Repairathon 2022: A resurrection of the legendary Asus P2B

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  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024
  • In this video I'm continuing my repairathon and will take a closer look at the Asus P2B mainboard. A legendary Slot 1 mainboard for the Intel Pentium II and Pentium III
    Music by Model Povedeniya
    modelp.bandcam...
    Patreon:
    / necroware

Комментарии •

  • @kasimirdenhertog3516
    @kasimirdenhertog3516 Год назад +39

    No need to apologize, as viewers we should be grateful that you make this high quality, very informative content, free for us to watch!

  • @chaoticsystem2211
    @chaoticsystem2211 Год назад +76

    I had a "defective" board gathering dust for 2 years. When i was ready to throw it away, i noticed that the battery socket was lose and prevented the board from booting...

  • @drCox12
    @drCox12 Год назад +49

    Your videos are my personal deoxidizer: Memory is coming back!
    Funny story: Back in the 90s I ordered a Slot 1 adapter. The shop made a mistake and sent not only the adapter but also a brand new ASUS P2B (I don't remember the revision anymore). This board was financially out of reach for my juvenile self. So I didn't dare to unbox and use it for several weeks but eventually I did. And it was a great board!

    • @l337pwnage
      @l337pwnage Год назад +8

      Ya, there was a consumer protection law passed decades ago where if they mail you something, it's basically yours. This was due to companies abusing the mail system by sending people unsolicited items, then demanding payment if you didn't return them.
      In modern times it's somewhat abusing the law to not return stuff, but I can't say I wouldn't keep stuff myself. I'm certainly no angel, lol.

    • @EternalxFrost
      @EternalxFrost 4 дня назад

      ​@@l337pwnageAgainst the law or not, it remains THEIR mistake to mail you unsollicited stuff.
      Accountability is the kryptonite of many people (and companies as well)

  • @enilenis
    @enilenis Год назад +19

    Asus P2B - forever the favourite motherboard revision. I've got 4 different ones running to this day. Most will handle 800MHz P3 with no modding and possible to take to 1GHz sometimes, with a single soldered wire. P2-233 Celeron minimum. My first CPU on the board was P2-266. Still sits somewhere in a box. I was blown away by performance. DVD's just came out, and I remember getting a DXR2 hardware decoder, thinking P2-266 couldn't handle it, but turned out, it could play DVD's with no additional hardware acceleration. That was huge.

    • @nexxusty
      @nexxusty Год назад +3

      Oh man, you're bringing back memories like crazy with this comment.
      I remember getting a new PC with a DVD drive in 2000. It was amazing, however DVD's stuttered because the place I bought it from sold me a non Intel chipset.
      I learned I had a PII-300 SL2W8. They were P2-450's sold as 300's. 99% of them could do 450mhz. Set the jumper from 66mhz to 100mhz, immediate stutter free DVD playback.
      Maaaan, that chipset sucked though. Especially since you're saying you did software decode on a 266mhz, and my 300mhz PII couldn't even.

    • @valparaisosting
      @valparaisosting Месяц назад +1

      I have several asus and they are fantastic! The question is would be the 1000eb 1.7v less or more stressful for the Vrm than the 1.75v versión? Don't know if those 0.05 volt could help to reduce amp or something...

  • @PatJamesRicketts
    @PatJamesRicketts Год назад +5

    Great video, I have one of the later revisions of this board with a Pentium II 400MHz Deschutes processor. It was sitting in the basement of an old house for decades, I cleaned everything, swapped the CMOS, added compact flash, some new fans, now it runs like a dream! Even came with an old CRT, keyboard and mouse. I love going from overclocking my modern Ryzen watercooled rig to listening to a floppy drive chatter and old PC speaker beep, it does something good for the soul.

  • @Eyetrauma
    @Eyetrauma Год назад +32

    Incredible catch with that missing keyboard jumper, I was fully expecting you to desolder the mouse/KB ports. Imagine how irritating it’d have been to do that and find they were totally fine

    • @AB0BA_69
      @AB0BA_69 Год назад +5

      Agreed. The troubleshooting/"debugging" parts of these videos are always my favorite. Even thought I don't work with hardware it's good to hear someone else's thought process to hopefully help me avoid the "it couldn't be that!" traps when I end up searching for a solution in all the wrong places.

  • @omarsis81
    @omarsis81 Год назад +2

    More than 20 years later and I still learn new things from the era. Today I learned about ESCD and that it is written in the EPROM.

  • @JamieBainbridge
    @JamieBainbridge 7 месяцев назад +1

    I must have built hundreds of systems with this board back in the day. Great then and great now.

  • @donfurioso3566
    @donfurioso3566 Год назад +2

    My P2B runs a Tualatin Celeron at 1,4 ghz and Voodoo 5. I love this Board.

  • @DytliefMoller
    @DytliefMoller Год назад +2

    Thanks Necrowave, post as you can, we all busy lives ♥

  • @mrfami-bo9by
    @mrfami-bo9by Год назад +1

    What a nostalgic seeing those bios post screen again....and the "beeps" haha. Still have my Pentium 2 PC buried somewhere inside my store room. It's P2B-B Pentium 2 350 board with soundBlaster Live value sound card and S3 savage 3D agp card.
    Not a good spec but it was my 1st PC into internet. Remember playing Commandos behind enemy line and man.... love those days!

  • @Linkintime1
    @Linkintime1 Год назад +3

    I was just hoping for another video, thanks!

  • @Choralone422
    @Choralone422 Год назад +6

    I remember choosing between the Asus P2B and the Abit BH6 back in those days. I ended up going with a Abit BH6 (due to it's jumper less design) and Celeron 300A combo which comfortably ran at 464 Mhz for many years. Sadly that board succumbed to bad capacitors that when they failed caused a spectacular failure in the power supply section of the board and burned a few components along with the PCB.
    Glad to see the work done on this board! Very entertaining!

  • @looks-suspicious
    @looks-suspicious Год назад +16

    As always, your video is full of useful information. I never knew about slotket adapters with jumpers to override the voltage requested, that's very interesting!

  • @777anarchist
    @777anarchist Год назад +24

    Every P2B deserves a Tualatin build.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  Год назад +3

      Yeah, that is awsome indeed.

    • @catriona_drummond
      @catriona_drummond Год назад +1

      @@necro_ware wish I had known about that in 2001. :P

    • @boot-nr7jn
      @boot-nr7jn Год назад +3

      Hell yeah. My main build is while not a P2B, is a P3B-F with a 1GB PC133 memory and a 1.4GHz PIII-S in a modified Asus S370-133 slotket. It's a beast!

    • @donfurioso3566
      @donfurioso3566 Год назад

      @@boot-nr7jn might try to get my P2B working at 133mhz FSB with a pIIi-s. I don’t know about the agp clock at that speed in my board revision. Might give it a try

    • @wishusknight3009
      @wishusknight3009 Год назад +2

      @@donfurioso3566 The P3S and P2B dont get along very well unless you have the proper slotkit which can convert the signaling voltage. Rev 1.10 and 1.12 can deliver the right vCore but the GTL+ signalling voltage tolerances are too wide for the P3S and will usually cause the cpu damage after a prolonged period of time.. Coppermine didn't have this issue as it used the same tolerances as the P2. Agp frequency runs at 89mhz which is not usually an issue for many video cards. Known working cards in my case were Matrox G200,G400, VooDoo3 and Ati Rage Pro.. TnT and TnT2 often worked. However gForce 256 and gForce GTS cards were hit or miss. Wen in doubt though a PCI card will be just fine as the Pci bus stays at 33mhz unless you jumper it usin only the 3 divider in which case it will be at 44mhz, and that will generally be a little much, not to mention it will be death for any DMA hard drive unless you set uDMA to 1.

  • @IOwnCalculus
    @IOwnCalculus Год назад

    This brings back all kinds of memories. At the time when this sort of system was new, my parents bought what ended up being the last pre-built PC we would buy for at least a decade - with a PII 350 and a P2B.
    A short time later my dad learned about "overclocking" and the 300A from a coworker, and we built a 300A/BH6 combo for less than half the price of the prebuilt.
    We eventually spent enough time messing around with overclocking those systems that we discovered that our particular 300A would do 450MHz without any voltage increase. So we swapped CPUs between them and put the 300A on the P2B. The PII 350 went into the BH6 and with a couple tenths of voltage to help, it'd do 466MHz on a 133MHz FSB. Two nearly identical performing systems made for instant LAN parties at home.

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Год назад

      that has to be times! To have LAN at home in 1998 or 1999.
      My friend with computer, was comming to me, few times per year, and let computer at me.
      We had to carry computer case, and CRT monitor, and accesories .
      Always had lots of fun.
      Later, we got cheaply Celeron 266 system from parents job, they were obsolete in 2003, and company got them very cheap for workers.
      from that time, we had LAN at home, I've built it around august 2003. Those were the times, those holydays were all gaming. :)
      almost noone had still internet at home, but LAN was super fast, internet games were slow in that time.
      So many friends had come to visit, to play some LAN games.
      It had to be cool to have LAN in 1998, and even Pentium II systems, both one of the greatest Slot 1 motherboards.
      I've upgraded that Celeron 266 Covington (without L2 cache, so basicaly as fast as Pentium 233 MMX), to Pentium II 400, and bought voodoo3, because there was only some 2D card. It handled games till year 2000 good. Pity, I didnt know, Pentium III Katmai is compatible with Pentium II boards, I would buy 500-600 mhz Pentium III Katmai instead. But I only checked (outdated) manual, and there was maximum Pentium II 450. That was my 20 year younger amateur hardware myself, doing mistakes. We could have much more performance, as Pentium II 400 was blocking that vooodoo3. But I found it in 2020, when I started to care about retro hardware, that Katmai is basicaly same as Pentium II and usually works in motherboards, even if not detected with microcode, it just works as Pentium II.

  • @kthmhg
    @kthmhg Год назад +2

    New Necroware video = nice weekend ;-)

  • @2dfx
    @2dfx Год назад +6

    It's no suprise that the P2B series was one of ASUS' best selling motherboard, even well into the P3B series. Rock solid & versitile.

    • @rkurbatov
      @rkurbatov Год назад

      ASUS even complained on fake boards :) And had instructions on how to distinct them :) Just impossible now.

    • @retropcs88
      @retropcs88 2 месяца назад

      I had a ZIDA board that looked just like the P2B, ofcourse without the Asus chips ​@@rkurbatov

  • @stamasd8500
    @stamasd8500 Год назад +1

    Back in the day, I ended up running even a Tualatin Celeron 1200MHz in an Abit BH6 motherboard (440BX). That prolonged the life of that system until I could afford a proper Athlon system. I skipped the P4 generation altogether. :) I had also intended to use a 1400MHz Tualeron but never had one handy. That was with a heavily modified slotket, the details of which escape my foggy memory right now.

  • @mesterak
    @mesterak Год назад +3

    Thank you for the video. It was very satisfying to see this board returned to operation. It was still a little unsettling about the ram not working and suddenly started working. I’ve always been mystified by the strange problems you run into with old hardware that basically is fixed by “magic” or FM as we called it back in the day.

  • @bertr6741
    @bertr6741 Год назад +1

    in the 90s and early 2000s, I've been working in a computer company in its technical/repair department. We do all the repairs and have everything all types or kinds of boards, monitors, printers, and many others, you name it, from setup to board level repairs.. I should have made a collection back then if only I knew I would be walking again down the memory lane.. thanks to your channel..

  • @horusfalcon
    @horusfalcon Год назад +6

    I have been really enjoying your repairathon and your channel! Keep up the good work!

  • @shadowfox-nf6zi
    @shadowfox-nf6zi Год назад +2

    Please film a Slotket comparison video! There are so many on the market and it's very confusing for those of us looking to build a wacky system from that era; there's precious little information out there now.

  • @Stratotank3r
    @Stratotank3r Год назад +4

    Never will get tired of your vids and always wait for the next one! I used a MSI Slotket Adapter with jumpers to convince my P3B-F to work with a VIA Nehemiah CPU and to provide the needed 1,4V. You might try to find a Pentium3 1100 (11*100) in order to keep the BX440 within Specs and not overclock it.

    • @rkurbatov
      @rkurbatov Год назад +1

      There were special adapters for Tualatin, so you can use 1.4GHz (if I'm not mistaken) and be faster than all Socket 423 P4s, but I still prefer 'equal' or 'typical' builds where everything matches.

    • @logipilot
      @logipilot Год назад

      @@rkurbatov No, rather put all time periods together for real frankstein build: p2b, tualatin, ide to sata w. ssd and Gt6800 or fx5900. With the sound card you can go back and forth in time ;)))

  • @camjohnson2004
    @camjohnson2004 Год назад

    This board is a bit of Nostalgia for me. Was my First Pentium II motherboard i ever had, basic but great. Had a Pentium II 333 and managed to clock that to 450Mhs on this board. When the Pentium III came out i updated the BIOS and ran a 450Mhz Pentium III on it and overclocked that 504MHz, the RAM i had refused to go to 133Mhz. This board was Retired when i moved from Pentium III to Athlon K7

  • @sndestroy
    @sndestroy Год назад

    This board was my workhorse for a while, paired with a CuMine P3 733Mhz, 256Mb PC133 RAM and a 32Mb AGP TNT2 (plus the ever ubiquitous CMedia generic sound card) it packed quite a punch. I remember the 440BX's 133Mhz FSB was "unofficial", in the sense that the chipset was not designed for it but worked stable enough if the board was well designed - something the P2B was legendary for. Aahhh, sweet random access memories from the past...
    Really good video, I thoroughly enjoyed it! :)

  • @FeArhsma21
    @FeArhsma21 Год назад +2

    That was really nice work and Doom was deferentially one of my favorites and Wolfenstein 3D.

  • @pof1857
    @pof1857 Год назад +1

    One of my biggest regrets in life is the loss (ignored at the time) of my P2B-DS system.
    Your videos have been a major contributor to me acquiring an MP-6DBX system and even getting it to post occasionally.
    This is a great video - thank you!

  • @foobar-9k
    @foobar-9k Год назад +1

    I used to clean memory contacts by scrubbing the contacts with a pencil eraser rubber (we joked what you need to "erase the memories" for them to work properly). The pencil eraser was soft,but firm enough to do the trick without damaging the contacts. Do no try it with ink/pen erasers 😀

    • @Darth001
      @Darth001 Год назад +1

      Strangely enough I got told to do the same and it works wonders

  • @djdjukic
    @djdjukic Год назад

    I have a P2B-F, and it is one of those boards that, when setting it up on a bench, you will pull out and reinsert the RAM modules 20 times but the 21st time it will start up with absolutely no problem, you can even wiggle the RAM with your finger while the computer is working.

  • @JamesPotts
    @JamesPotts Год назад

    When you got that rapid clicking, I immediately thought, "is he holding a key down?" Good catch on that jumper.

  • @Roadkill7878
    @Roadkill7878 Год назад +2

    I have the same motherboard. Very good board

  • @nismo1082
    @nismo1082 Год назад +1

    Da der IC Sockel eh defekt war, kann man sich das Auslöten erleichtern. Die Kontaktzungen einzeln mit einer Pinzette heraushebeln, dann mit einer Spitzzange greifen und die Pins einzeln auslöten. Ich die sicherste und einfachste Lösung. Vielen Dank für deine interessanten Videos. VG

  • @danielpetrov9179
    @danielpetrov9179 Год назад +1

    I still have a retro PC with Asus P2B-S (with On-Board SCSI and AGP Pro) and it runs great.

  • @mihela8167
    @mihela8167 9 месяцев назад

    I have the later P3BF as my main Windows 98 machine running a 933 Celeron. The range of supported CPUs is amazing. And stable as a rock!

  • @TalleyLewis
    @TalleyLewis Год назад +1

    Running that same board with a p3 550 and a voodoo3 and it works great. Bought the board brand new when it was released.

  • @1kreature
    @1kreature Год назад

    I have a Asus P2B-F here and now I will make sure the cmos battery is removed, just to be safe. Forgot I had it. Good times.
    Thanks for a great video!

  • @mm34639
    @mm34639 Год назад

    I had P2V with via chipset, Celeron 400 and Voodoo 3 2000 😁 upgraded straight from a 486dx2/66
    I could finally play all the new games that my friends at school were talking about - I had it for very long , had no problems but didn't overclock it

  • @nickwallette6201
    @nickwallette6201 Год назад

    I bought this board back in the day to replace a tragically unstable Cyrix 6x86 PR200+ with undersized voltage regulators. The P2B was such a breath of fresh air - fast, stable, trouble free. I used it for years before upgrading to a TUSL2-C, and my parents used it for a while after that. I recently got it back, and it’s in my retro P2 machine now, in a similar Enlight case. Right next to a (new to me) TUSL2-C in an Inwin case I still had from back in the day. It feels good to get the band back together. 🥰

  • @l337pwnage
    @l337pwnage Год назад +1

    Beast of a board, still got mine laying around, although it probably won't boot w/o work now. The keyboard power on was a sweet option. I miss it, sure, now they got sleep, and hibernate, and whatever else, but those always seem to have problems.
    Asus's hardware monitoring options were also a selling point for me.

  • @jbrizz99
    @jbrizz99 Год назад

    I am genuinely happy to see a P2B revived on this channel. I had one as a kid with a Celeron 333a which ran well at 500mhz. It was the first PC that I could call mine and really allowed me to learn so much about them without messing up the family PC, and is probably what kickstarted my successful career in IT. I had a couple other boards of this era and none of them compared to the speed and stability of that first Asus P2B-VM.

  • @Nobe_Oddy
    @Nobe_Oddy Год назад +1

    That was REALLY COOL! I NEVER would have expected to see a P3 1Ghz running on a P2B board!! GREAT JOB!!!!

  • @gekkehenk1980
    @gekkehenk1980 Год назад +2

    I had a P2B-F rev 1.14 (i think) that run with a slot T adapter and a Celeron A 1Ghz @ 1.33Ghz and 1GB ram with no problems at all. Good times!

  • @swrzesinski
    @swrzesinski Год назад

    I really like old Asus boards. I have few of them in my retro PCs: P55T2P4, P2B-S, P3B-F, TUSL2-C and few newer ones. Along with Abit its a way to go when building PC from late 90'.

  • @angieandretti
    @angieandretti Год назад +1

    My first retro build was very similar! I had an early-revision P2B-D board (same voltage regulator limits) and I used an MSI Slotket adapter to run a 1GHz P3 at 1.8 volts. Since then I've gotten a newer-version P2B-DS board that does support 1.7v and a pair of REAL SL4KL 1GHz Slot 1 P3 CPU's.

  • @Dunbar0740
    @Dunbar0740 Год назад

    Great vid. I'm still running two Win98 boxes on Asus CUSL2 motherboards, 1Ghz P3s, with 1Gig RAM each. They're over twenty years old and still work flawlessly (as hosts for my Korg OASYS PCI synth cards).

  • @AladimBR
    @AladimBR 3 месяца назад

    I have the same board, version 1.02. Last week I replaced the IC that controls voltage on the board, between the slot 1 and parallel port, north of the coil. The board now works with Pentium 3, I measured 1.65v and 1.7v on the same places you took your readings. The IC is HIP6019BCB. It requires a minimum soldering skill, which you also have (based on your videos). I didn’t consider a modification, more like an upgrade, and it is transparent afterwards. It is the same change Asus did on newer boards that can run Pentium 3

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  3 месяца назад +1

      Yes, I made the same change on this board. Just didn't mention it in this video, because at the time of making it I had no replacement DC-DC controller.

  • @fsfs555
    @fsfs555 Год назад

    I have one of these in the other room. I use it in conjunction with a Celeron 300A for in-depth hard disk testing and sanitization, since some software doesn't run properly on newer chipsets (if they even have ATA support at all).
    Back in the early '00s I bought a similar VIA-based board (FIC VB-601, I think) when it was on clearance at the local PC store, and it went through various PII and PIII modules through its life. I still have it, with a proper Slot 1 933MHz PIII and a 3dfx card of some sort.

  • @dennisp.2147
    @dennisp.2147 Год назад

    P2B was my board back in the day with a Celeron 300A overclocked to 450. It was a beast! I ended up replacing it with an Asus A7v133 and a Duron, which was promptly overclocked, then a 1.4 Thunderbird and finally a 2.0 ghz Athlon. I loved ASUS back in the late 90's and early 00's. I've still got the P2B, I need to pull it back out and set it up to its former glory.

  • @yeoldestuff
    @yeoldestuff Год назад +2

    This is a very good mainboard for Pentium II and Pentium III Katmai CPUs. I have one, I also have a P3B-F, but my favourite 440BX board is the good old Gigabyte GA-6BXC rev2. It kinda flies under the radar and can be bought quite cheaply, but it's every bit as good as the P3B-F. I use mine with an MSI MS-6905 Master slotket and VIA C3 CPU which can be slowed down to 386 speeds with SetMul. It's the only DOS gaming PC that I need because it covers all DOS games I'm interested in, from the late 80s until early 2000s.

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Год назад

      I have both GA-6BXC and 6BXS boards. 6BXC has problem, it autostarts after plugging power in. It doesn't wait for power on button. This is the only thing I dont like on it, and I thinking about changing it to some other slot 1 board. Maybe when I will be lucky, I'll get Asus P2B or P3B.
      Also , I like GA-BX2000. Seems kinda upgraded from later era. Not sure, if it is same good as 6BXC, but I'm looking for it, when I get it, I probably sell 6BXC

    • @yeoldestuff
      @yeoldestuff Год назад

      @@warrax111 I guess there’s something wrong with your 6BXC, mine does not autostart. There might be a relevant setting in the BIOS.

    • @yeoldestuff
      @yeoldestuff Год назад

      @@warrax111 I just checked and there is indeed such a setting in the BIOS. Under Advanced Chipset Features there is a setting called Power Supply Type. If it's set to AT, the motherboard turns on immediately when the power is applied. If it's set to ATX, the motherboard behaves normally.

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Год назад

      @@yeoldestuff Great. Thank you. I'll check it, would be great.
      Anyway I was sending reference to review of the board, but I see, comment is deleted? Did you get that comment about tomshardware review?

    • @yeoldestuff
      @yeoldestuff Год назад

      @@warrax111 No, I haven't seen it, I believe RUclips's spam filters automatically remove all comments with links

  • @rkurbatov
    @rkurbatov Год назад +1

    I have this board, but of revision 1.04. They had many P2B's of different types and revisions, with SCSI integrated and so on. I wanted to make a switchable build with PII/PIII, but decided to split eventually. I don't have special Slotket (they are rare), so technically you can inside anything from Pentium Pro (in a special adapter and with special BIOS - they are same with P2 and P3 electrically) to PIII Tualatin, but there are other limitations. The memory is limited to 768MB on 440BX and even for that value you should have special 2-row, better registered RAM that's also rare and expensive. So I bought KT133A motherboard for my P3 builds (with Voodoo II SLI and MonsterSound on WinME/Win2K) and left this board for late DOS games and early Windows games on canonical slot Celeron :)

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Год назад

      P2B rev 1.04 is not fake? Not made by Asus? I found articles, that Asus claimed, they didnt have revision 1.04.

    • @rkurbatov
      @rkurbatov Год назад

      @@warrax111 won't be surprised, really. They complained on lot of fakes.

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Год назад +1

      @@rkurbatov I found out how it was:
      They made 1.04 , but it was very fast stopped, because they found out, they are faking it. So they moved to revision 1.10.
      So most of the 1.04 stood fake. They stopped producing 1.04 in december 1998.
      You can differ them by number of jumpers for setting speed.
      Asus p2b 1.04:
      3 jumpers block = fake
      4 jumpers block = real one.

  • @envoycdx
    @envoycdx Год назад

    Rewatched :) enjoy watching for the tips, and it's rather cathartic

  • @boneske
    @boneske Год назад

    I've been binge watching your videos all week. Can't wait to see what you have stored this year. My first computer I built was with this motherboard though I think it was 1.04 revision coupled with the exact Celeron 433Mhz setup.

  • @daniel5927218
    @daniel5927218 Год назад

    I love wathing You working out issues👍

  • @darthtripedacus1
    @darthtripedacus1 Год назад

    That's a beautiful board. All the features I want. ISA and AGP. You make amazing videos. Thank you sir.

  • @MarcoGPUtuber
    @MarcoGPUtuber Год назад +2

    Resurrection? I hope it shows a hand holding the P2B pushing through the dirt!

  • @mtalhakhalid1679
    @mtalhakhalid1679 Год назад

    mee too love doom playing it back in my childhood days 2003 2004 till now 2023 love it

  • @patrickreichl3936
    @patrickreichl3936 Год назад +1

    When you do fastvid, maybe also include the more obscure tools for the K6-2/III (MXK6OPT and SETK6V3).

  • @VikasGupta-bx5qv
    @VikasGupta-bx5qv Год назад +3

    Perhaps that last memory swap removed just enough tarnish from the memory slot and allowed it to work.

    • @djtongi
      @djtongi Год назад +1

      i think so too... maybe you use a small plastic brush after spraying. That's why i always recommend NOT to wash hardware with normal water!

  • @Zebpro
    @Zebpro Год назад

    Marvelous, those P2Bs boards were the sh*t back in the days, and this one is no exception! :-]

  • @rodhester2166
    @rodhester2166 Год назад

    That is one of my all time favorite motherboards.. Really enjoyed this video. thank you .. cheers.

  • @ricargoncalves
    @ricargoncalves Год назад +1

    Great video as usual. Keep up with the good work 😀

  • @JesperValentine
    @JesperValentine Год назад +1

    I had a P2B 1.02 back in the day :) It took me through celeron 300a, then 366 up til Pentium 3 1000MHz as you have here, also through socket adaptor with 1.8v . It was stable as a rock!

  • @linoxyard
    @linoxyard Год назад +1

    I had a P2B-DS board. It was very nice, rocking dual 450mhz PIIIs. Unfortunately I didn't own a slotket to use a faster coppermine PIII, so I was limited to the 450mhz processors

    • @rkurbatov
      @rkurbatov Год назад +1

      I also though about that, but early Dual CPU systems are only for Windows 2K without any benefits to game of that era. It was almost a miracle to me when I first saw blessed two core chart on Linux on Tyan MP boards (with two Athlons on it, not even MPs - it was possible), but now, looking on 24 bars on my desktop it's not a miracle anymore. :)

  • @barowt
    @barowt Год назад

    I remember the time 20 years ago, when I had all of the Beep error codes memorized.. The gold old days.. 😢

  • @KeefJudge
    @KeefJudge Год назад

    Love your videos - don't worry about frequency of video release, they're very much appreciated when you find the time.

  • @xianox8
    @xianox8 Год назад

    Cool thank you for an interesting video. I find your videos very informative and easy to follow along. I hope your work saves some hardware for future generations.

  • @juniorbcm5375
    @juniorbcm5375 Год назад

    Those Asus P2 series are quite powerful. I had a P2-99 paired with a P3 750MHz coppermine on a slot 1 adapter, back in the early 2000's, running win98 and XP in dual boot. Worked great.

  • @matth.imaging8952
    @matth.imaging8952 Год назад

    Still have a PC running with an Asus P2B inside, running on a Tualatin Celeron 1.3 GHz with 768MB of RAM.
    Nice to see that you were able to run the 440BX chipset at 133 MHz, as it officially only supports 66 MHz and 100 MHz speeds.

  • @el2-More
    @el2-More Год назад +1

    These old award bios files are modular ones, and can be easily taken into parts with cbrom. Than you’re able to change the cpucode part to a newer on to solve compatility issues, or, if you’ve got, to update the integrated raid controller bios, etc.
    I did a lot of such mods back in the early 2000s, running Tualatin cpus with Powerleap adapters in old BX boards, even have some i820 rambus ones, with cpucode.bins swapped from last 815E boards like the Abit ST6.

  • @artursmihelsons415
    @artursmihelsons415 Год назад

    Great video, as always!
    👍
    Didn't know, that PII written in BIOS chip some settings.. Nice to know now!

  • @crbielert
    @crbielert Год назад

    reminds me of a workstation I had back in the day, dual processor either slot 1 or slot 2 with xeons. had separate VRM cards.

  • @jdebultra
    @jdebultra Год назад

    I have one of those boards, it was a fantastic board. Rock solid stable. I would think it would still boot but would need to be inspected.

  • @georgez8859
    @georgez8859 Год назад

    Great Video Very useful Information on those BIOS Chips Thank You

  • @mortwin6054
    @mortwin6054 Год назад

    i don't mind the long time between videos :) keep up the good work all you got me digging sum of my old motherboards out and see what i can do with them :D

  • @retropcscotland4645
    @retropcscotland4645 Год назад

    Got an old presario in the cupboard running a slot1 p3 550mhz. Had it for years minted. Also got super 7 with k6-2 and socket 370 with a 1ghz p3. Yeah been doing this for a lot of years.

  • @run4restrun259
    @run4restrun259 Год назад

    FSB you can change for any processor, that's why best choice was Celeron 333 with 66 FSB - at 100MHz FSB give insane 500Mhz! And best for 133Mhz is Celeron Tualatin 1000Mhz - his overclock to 1300Mhz!!

  • @blakecasimir
    @blakecasimir Год назад

    Absolutely worth the wait. Another great video from you sir. A follow up covering taking this board to the limit with that P3 would be great.

  • @DM01710
    @DM01710 Год назад

    Sweet nice on necro!!!!!

  • @GeFeldz
    @GeFeldz Год назад +1

    The abit bh6, dude... That's the best board.

  • @geoffcollins6601
    @geoffcollins6601 Месяц назад

    Thank an excellent video

  • @kimd7300
    @kimd7300 Год назад

    Ahhh jumpers. I use to have bags of them laying everywhere. Now i don't think I've touched or seen one in years.

  • @up2tech
    @up2tech Год назад

    "Necroware Lives!"🤗

  • @tom_foolery
    @tom_foolery Год назад

    I had an Asus P2B-D. Wish i never got rid of it. It was the first computer i ever built

  • @dabombinablemi6188
    @dabombinablemi6188 Год назад

    It looks extremely similar to the P2L97 (440LX, released in 1997). It was shockingly fast under 98SE with only a Celeron 300A (with the FSB at 83MHz) and the Seagate U5. And maybe even with its original PII 233 (didn't use due to dead fan with corrosion on its cable pads). Would have held back the Viper V550 and Diamond Monster 3DII that were paired with it however.
    The board actually worked with a PIII 650 (used with my SE440BS-2) and 3x 512MB sticks of RAM btw. Just recognising the PIII as a 429MHz Pentium II (and run at 2V) and only 1 side of each RAM stick. Still haven't replaced all of the caps behind the slot though...and they aren't of reputable manufacture.

  • @jeffm2787
    @jeffm2787 Год назад

    Memories, I had one of these.

  • @projectartichoke
    @projectartichoke Год назад

    Great video. The P2 and P3 were two generations of Pentium processors I missed out on, but very interesting none the less. I wound up with a Pentium D system which I'm still using for ongoing tasks like a file and e-mail server to this day.

  • @LG-HH
    @LG-HH Год назад +1

    Great video 👍
    Great to see such a legendary motherboard again
    Maybe you do a video series about legendary mainboards.
    Two suggestions from me. Asus P55T2P4 and Epox EP-MVP3G5 😍

  • @mbwoods2001
    @mbwoods2001 Год назад

    I had a slot 1 p3-500 on my old pc, then got a free upgrade to p3-700 from a warranty repair. I then fitted a p3-933 coppermine on a slocket converter when i knew the motherboard could take 133 bus cpu's and the max multiplier was 8(i think)

  • @nm0490
    @nm0490 Год назад

    Great video. I was checking on a daily basis if you have already produced another repairathon.

  • @vswitchzero
    @vswitchzero Год назад

    Great video! I love the ASUS P2B. It's probably my favorite slot-1 board. I have one of the ASUS branded sloket adapters with voltage control as well. I was able to overvolt a Celeron 300A for a nice 100% overclock recently 🙂

  • @TC_here
    @TC_here Год назад

    interesting how the bad memory caused the bios to fail so early in POST considering youd expect the memory test to be performed later in the POST,.. and then it magical fixed itself :) Nice video.. keep em coming .. very enjoyable watch on a Friday evening :)

  • @ThorLite
    @ThorLite Год назад

    Great motherboard,used to run a Celeron 600 coppermine at 1GHz.

  • @RalonsoF1
    @RalonsoF1 Год назад

    (You are) Simply GREAT. 😉😉👍👍

  • @su4ibu4i
    @su4ibu4i Год назад

    nice work as always =)

  • @Wingpad
    @Wingpad Год назад +1

    I'd love to see a follow-up video where you tune this board's performance! I like to tinker with boards of this vintage, but I've never approached getting optimal performance from them.
    (My go-to board right now is a dual Slot 1 Tyan board with two 1GHz Coppermine CPUs; I run FreeBSD on it, for science.)

  • @dodgydruid
    @dodgydruid Год назад

    I remember having an Asrock motherboard that had not only P2B socket but the new P4 type socket plus it had old pre-DDR and DDR1 ram slots, Asrock produced a lot of weirdness like that which was pretty handy, we called them "upgrade" boards or transition boards as it meant you could use your old hardware then transition to the next generation of hardware without having to do a massive full reinstall etc. I do believe Asrock made a dual CPU variant around that time which was seen closest to godliness in the hardware game, two full CPU's and a stack of ram slots but sadly was pants at gaming due to the crazy timings of it all.

  • @enzito_sdf6978
    @enzito_sdf6978 Год назад

    you should do a vid on via c3 nehemiah cpus, they are basically socket 370 cpus (1.45v sadly, but a new enough bx board can easily take them, my soyo 6BA+III does just fine) with speed control (like K6-2+ / K6-3+), and can still be found for quite cheap. at 1.2 ghz, they perform like a p3 600, and can be slowed down easily to 386 levels, and everything in between just with setmul. some people even claim they got it down to 8086 levels also using throttle since the 440bx is supported. honestly it's the best way to get a cheap all-in-one retro gaming pc. great vids btw, i love the late 90s era of pc gaming.

  • @forbiddenera
    @forbiddenera Год назад

    Makes me miss my dual p3 board that had two of those 1ghz chips 🍟

  • @djtongi
    @djtongi Год назад +1

    i think i should have one of the last revisions here... i found it on the trash togehter with the holy grale: the Asus TUSL2-C, the best platform for a tualatin warmaschine :D