believe, but not a total waste. Besides I'm expecting to reap more benefits when I get a faster CPU...
I swapped the Intel 80486DX that was in the system for a 80486DX2! The increase in performance has made the system tenable for several classic computer games for which it was just barely too slow. The new processor requires a HSF, but luckily I only had to invest in the thermal pad...
Swapped the CT3670 that died for a Media Vision Jazz 16!
[Install Win95 like you were born in 1985!] on systems like this or this.