Last week, at the System Source swap meet, I picked up a bunch of interface cards! Additionally, I have this Microchannel network card that arrived in the mail. Let's test these cards out on the Pacman PC! Time for a long 🧵
As I was thinking about which PC to use to test these, the Pacman PC ended up being ideal. Its motherboard has ISA, PCI, and AGP support! Some of you might remember this CYS Tech CYSMBD-694X motherboard that I picked up from Ali Express a little while back:
We're going to use Windows 98 SE to test. To ensure that I don't clutter my install with a bunch of driver install fun, I am going to make a backup copy of Win98SE that we will use for our purposes today.
First up, we will test this 3Com Fast EtherLink XL PCI card, and this S3 Trio64V+ card. The video card got detected right away! Perfect! I set the resolution to 1024x768x256, and set the refresh rate to 60Hz since it seemed to perform best at those settings.
As for the network card, it got detected as well, and we are able to browse the web. Excellent.
Time for the second batch of cards. I put the network card in a different PCI slot, and it got angry. Moving it to the same slot as the first round of testing fixed things right up!
As for the video card, I wasn't 100% sure what it was, so I fired up Unknown Devices. It's an ATI Rage 128 Pro. I hunted down drivers on The Retro Web, but looks like we are going to need to install DirectX first.
So, I installed DirectX, installed the drivers, set the resolution, and we are looking good!
Okay, time for the third batch. We'll test a Realtek RTL8139D card, and this ATI 3D Rage Pro AGP card. The video card detected right up and I was able to set the video mode and refresh rate to my liking!
As for network, I needed to find drivers, so I headed over to The Retro Web. Smooth sailing, and we are now online!
Time for the fourth batch. We have a Cirrus Logic CL-GD5440 video card and another Realtek RTL8139D network card. The video card detected right up, but on reboot, it went out of video range. Ugh. Guess we better head to safe mode.
While in safe mode, I thought I would see which video card drivers are now installed, and it is becoming quite the list 😂. I tweaked the refresh rate setting, which then prompted me to start up with 640x480x16 in "regular mode", which is exactly what we want.
Okay, so back in "regular mode", I was able to set the resolution to 1024x768x256. Good enough.. I bet higher modes and depths are interlaced, hence the "out of range" earlier. Also, the network card is working great!
Alright, next batch. We have this Trident TVGA 8900D ISA card, which totally doesn't belong in a Pentium III, and a Smart Modular Technologies 90079 "riptide" card. I had to run the "Add New Hardware Wizard" since I don't think this card is Plug and Pray. And... oh, this again?
Well, you know the drill. Safe mode. Tweak some setting. 640x480x16. Boot back in and adjust. This card kept getting ticked off with more than 16 colors, so 800x600x16 it is. It is a nice card though with 1MB of memory, it's just better for a DOS system.
Okay, time for that riptide card. It was a royal pain to find drivers for it. The drivers listed on The Retro Web didn't work, at least for Win98. But I eventually found something that did, geared for an HP Pavilion! This card is a combo modem/audio card!
So, I went one by one on the yellow question marks in device manager, and we got things to work! Looking good, and this card doesn't sound half bad either!
Let's fire up Retro SHOUTcast to have a quick listen. Gotta love the crappy video mode we are in still 😂
Ookay, we're almost done. I have one other Smart Modular Technologies 90079 card to test (different revision). It was a bit flaky at first, but got detected on reseat. I launched a terminal program so that we could see some information about the modem! Yes, it's a soft modem.
So, with this, we're left with the one Microchannel card to test, but honestly, I don't feel like getting the PS/2 out right now, so we might look at that a little later. I hope you enjoyed this testing session, thx for following along!
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Let's test this Microchannel 3Com network card that I picked up for my IBM PS/2 Model 70 386 (with a 486 upgrade). Time for a quick 🧵
So, this card is a 3Com EtherLink/MC TP. As per usual, the Ardent Tool of Capitalism has a nice writeup on the card, as well as drivers! Looking at the drivers disk, it appears we have LAN Manager, NDIS, and Netware drivers. Pretty limited, but this is an older card.
Time to get this installed. And of course, this is Microchannel, so, on powerup, the PS/2 is immediately angry. I did copy the "adapter configuration file" to my PS/2 Reference disk. Running auto configure, the card gets detected, and we can see the settings. Nice!
Last week, I triaged and repaired around 20 or so LTE 5000 systems that I picked up at the System Source swap meet. Today, I spent some time swapping around parts and "making them better." Let's talk about it briefly in a 🧵 here!
By far, the most common repair needed was screen sliders, latches, casings, and bezels. I spent a fair amount of time replacing and "placing" these based on what I had in stock, or based on spare parts machines from the haul. It's the little things that count 😂
Also, I had some very "yellow" keyboards that I went ahead and swapped out with spares. Might as well!
Here's some good news for BlueSCSI/ZuluSCSI owners who want wireless networking in DOS and Win3.1x: Michael Brutman (author of mTCP) has taken my DaynaPORT DOS packet driver and greatly improved it! I'm using it to browse the web. Let's talk about how in a 🧵 here!
First, some context: several months ago, I started down the path to get my BlueSCSI working in DOS, and made a very alpha driver to do such. As per usual, I then abandoned the project 😂
Then, Michael found out about the project, and greatly improved upon it! There is a beta version that you can find here: . Although the driver is currently beta, it is very well written, and is working great for me!github.com/mbbrutman/dayn…
I had a total blast testing my newly-acquired fleet of LTE 5000 series systems! Over the past four days, I was able to make 20 working systems from my haul of (I believe) 26 systems. Let's have a BRIEF outbrief in a 🧵 here!
First, just LOOK at everything!! Everything you see here either will go in a system (HDD, FDD, CD-ROMs, battery shells), is a spare part, or a conversation piece (PCMCIA cards without dongles 😂). And, oh, for the six systems that contributed to parts, look at all of the screws!
Here are the "failed" parts. Several failed or flaky mobos. Two bad processor cards. Several bad DC to DC cards. Only one bad FDD, which is miraculous. And of course, that one keyboard that took a lot of abuse, too much to repair.
Day 4 LTE 5000 (and probably some LTE Elite!) cleanup and testing. I'll just do highlight reel, I am sure you guys have seen enough at this point 😂. Let's do this! 🧵
First, we have doubled downstream testing power 😂. Now let's talk about the system on the right...
So, as you can see, the screen is bad, but I think the effect is lowkey cool! Also, this system had a bad processor card and DC to DC card. That's been fixed. The HDD caddy had the logic board for a HDD and was missing the cover. Someone has been in here!!
It's another beautiful day here... and time to clean and test some more LTE 5000 systems! And since I am taking an extended weekend, we have time to do this. Let's get to work. 🧵
So, first, the tarp earned its pay. It rained a bit overnight. Most systems did stay dry. No concerns here! I thought the tarp had a small hole in it. Indeed it did 😂
Before we proceed, I do have a confession: late last night, I did pull one more system off the stack, clean it up, and try to test it. Sadly, it's dead. Oh well, we will deal with that later.