Alright, let's check out the $10 photo booth PC that I picked up on Thursday. Allegedly this PC was used in a mall photo booth kiosk, and it definitely is weird... and, well, I did get it to power on a few times, but that was it 😅. Time for a 🧵
First, in addition to being a desktop ATX case, it does have an interesting black oval on the front! Probably for infrared, I didn't take it apart, I was lazy. If so, that's a cool feature. And this ATX case has an AT mobo in it, with an AT I/O shield!
As noted in the first post, this PC has some weird stuff. Looks like this DE9 connector supplied... power. Yikes! Yea, I took that out, we don't want to have any surprises later. Guessing this powered some other kiosk device.
Here's some more weirdness: an ISA card labeled "Foto Fantasy" with a timer, a bunch of flip flips, and a relay to say the least. I wonder if it was used for a picture taking delay or something of the sort. We'll never know probably, there is ZERO documentation on this available
Here's the mobo, both inside and outside of the case. It's a FIC VA-503+. Must have been a transition board with its support for AT and ATX power, as well as 72 pin SIMMs and 168 pin DIMMs.
So, one thing about this case, it has PLENTY of rust. The screws were pretty rusty too.. we'll replace them with some fresh ones!
The case also had some weird standoffs for the mobo. Either the PC builder did this, or "someone has been in here" over the years...
The CPU is a 300 MHz Cyrix MII . I guess that is all you needed if you wanted to take photos in 2001 😂
Here are some of the other cards. I really want to know what is up with that bodge fix on the Tseng video card. And, wow, this PC had A LOT of I/O... three parallel ports in total. Probably to run photo printers or something of the sort.
So, in trying to get this to power on, at first, I couldn't get it to POST at all. And occasionally the power supply would "buzz" which signifies some sort of overload/short. Eventually I moved the video card to the second PCI slot and it powered up!
But my joy was short lived. The PC did power on a few times. I swapped a different power supply and memory module in to see if it would be more stable. And it worked a few times, until it was back to not POSTing again.
Tried a new CR2032 for good measure too. No luck. The problem? Probably needs a recap, a few of these caps around the CPU are suss. I won't troubleshoot further, this PC will have a new home soon. Sorry we don't have better news, but thx for reading.
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I spent a few minutes today setting up this Dell Latitude D600 laptop. It's a neat and zippy little Windows XP PC. Let's talk about it in a 🧵 here!
Here are the specs! Pentium M 1.60 GHz, and 2GB of memory. Pretty nice specs. And the battery is charging up nicely too. Score!
Unfortunately, the HDD is dead on this. So I put in a CF card adapter, using the old HDD to help align its placement. 4GB is going to be anemic for Windows XP, but it will get us by for now.
I bought this Packard Bell Multimedia 601 at last week's Northern Virginia swap meet. It had a bit of a transformation, and it is now all set up too! Let's talk about it in a 🧵 here!
First of all, when I picked up this thing, it was DIRTY, like REALLY DIRTY. But that is something we can fix.
I got started with some glass cleaner and also use a melamine pad to clean it up a bit. With a little bit of elbow grease, I think it turned out nice!
I bought some memory to upgrade the Pacman PC. SURELY this will go off without a hitch.. surely it will. Okay, let's talk about it, in a 🧵 here!
So, as you saw from the intro picture, we're now showing 1.5 GB of memory in this lovely system. The system booted up into Hannah Montana Linux 😂. That's fine.. we can ask it how much memory it sees. Looking good!
Oh, here's the memory installed. Let's kick off MemTest86+
I had some "larger" hard drives laying around, and wanted to put one in the new Kehtron computer. But to do that, I had to work around the 528MB limit of this computer's BIOS. Let's use XTIDE to do that...surely this adventure will go off without a hitch... right? Time for a 🧵
So, first of all, what is this 528MB limit all about? Well, older BIOSes were limited to 1024 cylinders. Around the 486 era, as drives got bigger, BIOSes started to support Logical Block Addressing mode. However, this particular BIOS does not.
There are some workarounds! You could use a program like Ontrack Disk Manager which solves the problem in software. You could also upgrade your BIOS to a later version, or even acquire an aftermarket BIOS like MR BIOS (someone put together a nice archive of past versions!)
Got a few things in the mail today! No need to really test the CPU fans or batteries, but let's test the video card! Time for a 🧵
So, this video card is a Tseng Labs ET4000AX. Here it is next to my other ET4000AX card. Some differences for sure!
I figured I would test this card in the Kehtron 486DX/50 card... and... uh oh! What is the deal here? Seller tested card, and my other Tseng Labs ET4000AX card works in this PC. How odd! Must be a bad card, right?
Okay, let's get some software installed on this "new" 486DX/50 PC of mine. As per usual, nothing was flawless here, so let's go over what went well and where I hit some snags! Time for a 🧵
To get the installers on the box, I decided to use MS LAN Manager and the network. I made a special LAN Manager boot disk with drivers for the Intel EtherExpress 16TP that you see in the bottom of the last picture here.
I've been very curious about how this machine would stack up, so I copied over SpeedSys to benchmark the system. And as we can see, it fell right in line with where it should be!