Socket 462 Retro Build Testing!

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
  • It's been a wild ride but it's finally together and useable. Let's benchmark it and play a couple games. Finally.
    If you haven't seen the other videos in this 3 part saga check them out here:
    part 1: • Retro Socket 462 Build...
    part 2: • Socket 462 Retro Build...

Комментарии • 18

  • @ted-b
    @ted-b Год назад +3

    Like the fan adapter you made!

    • @idoesstuff1
      @idoesstuff1  Год назад

      Thanks, I cannot take full credit though since I got it from thingiverse.

  • @mike13foxtrot79
    @mike13foxtrot79 5 месяцев назад +1

    Reviving one now. have an LS-120 drive with about 20 new disks. And some old floppies I wanna go thru before destroying. Got the CPU 1GB 2 512 ram. Old IDE HD's a new in box 400W PS never used. My basement looks like a PC store. Built 3 new systems so far in the last 4 months 2 for me, 1 for my niece. Upgraded my gaming rig and desktop, about to upgrade my desktop again. Even though I have 2 brand new systems ready built them and put them back in the boxes. Got the cooler the ATI GPU not gonna put it in a case. Have 3 NOS MB in boxes. 1 Intel, 1 ASUS and 1 Tyan. all about 98/99 systems.

  • @fuzzyg18
    @fuzzyg18 Год назад +1

    my man using that 3d printer like a king

  • @neongenesis2979
    @neongenesis2979 Год назад +2

    The Asus website still has Driver, Manual, and Documentation for this A7N8X-E Deluxe MOBO. It's actually an amazing Socket 462 board! It will support 3GB of PC3200 and the Athlon XP 3200+. I have a similar board by FIC that does both and it runs XP smooth. I ended up buying a PCI GPU, the Zotac GT 520 and it's fascinating how well it handles. Mine still sounds like a Jet turbine though with it's 5000 RPM cpu fan. Maybe I'll try out one of those Fan Adapters. Great Video! I look forward to the follow up!

    • @TheMikeMan777
      @TheMikeMan777 Год назад

      I still own 2 nForce2 MBs. One is an Abit and the other is a full ATX Shuttle! Both stored in the garage in my PC collection pile!

    • @nightmareretro1148
      @nightmareretro1148 Год назад

      Rev 2 of the motherboard has xp3200 support he and I has the older rev 1 so supports xp3000+ max

    • @neongenesis2979
      @neongenesis2979 Год назад +1

      @@nightmareretro1148 There are 3 boards actually:
      A7N8X Deluxe Rev 1.04
      A7N8X Deluxe Rev 2.0
      A7N8X-E Deluxe Rev 1.01

  • @Pillusch
    @Pillusch Год назад +1

    I remember this Motherboard. Had the same model around 2003/2004 in combination with an AthlonXP 3200+ ... and it was very picky about its RAM... Even had the "expensive" Kingston HyperX gaming RAM with its blue aluminium heatsinks... it was so incredible unreliable and crashed a lot with random reboots until I clocked it down from 400 to 333 MHz... or 200 MHz FSB to 166 MHz FSB... i don't remember exactly. It was my most shortlived PC build ever. Only lasted until 2007 when i got my Q6600 ... good times ;)

    • @PatientXero607
      @PatientXero607 Год назад

      Not sure what you are talking about. I was running Samsung TCCC PC-2700 with no issues. I then moved up to Corsair XMS PC-3200 and didn't have any problems with those modules either. The only real issue was with the VRM's. Under heavy overclocking, the VRM's would give out in a short period of time.

    • @Pillusch
      @Pillusch Год назад

      @@PatientXero607 Thats something I never thougt about back then (I was new into Hardware, I was just 16 years old in 2003 ^^). You might be right. But nevertheless, downclocking to 333 MHz solved the problems for me back then.

  • @mipcstv
    @mipcstv 3 месяца назад

    These cpu's are amazing to overlook.

  • @nushnume
    @nushnume Год назад +1

    For the CPU cooler you could try to find an Arctic Cooling Silent Copper 3. It was made when socket A was already pretty outdated and it's almost as silent as a stock intel cooler with good temps too (keeps my XP 2500+ around 35~40C idle) and it also uses screws instead of the annoying tension bracket. It was around 8$ when it was brand new so i imagine it would be even cheaper now if you could find one

  • @phillycheesetake
    @phillycheesetake Год назад

    Before trusting temperature reporting in software, look up reviews of the board you have. AMD CPUs didn't have internal temperature probes until Athlon64, so it was up to motherboard makers, and many implementations were just bad.
    Nice build, I love socket 462.

  • @Hadisabetghadam
    @Hadisabetghadam 9 месяцев назад +1

    Do not pay attention to Serial Number Of Ram
    The only thing you should pay attention to in RAM is the RAM speed and its voltage

  • @pete8475
    @pete8475 Год назад +1

    1:14 - did you say GAMBIT? 🤣

    • @idoesstuff1
      @idoesstuff1  Год назад

      I meant gamut lol. I wish I would have caught that.

  • @Blaze_Dady
    @Blaze_Dady 3 месяца назад

    I WANT BLOB EMOJI 😡😡😡😡😡😡