You are genuinely the only person I can watch for an hour straight without getting bored and skipping through the video. You're videos are so awesome man. Keep up the amazing work!!
A few years back, I bought a computer lot from from a local city's court. When I went to pick them up, I was only supposed to get 6, but there was another pile next to that pile that they told me I could have. I loaded everything up, got home, and started going through the computers. The pile I purchased had their hard drives removed. The other pile did not... Several had documents containing arrest warrants, social security numbers, and a really good buffalo chicken dip recipe that I still use to this day. I ended up wiping the drives thoroughly and never heard anything from the court, but I don't think I was supposed to get the second pile of computers.
🤣 The buffalo chicken dip recipe… That’s some sensitive data! Yeah it’s amazing how much data falls through the cracks. It’s a good thing these systems fall into the hands of people like us and not identity thieves.
You wouldn't believe how many businesses dispose of IT equipment without scrubbing the disk drives. They tend to be SMBs with one IT guy on the end of a phone somewhere in a remote state. I used to spend days low-level formatting SCSI disks just to throw them away. These days I DBAN them and pile them up for periodic shredding down to electronic coffee grounds! Keep up the great work on the channel.
Yup! Having spent decades in corporate IT I can't say I'm surprised. Several passes with random data combined with physical destruction was SOP when I worked for DoD contractors.
As always, your videos serve to relax and entertain. I love your content. Congratulations on the growth of your channel, Mike, you cutie. You deserve it. I noticed you took off the pride flag from the clock :( Big hug, Mike, keep up the great work.
Just wanted to say how much I appreciate your channel, reminds me of working at my first job at a small computer store in the wild west of PC's in 1996... Also I am now calmed by the clicks of your test drives, lets all hope those never fully die!
Hi Mike!! The Feature Connector is the same set of pins you'll find for example on Trident or S3 PCI cards from that era, apparently it was used on some MPEG accelerator cards but hardly used.On the other hand, the Wave connector would be like the ones found on Soundcars for plugging in external wavetable modules. I think it's a nice bonus from the board makers, having everything on board and also provide the same features as if there were discrete cards. Keep the videos coming!!!
That Micron and the Dell you compared it to are just a couple of makers who used that case. It was also used by OmniTech, CompUSA, HP used it in their Kayak series, even UMax (one of the Apple cloners) used it in their high end models. I'm sure there are others I haven't listed. I still don't know who actually made it, although I wonder if it was Foxconn. Best 90s OEM case ever made.
You have *NO IDEA* how badly I want to relive the AOL 2.5 days. I was very active in the Hackintosh warez scene and even began learning how to script/program using a utility called OneClick. Man, those were the days!
I don't even have a drive indicator on my modern laptop & yet I can come here and literally hear drive activity, it's beautiful. I see more retro RUclipsrs just resorting to the quiet CF / SD / SSD replacements. This is why I appreciate you keeping it as true as you can while you still can!
Another great video! This one was jam packed. I love watching you dive into and take apart all these computers. It’s my favorite Friday morning activity. Yes I can attest to the fact you like to drill things lol. Thinking back to three holes drilled into the floor. I wonder the people at AOL would think if they knew that email was from a 7 year old HA! That Tonka game was a trip. Looking at the picture makes me wonder what kid stuck that gift card in the floppy drive. I miss all the old computer sounds. Listening to the hard drive click. Those sounds equate to the computer thinking. I love your videos, they bring back many memories.
I love watching these while I am working on projects. Also going to be great prep for my machines that have been sitting out in the garage for a long time.
Thanks! I'm going to do everything I can to save that board. There has to be a way to re-connect the middle layers to those vias. I've ordered some micro drill bits to see if I can expose the interconnects inside those vias.
I remember selling those micron PCs at office depot, they were pretty nice units but the market was cramped with to many brands, so they folded that side of it and concentrated on their dram business. I also remember all the others when they were new.
Some good tips there about trace repair, and a great use for old desoldering braid. Yes, board trace repair can be a really fun thing, especially on these multilayer boards, we have some Sony 4 and 6-layer boards at work in BVH-3000 series video recorders, the traces got eaten not by batteries but by leaking Elna high-temperature capacitors, they are made more fun by the fact that the seal fails on the bottom of the capacitor and the leftover seal adheres to the board, it takes between 4 and 10 hours of work on each board. I really hope you can save that Pentium VLB board, if you do you should configure Openstep x86 on it, just like Cannon did with 486 machines to make a turnkey high end DTP machine.
That Micron/Dell is just like the Dell I once worked with. Recall a story about a woman who called tech support asking how to remove the sticky side cover. She was told to pick up the CPU box and "bounce it gently on the floor". And I've found cards in computers also. My first old Pentium-100, a thrift store, was being used for baseball card storage. Probably 100+ inside the case, stuffed in the floppy drive, in the optical drive, every crack and crevice had baseball cards crammed inside. Probably a good find for a computer enthusiast who's also a sports card collector.
The Micron Millennia was the last new pre-built desktop/tower PC I ever bought. After that I assembled all my PC's from components. I'm not sure of the exact model but the front panel is just like the one you have in the video. I do remember that the front panel power button broke so I had to poke the switch behind the front panel with a pencil to start it up. Brick & mortar computer stores like Egghead, CompUSA, CompuAdd, Radio Shack and computer fairs were my main source of parts until the early 2000's when online retailers such as PC Connection and CDW offered a vast array of PC parts. Of course I bought a few pre-made laptops and upgraded the RAM and storage. I've also bought some inexpensive used PC's off of eBay and Craigslist to uses as secondary or tertiary PC's.
1992, Tandy (Radio Shack) 1000 RLX 20 mb hd, 3 1/2" floppy, monitor, keyboard, mouse, dot matrix printer. Three year Warranty, which came in handy since the system had a faulty hard drive. It switched between DOS and Desk Mate(very nice, basic GUI); the technicians could not explain what was going on. Almost $1000.00 spent. After the new hd, it was working well! I mostly used it's version of BASIC, DOS, Desk Mate; Hangman, Print Shop, and Wheel of Fortune!
I have that exact Micron Millennia that I found back in 2002...minus the target gift card and tonka cd lol. Same video card, cpu, dial up modem and nic. The only difference is it had a quantum bigfoot hard drive that somehow the owner rigged into the case. Those things are huge!
WOW... you're getting PTSD?!? I managed a network of 20+ Win NT4 machines and it is what made me change gears and steer my career to being a Linux/BSD admin. :) Great video!
I am listening you dig through ancient computers while trying to get my Amiga Video Toaster set up. You want to dig through some oddball hardware, the Amiga is a treasure for such things! Though the prices have become ridiculous...
my recent windows 98 build was in a black tower, which is fine, because I have a black PS/2 keyboard, black serial mouse and black CRT… I just really want an off yellow wish everything the next time around, it just gives it that home feeling of you know everything‘s gonna be all right when you look at it. Thx Mike :)))
I had an NEC Ready in 1997. It was a little bit of an upgrade to the one you have there but it was still the same form factor. It was a 233MMX and came new with a 4 gig hard drive and 32 megs of ram. I remember it included this neat tutorial software with a wizard guy that would walk around on your screen and teach you how to use the computer.
@@youtubasoarus We had the very same model from the video, and yeah, I never saw anyone else with an NEC computer at the time. I think NEC stopped making PCs just 5 years later or so. It was a pretty sweet machine, though.
My technique for replacing destroyed copper tracks is to use wire wrap wire (30 or 26 GA). It's silver plated and solders like a dream because the silver is oxide/tarnish free having been under insulation which easily strips off. Plus leaving the insulation on for long runs the wire instantly bonds to the circuit board with the tiniest amount of Krazy-Glu, you don't have to solder the wire down along a track, just where the wire terminates to the intact track. I wash all of the flux off and coat the repairs with lacquer. Thanks for letting me know about the rubber Dremel bit.
the videos just keep getting better, love the long vids! and finally a CD ROM drive has a disc in it, last week I sensed it was coming lol , can't wait in time to see all the Franklin E-Waste Haul computers, completed, and ready for the big group photo!!! Congrats on 6K subs also, climbing all the time! all my best!!
I actually remember having that Tonka game back in the day when I was in probably 2nd or 3rd grade. Got it from the book fair the school system did back then.
The IR pick up on the first one isn't for data transfer between devices, it is for an actual remote control that could navigate the PC. I think every PC big name tried it in that period of a couple years.
Oh man, that NEC Ready 7022 was my family's first ever brand new computer (hand-me-downs before then). It cost a small fortune at the time, but I used the ever living hell out of the thing. Came with a full copy of Descent, too. Good times.
Ex-NT4 admin here. Yes, it was very different from 2000 and 2003. You'd be able to find your way around 2000 without any trouble with your 2003 experience, but NT4 was pretty spartan. I'd forgotten NT4 had *any* MMC functionality at all. It was all EXEs for the main server utilities. No Active Directory on NT4 either, AD didn't come along until 2000. I rarely used NT4 after about 2003, but the place I worked then had a couple of NT4 servers lingering around. I was responsible for moving them to VMware off physical hardware so they probably survived 10 years longer than they should have, long after I'd departed for greener pastures. But you've heard the story... Biz-critical server, software vendor went out of business and a long-gone employee named Dan lost the original media. I heard the same story at two different employers about a dead-end server and the guy's name was Dan both times.
Good ol’ Dan! 🤣 Yeah I was pretty helpless in NT4. My last company still had a Server 2003 VM (they did a P2V at some point) which I was tasked with migrating and retiring. This was in 2019…. Sure it was retro-cool and all but this was a live corporate environment… Thanks for the comment, gave me a chuckle!
That Windows NT blue start up screen at 59:26 brings back memories, I'd totally forgotten it did that on boot up and how slow it was. This would have been in 1997 or 98 so not sure which version it was, it might have been NT 4. These were IBM workstations running Avid Media Composer and they had a SCSI drive as the main C drive. All the external media drives were on SCSI chains, mostly 9 or 18GB but occasionally a 36GB. Then at some point they were all upgraded to Windows 2000.
Can't wait for the video about this HP DDS3 Tape Drive! I also bought one lately and just run it on Windows 10! It works but I'm a newbie here so I hope your video will make me feel better here! PS. You do a great work with your channel, please do it as long as possible! 🤗
Sorry if someone mentioned this, but do those Socket 4 pentiums require two 72 pin SIMMs like socket 5 CPUs? You had only used one 32 bit SIMM during testing. A VLB socket 4 board seems so insanely strange and rare. Hopefully you can get it working eventually!
I believe they do. Sadly, still no love after trying two and four sticks. Think I must have missed some damaged traces. Sure wish it would give me some beep codes. Seems like the documentation on the POST analyzer codes are sort-of just guessing. I remain hopeful!
@@miketech1024 I did a little reading and yes it appears the original P5 also had a 64bit wide memory interface, so definitely needs two 72 pin modules. (or 4) Hopefully you can find the damage -- damn VARTA batteries!!!!!
those dell/micron cases are a foxconn inhouse design, fun fact the case design was also used for a macintosh clone. also the drive cage shoud just be one or two screws and you should be able to just tilt or pull the cage out without removing the other sidepanel.
That case style that Micron and Dell used was also used with the UMAX S900 Macintosh clone. It was one of the first ATX cases out there. That case design lived into 2001 or so when Dell finally replaced it with the grey/black clamshell cases with those terribly placed front USB ports.
Yes, we got a batch of those Micron Millennia systems at a multimedia software company I worked at. And around the same time we also got one of those UMAX Macintosh clones with the same case. And since I did side work of fixing people's home computers, so I also saw one of the Dell systems with the same case. I'm thinking there might even have been a Digital home computer in the same case as well (more than 25 years ago, memory isn't so good).
Lol.. exchange server ptsd is indeed a real tithing! Funny story: an old boss of mine from long ago wanted a HDD upgrade for our amiga computer, so he called up the dealer, and the sales person asked IDE or SCSI? My boss responded: SCSI? no… I want a good one!
Please don't add secondary battery to your RTC chip as 10:30 . If You can't replace it in a proper way, at least disconnect the old one by cutting one of the terminals.
I feel I'm repeating myself but I get so excited or nostalgic whenever I see an OPL sound chip. To me the value of these chips is only going to get more valuable. Plus I get so excited about a 'classic' video card. And CPUs on daughter or riser cards still blow me away. Great work. X
Many years ago for some reason I set up a Compaq ML370 (IIRC) with either a BSD or Debian on it as my file server. Dual 733MHz Pentium III. It had an onboard ATI Rage IIc. I wonder if those were standard issue for Compaq and HP? It sounded like a vacuum cleaner running without the driver to tell the fan to spin down. I hacked the driver from RHEL onto it somehow, which helped a lot! Also, about 6 or 7 years ago I was out with some friends and drove past a few old computers outside a small office block, so I grabbed them. A few were desktops (one was better than my then current system so that got swapped in), but one was a generic server with Windows Server 2003.Turns out it belonged to a financial planner's office and all of the personal data was in the recycling bin. Driver's licenses, scans of Medicare cards, correspondence, you name it. I figure someone unqualified just selected the files and hit delete without knowing what they were doing. Rest assured I DBANed that thing immediately.
Wow! I swear some very basic data sanitization course should be a part of whatever qualifications are required to be a CPA or other finance-oriented professional. I see this stuff all too often.
The optical drive that's installed on the NEC is a 40x drive (hence CD Master 40E). Samsung sold a metric buttload of drives on the OEM market in the late 90's and early 2000's. eMachines was one of their biggest customers, but every mom and pop shop in my area carried their drives as well.
i miss the scrolling of loads of processed files ,made you appreciate how busy it is ,now its all hidden , never liked the stuttering /freezing progress bar
about the rtc hack ? will the new battery not just drain supper fast if its in series with a known bad cell. ? a 18650 in a holder may be the way to go for a long life. also loving the tight editing straght to the point. i never have to skip. top marks. lol
The onboard sound adapter in the first machine you took apart is an Opti 930. I had an ISA card version when I was younger - it had very decent Sound Blaster Pro and Adlib compatibility for DOS gaming.
34:10 That's an rare Opti 82C571/572 VLB socket 4 board. Not the Opti Corba 82C596/597 with the PCI slots bridged of one master VLB slot which was as weired but apparently more common. Seems to be a TMC/MyComp/MyNix/Megastar PAT45PVS (VER.2.0). And according to The Retro Web there were only three boards with that chipset. One by Acer and two by Megastar Kamtronic. The other one had that socket 3 installed. Hope you can fix it but you should buy an lottery ticket for sure. 34:23 WD bought Paradise in 1986 and sold it to Philips in 1995 only days before their first 3D card (Tasmania 3D based on the Yamaha YGV612) came out. I know that because I search one for years now. Some still exist. If you find one as well... Please hit me up.
The NEC system, I LOVE IT!! I like the way you fix and clean this vintage machines. You can use stuff like PCem to emulate these but you will never get the real experience like what a CRT and a Pentium 2 would get you. I really liked the server machine, I have never seen a dual Slot 1 motherboard with on SCSI, that's insane! The ATI 3D Rage IIc is a VERY unpowered and common 3D AGP video card and some could even do hardware DVD playback. The 25th is my last day of school for me, so you will see more content on my channel!
Thanks! I agree there is simply no replacement for the sights and sounds of real hardware. I do appreciate that things like PCem, DosBox and 86Box lowers the barrier of entry to DOS gaming (no need to buy an expensive retro machine), but I need real hardware. Even when playing NES games, emulation just isn’t the same for me. I can’t explain it either because the NES is silent. Yeah servers usually come with super basic video cards. Especially modern servers because usually we’re just loading a hypervisor on there, connecting it to the network and it never sees a monitor again until it needs on-prem maintenance. I was surprised to see that this card had any 3D capabilities at all. Awesome, can’t wait to see what you upload!
@@miketech1024 Yeah, I plan on doing a overview video on my Windows 98 PC nicknamed MadMax because of the black drives in a beige case (i couldnt find anything DVD-ROM/CD-RW IDE drives in beige at a good price at the time) and installing OS2 Warp 4 or 4.52,
Interesting Machines, Both Dell and Micron got a lot of use out of that model of Case I have a Newer Micron and a Dell 4100 Same Case as yours just newer Front Face Plates. Thanks for the Video.
Good god, Server NT 4.0 looked like the wild west. My experience like yours goes back to 2003 (2003 Small Business Server to be exact) and apparently there was so much more creature comforts that 2000 or 2003 brought that made our lives easier. Granted when I got my first sysadmin job, it was the year of our Lord 2010 and Server 2003 was already old. It helped to tap in on my experience from building complete AD domains in my bedroom growing up. After typing that, I'm pretty sure I know why my life took the path it did. Not bad.
I was pretty lost in NT4. PowerShell probably wasn't even thought of yet! At my last job, they were still running a Server 2003 VM (they did a P2V) which I had to retire... In 2019... Yeah we are very fortunate to have been such tech-curious kids! It's amazing how much those early experiences helped accelerate my career!
magnet wire is what louis rossmann uses for trace repair. Your method will work as you know, this isn't a critique, just if you are having trouble with small traces that is more ideal.
You might try write precomp set to 65535.. As i recall tthe starting cylinder for write precomp was the one in the bios, and pretty much all IDE drives didnt' use it, so setting to 65535 is how to tell it to ignore it.. Wirite Precomp was more for MFM/RLL disks..
That one fan you noted was somewhat silent reminded me of some fan blade design from MIT with toroidal blades. It is supposed to be more silent. Although this is on drones, don't dismiss it as being just for drones like some narrow minded people who don't know that things have multiple uses. Maybe they even work better for those uses than their original intended use! Or maybe something that was designed for something else works really well for a lot of things. One thing I would mention about that fan you had is that the blades didn't have sharp corners. They were nicely rounded and that is not something you usually see on PC fans. Some of them have pointy and sharp blades that make them a little bit dangerous when they run without a grill over them. Also that grill would help prevent them from ruining wires that are too close.
There are STL files to 3D print these fans also. I guess the best thing to do is have one that the hub motor is easy enough to remove and remove the plastic from to have a base to put that onto.
“Ok how about you go away”
Mike tech is a real nice guy!
In my defense, dude was kinda pushy...
Another vid by my favorite hot tech guy
You are genuinely the only person I can watch for an hour straight without getting bored and skipping through the video. You're videos are so awesome man. Keep up the amazing work!!
Thanks!
I was expecting to click away pretty quickly at the start of this video and now it's at the end! Nice video Mike.
I only know a few other creators like that.
@@miketech1024 It helps he has a very soothing voice, and he is _really_ easy on the eyes. 🤤🤗
A few years back, I bought a computer lot from from a local city's court. When I went to pick them up, I was only supposed to get 6, but there was another pile next to that pile that they told me I could have. I loaded everything up, got home, and started going through the computers. The pile I purchased had their hard drives removed. The other pile did not... Several had documents containing arrest warrants, social security numbers, and a really good buffalo chicken dip recipe that I still use to this day. I ended up wiping the drives thoroughly and never heard anything from the court, but I don't think I was supposed to get the second pile of computers.
🤣 The buffalo chicken dip recipe… That’s some sensitive data! Yeah it’s amazing how much data falls through the cracks. It’s a good thing these systems fall into the hands of people like us and not identity thieves.
You wouldn't believe how many businesses dispose of IT equipment without scrubbing the disk drives. They tend to be SMBs with one IT guy on the end of a phone somewhere in a remote state. I used to spend days low-level formatting SCSI disks just to throw them away. These days I DBAN them and pile them up for periodic shredding down to electronic coffee grounds! Keep up the great work on the channel.
Yup! Having spent decades in corporate IT I can't say I'm surprised. Several passes with random data combined with physical destruction was SOP when I worked for DoD contractors.
As always, your videos serve to relax and entertain. I love your content. Congratulations on the growth of your channel, Mike, you cutie. You deserve it. I noticed you took off the pride flag from the clock :(
Big hug, Mike, keep up the great work.
Thanks! The watch face change is unintentional. The slightest accidental swipe of the screen changes it.
Just wanted to say how much I appreciate your channel, reminds me of working at my first job at a small computer store in the wild west of PC's in 1996... Also I am now calmed by the clicks of your test drives, lets all hope those never fully die!
Thanks! If you like hard drive sounds, you should check out Arnold's channel: www.youtube.com/@arnlol
It's like music to me!
All hale the sacrificial HDs!!! Even when they're about to croak, they fight the good fight!
@@keithbrown7685 We thank them for their sacrifice!
6:01 The mommyboard. 😂😂
Legit am going to call it a mommyboard from now on. I blame Mike 😂
I assume Mike called it the Mommyboard as that Machine had a Daughterboard / Riser Card from what I remember! 😂
You are so lucky you found a room full of vintage computers! I wish that was me :(
Aww, you had the opportunity to use the Target gift card to spread the thermal paste! Great repairs and attempted repairs.
unnecessary.
@@BenStatewhy
@@Cat_loaf20 makes no difference whatsoever
@@BenStateit would be fun
Hi Mike!! The Feature Connector is the same set of pins you'll find for example on Trident or S3 PCI cards from that era, apparently it was used on some MPEG accelerator cards but hardly used.On the other hand, the Wave connector would be like the ones found on Soundcars for plugging in external wavetable modules. I think it's a nice bonus from the board makers, having everything on board and also provide the same features as if there were discrete cards. Keep the videos coming!!!
Thanks!!
That Micron and the Dell you compared it to are just a couple of makers who used that case. It was also used by OmniTech, CompUSA, HP used it in their Kayak series, even UMax (one of the Apple cloners) used it in their high end models. I'm sure there are others I haven't listed. I still don't know who actually made it, although I wonder if it was Foxconn. Best 90s OEM case ever made.
According to an old AnandTech article those are Palo Alto ATCX ATX cases
You have *NO IDEA* how badly I want to relive the AOL 2.5 days. I was very active in the Hackintosh warez scene and even began learning how to script/program using a utility called OneClick. Man, those were the days!
Mike melts my heart almost as much as that battery fluid melter those tracks ❤😍😍😍🥰
love the rtc hack , great problem solve
I don't even have a drive indicator on my modern laptop & yet I can come here and literally hear drive activity, it's beautiful. I see more retro RUclipsrs just resorting to the quiet CF / SD / SSD replacements. This is why I appreciate you keeping it as true as you can while you still can!
My Grandpa had a Micron in the 90's loved that computer.
30:10 AWWWW that's for sure a grandma computer. So cute! 🥰🥰
Bonus points awarded for conjegated use of the word "cromulent".
When you do the power supply test, you should check the outputs in AC mode as well to check for any really bad ripple due to failing caps.
Another great video! This one was jam packed. I love watching you dive into and take apart all these computers. It’s my favorite Friday morning activity. Yes I can attest to the fact you like to drill things lol. Thinking back to three holes drilled into the floor. I wonder the people at AOL would think if they knew that email was from a 7 year old HA! That Tonka game was a trip. Looking at the picture makes me wonder what kid stuck that gift card in the floppy drive.
I miss all the old computer sounds. Listening to the hard drive click. Those sounds equate to the computer thinking. I love your videos, they bring back many memories.
I love watching these while I am working on projects. Also going to be great prep for my machines that have been sitting out in the garage for a long time.
Top content again. Always looking forward to your videos. Sad that this ultra rare Socket4 was damaged so badly. Hop you get it fixed 100%. Cheers
Thanks! I'm going to do everything I can to save that board. There has to be a way to re-connect the middle layers to those vias. I've ordered some micro drill bits to see if I can expose the interconnects inside those vias.
I have quite a few NEC ready PCs. Nostalgic design. Also Micron PC as well.
I remember selling those micron PCs at office depot, they were pretty nice units but the market was cramped with to many brands, so they folded that side of it and concentrated on their dram business. I also remember all the others when they were new.
what a time capsule, this is amazing. how cool would it be to find those kids all grown up
Some good tips there about trace repair, and a great use for old desoldering braid. Yes, board trace repair can be a really fun thing, especially on these multilayer boards, we have some Sony 4 and 6-layer boards at work in BVH-3000 series video recorders, the traces got eaten not by batteries but by leaking Elna high-temperature capacitors, they are made more fun by the fact that the seal fails on the bottom of the capacitor and the leftover seal adheres to the board, it takes between 4 and 10 hours of work on each board. I really hope you can save that Pentium VLB board, if you do you should configure Openstep x86 on it, just like Cannon did with 486 machines to make a turnkey high end DTP machine.
That Micron/Dell is just like the Dell I once worked with. Recall a story about a woman who called tech support asking how to remove the sticky side cover. She was told to pick up the CPU box and "bounce it gently on the floor". And I've found cards in computers also. My first old Pentium-100, a thrift store, was being used for baseball card storage. Probably 100+ inside the case, stuffed in the floppy drive, in the optical drive, every crack and crevice had baseball cards crammed inside. Probably a good find for a computer enthusiast who's also a sports card collector.
I wrestled with opening that case for longer than I'd like to admit! 😂
The Micron Millennia was the last new pre-built desktop/tower PC I ever bought. After that I assembled all my PC's from components. I'm not sure of the exact model but the front panel is just like the one you have in the video. I do remember that the front panel power button broke so I had to poke the switch behind the front panel with a pencil to start it up.
Brick & mortar computer stores like Egghead, CompUSA, CompuAdd, Radio Shack and computer fairs were my main source of parts until the early 2000's when online retailers such as PC Connection and CDW offered a vast array of PC parts.
Of course I bought a few pre-made laptops and upgraded the RAM and storage. I've also bought some inexpensive used PC's off of eBay and Craigslist to uses as secondary or tertiary PC's.
1992, Tandy (Radio Shack) 1000 RLX 20 mb hd, 3 1/2" floppy, monitor, keyboard, mouse, dot matrix printer. Three year Warranty, which came in handy since the system had a faulty hard drive. It switched between DOS and Desk Mate(very nice, basic GUI); the technicians could not explain what was going on. Almost $1000.00 spent. After the new hd, it was working well! I mostly used it's version of BASIC, DOS, Desk Mate; Hangman, Print Shop, and Wheel of Fortune!
Hey! I have that tonka game, my dad bought it for me brand new when we still had our IBM Aptiva in the early 2000's. Still have the disk. eheheheh.
2:37 - Opti 82C930A ;)
18:50 - IRDA is probably connected to either COM1 or COM2 - it must be enabled in BIOS to be in IRDA mode
It's a new one for me. Amazed it has an OPL chip!
I have that exact Micron Millennia that I found back in 2002...minus the target gift card and tonka cd lol. Same video card, cpu, dial up modem and nic. The only difference is it had a quantum bigfoot hard drive that somehow the owner rigged into the case. Those things are huge!
Another good post, I can look at your channel for hours, keep on!😀
WOW... you're getting PTSD?!? I managed a network of 20+ Win NT4 machines and it is what made me change gears and steer my career to being a Linux/BSD admin. :) Great video!
Great video, Reminds me of when computers were fun minus the slow load times. :)
Recently subscribed - Retro Tech Chris mentioned you on Twitter/X. Thanks for the mention! That was a fun surprise. 🙂
You provide an invaluable service to this hobby. I’m happy to help! 🙂
I am listening you dig through ancient computers while trying to get my Amiga Video Toaster set up. You want to dig through some oddball hardware, the Amiga is a treasure for such things! Though the prices have become ridiculous...
the tonka game is cool, my brother and i played those as kids on a very similar Micron, ours was a P166
Impressive!
my recent windows 98 build was in a black tower, which is fine, because I have a black PS/2 keyboard, black serial mouse and black CRT…
I just really want an off yellow wish everything the next time around, it just gives it that home feeling of you know everything‘s gonna be all right when you look at it.
Thx Mike :)))
I'm always amazed with such small solder work, it never seems small because of no context but when you said "sewing needle" the size clicked.
I had an NEC Ready in 1997. It was a little bit of an upgrade to the one you have there but it was still the same form factor. It was a 233MMX and came new with a 4 gig hard drive and 32 megs of ram. I remember it included this neat tutorial software with a wizard guy that would walk around on your screen and teach you how to use the computer.
Another NEC owner. Nice! Seems it was kind of a rare thing to have back then.
@@youtubasoarus We had the very same model from the video, and yeah, I never saw anyone else with an NEC computer at the time. I think NEC stopped making PCs just 5 years later or so. It was a pretty sweet machine, though.
@@pommefrites Heck yeah, they're built like tanks!
Omg your so adorable trying to run MSC snap ins on NT4!
“Daddy they took my PowerShell!”
My technique for replacing destroyed copper tracks is to use wire wrap wire (30 or 26 GA). It's silver plated and solders like a dream because the silver is oxide/tarnish free having been under insulation which easily strips off. Plus leaving the insulation on for long runs the wire instantly bonds to the circuit board with the tiniest amount of Krazy-Glu, you don't have to solder the wire down along a track, just where the wire terminates to the intact track. I wash all of the flux off and coat the repairs with lacquer. Thanks for letting me know about the rubber Dremel bit.
Hi Mike, I love your videos. I'm an It administrator and I love old PC ❤.
the videos just keep getting better, love the long vids! and finally a CD ROM drive has a disc in it, last week I sensed it was coming lol , can't wait in time to see all the Franklin E-Waste Haul computers, completed, and ready for the big group photo!!! Congrats on 6K subs also, climbing all the time! all my best!!
Thanks! Yeah you definitely called it!
You are the steve1989 of retro tech - awesome videos
It's amazing isn't it! I literally commented the same thing.
Micron and Dell just used the same chassis, the Palo Alto ATCX, in both cases with custom front bezels.
man, i found this channel yesterday, im having a blast watching your vids!! Instant subscibe
30:00 - it would have been awesome to look those people up. Probably a little sketchy though.
I actually remember having that Tonka game back in the day when I was in probably 2nd or 3rd grade. Got it from the book fair the school system did back then.
I remember seeing towers like this in the Computer Shopper Magazine.
The IR pick up on the first one isn't for data transfer between devices, it is for an actual remote control that could navigate the PC.
I think every PC big name tried it in that period of a couple years.
34:59 - I have an identical controller :) Very good ! And VLB + Pentium motherboard is really a rarity.
I wouldn't have minded that NEC Ready machine back in the day, even today lol.
I would definitely upgrade everything to the max and then some lol
Oh man, that NEC Ready 7022 was my family's first ever brand new computer (hand-me-downs before then). It cost a small fortune at the time, but I used the ever living hell out of the thing. Came with a full copy of Descent, too. Good times.
A friend told me to ask if you could do the introduction video wearing the tank top.
YES PLEASE!!!
LOL there is one such video on Patreon, but it's about building the wooden parts stand. In my defense it was over 80°F (27°C) that day...
#AskingForAFriend
Ex-NT4 admin here. Yes, it was very different from 2000 and 2003. You'd be able to find your way around 2000 without any trouble with your 2003 experience, but NT4 was pretty spartan. I'd forgotten NT4 had *any* MMC functionality at all. It was all EXEs for the main server utilities. No Active Directory on NT4 either, AD didn't come along until 2000. I rarely used NT4 after about 2003, but the place I worked then had a couple of NT4 servers lingering around. I was responsible for moving them to VMware off physical hardware so they probably survived 10 years longer than they should have, long after I'd departed for greener pastures. But you've heard the story... Biz-critical server, software vendor went out of business and a long-gone employee named Dan lost the original media. I heard the same story at two different employers about a dead-end server and the guy's name was Dan both times.
Good ol’ Dan! 🤣 Yeah I was pretty helpless in NT4. My last company still had a Server 2003 VM (they did a P2V at some point) which I was tasked with migrating and retiring. This was in 2019…. Sure it was retro-cool and all but this was a live corporate environment… Thanks for the comment, gave me a chuckle!
I'm not that old... yet. Or am I🤔
That Windows NT blue start up screen at 59:26 brings back memories, I'd totally forgotten it did that on boot up and how slow it was. This would have been in 1997 or 98 so not sure which version it was, it might have been NT 4. These were IBM workstations running Avid Media Composer and they had a SCSI drive as the main C drive. All the external media drives were on SCSI chains, mostly 9 or 18GB but occasionally a 36GB. Then at some point they were all upgraded to Windows 2000.
Oh my, oh my, the old 'friend' of us all, Barrel the Devil once again terrorizing out there... [33:24]
haha gotta love that y2k compliant sticker on the monitor xD
HP server with AGP and ISA in a nice case, lovely base for WIN98 gaming rig ;) The SX948 is great piece of history, sadly it has no FDIV bug.
That NEC I was hoping that would be an Alpha risc processor! Dreaming of getting one of those!
Can't wait for the video about this HP DDS3 Tape Drive! I also bought one lately and just run it on Windows 10! It works but I'm a newbie here so I hope your video will make me feel better here! PS. You do a great work with your channel, please do it as long as possible! 🤗
Quality work man.
Sorry if someone mentioned this, but do those Socket 4 pentiums require two 72 pin SIMMs like socket 5 CPUs? You had only used one 32 bit SIMM during testing.
A VLB socket 4 board seems so insanely strange and rare. Hopefully you can get it working eventually!
I believe they do. Sadly, still no love after trying two and four sticks. Think I must have missed some damaged traces. Sure wish it would give me some beep codes. Seems like the documentation on the POST analyzer codes are sort-of just guessing. I remain hopeful!
@@miketech1024 I did a little reading and yes it appears the original P5 also had a 64bit wide memory interface, so definitely needs two 72 pin modules. (or 4)
Hopefully you can find the damage -- damn VARTA batteries!!!!!
Thanks! I think it’s no coincidence that VARTA sounds like the name of a comic book supervillain…
The Micron case is a Palo Alto ATCX IIRC.. Dell used that case for ages!!!
I think one of the HP vectas the p2 system had a backup of the documents folder pointed at mpa01 that server was mpa01 cool!
those dell/micron cases are a foxconn inhouse design, fun fact the case design was also used for a macintosh clone.
also the drive cage shoud just be one or two screws and you should be able to just tilt or pull the cage out without removing the other sidepanel.
Thanks! That will come in very handy when I tear down the Dells.
That case style that Micron and Dell used was also used with the UMAX S900 Macintosh clone. It was one of the first ATX cases out there. That case design lived into 2001 or so when Dell finally replaced it with the grey/black clamshell cases with those terribly placed front USB ports.
I didn’t realize how widely used this case was! It is actually quite nice.
Yes, we got a batch of those Micron Millennia systems at a multimedia software company I worked at. And around the same time we also got one of those UMAX Macintosh clones with the same case. And since I did side work of fixing people's home computers, so I also saw one of the Dell systems with the same case.
I'm thinking there might even have been a Digital home computer in the same case as well (more than 25 years ago, memory isn't so good).
Lol.. exchange server ptsd is indeed a real tithing! Funny story: an old boss of mine from long ago wanted a HDD upgrade for our amiga computer, so he called up the dealer, and the sales person asked IDE or SCSI? My boss responded: SCSI? no… I want a good one!
🤣🤣🤣
Normaly I dont like long vids, but you make it fun to watch. Thumps UP.
Please don't add secondary battery to your RTC chip as 10:30 . If You can't replace it in a proper way, at least disconnect the old one by cutting one of the terminals.
26:46 - I use magic sponge with really hard marks on the plastic, works a treat!
Haven’t used one of those in a while. I’ll have to try it. Thanks!
I feel I'm repeating myself but I get so excited or nostalgic whenever I see an OPL sound chip. To me the value of these chips is only going to get more valuable. Plus I get so excited about a 'classic' video card. And CPUs on daughter or riser cards still blow me away. Great work. X
I had a feeling that you’d watched NecroWare’s channel as mentioned at: 39:45 or thereabouts! 🙂
Many years ago for some reason I set up a Compaq ML370 (IIRC) with either a BSD or Debian on it as my file server. Dual 733MHz Pentium III. It had an onboard ATI Rage IIc. I wonder if those were standard issue for Compaq and HP? It sounded like a vacuum cleaner running without the driver to tell the fan to spin down. I hacked the driver from RHEL onto it somehow, which helped a lot!
Also, about 6 or 7 years ago I was out with some friends and drove past a few old computers outside a small office block, so I grabbed them. A few were desktops (one was better than my then current system so that got swapped in), but one was a generic server with Windows Server 2003.Turns out it belonged to a financial planner's office and all of the personal data was in the recycling bin. Driver's licenses, scans of Medicare cards, correspondence, you name it. I figure someone unqualified just selected the files and hit delete without knowing what they were doing. Rest assured I DBANed that thing immediately.
Wow! I swear some very basic data sanitization course should be a part of whatever qualifications are required to be a CPA or other finance-oriented professional. I see this stuff all too often.
dude i love your videos! thats not how online shopping works!
This takes me back :)))))))
The optical drive that's installed on the NEC is a 40x drive (hence CD Master 40E). Samsung sold a metric buttload of drives on the OEM market in the late 90's and early 2000's. eMachines was one of their biggest customers, but every mom and pop shop in my area carried their drives as well.
I just love that content. Fantastic tip with that knoppix. Waiting for more!
i miss the scrolling of loads of processed files ,made you appreciate how busy it is ,now its all hidden , never liked the stuttering /freezing progress bar
I do miss when system work was actually palpable like that. It's one of the reasons I like noisy drives so much.
about the rtc hack ?
will the new battery not just drain supper fast if its in series with a known bad cell. ?
a 18650 in a holder may be the way to go for a long life.
also loving the tight editing straght to the point. i never have to skip. top marks. lol
man I love your videos super sweet and very very smart guy
The onboard sound adapter in the first machine you took apart is an Opti 930. I had an ISA card version when I was younger - it had very decent Sound Blaster Pro and Adlib compatibility for DOS gaming.
And it has a wavetable header, which makes it far superior to most onboard sound solutions.
34:10 That's an rare Opti 82C571/572 VLB socket 4 board. Not the Opti Corba 82C596/597 with the PCI slots bridged of one master VLB slot which was as weired but apparently more common. Seems to be a TMC/MyComp/MyNix/Megastar PAT45PVS (VER.2.0). And according to The Retro Web there were only three boards with that chipset. One by Acer and two by Megastar Kamtronic. The other one had that socket 3 installed. Hope you can fix it but you should buy an lottery ticket for sure.
34:23 WD bought Paradise in 1986 and sold it to Philips in 1995 only days before their first 3D card (Tasmania 3D based on the Yamaha YGV612) came out. I know that because I search one for years now. Some still exist. If you find one as well... Please hit me up.
Thanks for the info! There’s probably one of those cards somewhere in this haul.
The bravery of showing your paste application method.
The NEC system, I LOVE IT!! I like the way you fix and clean this vintage machines. You can use stuff like PCem to emulate these but you will never get the real experience like what a CRT and a Pentium 2 would get you. I really liked the server machine, I have never seen a dual Slot 1 motherboard with on SCSI, that's insane! The ATI 3D Rage IIc is a VERY unpowered and common 3D AGP video card and some could even do hardware DVD playback. The 25th is my last day of school for me, so you will see more content on my channel!
Thanks! I agree there is simply no replacement for the sights and sounds of real hardware. I do appreciate that things like PCem, DosBox and 86Box lowers the barrier of entry to DOS gaming (no need to buy an expensive retro machine), but I need real hardware. Even when playing NES games, emulation just isn’t the same for me. I can’t explain it either because the NES is silent.
Yeah servers usually come with super basic video cards. Especially modern servers because usually we’re just loading a hypervisor on there, connecting it to the network and it never sees a monitor again until it needs on-prem maintenance. I was surprised to see that this card had any 3D capabilities at all.
Awesome, can’t wait to see what you upload!
@@miketech1024 Yeah, I plan on doing a overview video on my Windows 98 PC nicknamed MadMax because of the black drives in a beige case (i couldnt find anything DVD-ROM/CD-RW IDE drives in beige at a good price at the time) and installing OS2 Warp 4 or 4.52,
Interesting Machines, Both Dell and Micron got a lot of use out of that model of Case I have a Newer Micron and a Dell 4100 Same Case as yours just newer Front Face Plates. Thanks for the Video.
Hello
For the HP NetServer E60
Below the ps2 ports are two usb ports behind the shield. You only have to break the board that covers the usb ports.
Wow that is crazy! I wonder what the rationale was for HP blocking them off. Port security?
Good god, Server NT 4.0 looked like the wild west. My experience like yours goes back to 2003 (2003 Small Business Server to be exact) and apparently there was so much more creature comforts that 2000 or 2003 brought that made our lives easier. Granted when I got my first sysadmin job, it was the year of our Lord 2010 and Server 2003 was already old. It helped to tap in on my experience from building complete AD domains in my bedroom growing up.
After typing that, I'm pretty sure I know why my life took the path it did. Not bad.
I was pretty lost in NT4. PowerShell probably wasn't even thought of yet! At my last job, they were still running a Server 2003 VM (they did a P2V) which I had to retire... In 2019...
Yeah we are very fortunate to have been such tech-curious kids! It's amazing how much those early experiences helped accelerate my career!
magnet wire is what louis rossmann uses for trace repair. Your method will work as you know, this isn't a critique, just if you are having trouble with small traces that is more ideal.
You might try write precomp set to 65535.. As i recall tthe starting cylinder for write precomp was the one in the bios, and pretty much all IDE drives didnt' use it, so setting to 65535 is how to tell it to ignore it.. Wirite Precomp was more for MFM/RLL disks..
That one fan you noted was somewhat silent reminded me of some fan blade design from MIT with toroidal blades. It is supposed to be more silent. Although this is on drones, don't dismiss it as being just for drones like some narrow minded people who don't know that things have multiple uses. Maybe they even work better for those uses than their original intended use! Or maybe something that was designed for something else works really well for a lot of things. One thing I would mention about that fan you had is that the blades didn't have sharp corners. They were nicely rounded and that is not something you usually see on PC fans. Some of them have pointy and sharp blades that make them a little bit dangerous when they run without a grill over them. Also that grill would help prevent them from ruining wires that are too close.
There are STL files to 3D print these fans also. I guess the best thing to do is have one that the hub motor is easy enough to remove and remove the plastic from to have a base to put that onto.
Thanks for another interesting video. You got any more HP systems to review?
Small business server was a locked down version of a normal NT server. Supposedly to make it simpler to run in a small business.
Mike, Any idea why the PG rating flashes on the Power Supply Tester at: 55:55, I haven’t had that before when testing PSU’s using mine?
I had a Micron PC that came with the Ghz Athlon chip and DDR.
yea man. Micron has very nice laptops in the 90.s They also did build servers.