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Totorus

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  1. Informative
    Totorus reacted to Dedayog in Will a 3060 12 GB VRAM (Rev. 2.0) with LHR be limited or have low performance in other scenarios?   
    Yes, that driver did relax all the LHR restrictions.  There is nothing to mine though, but you could if there was 🙂
     
     
  2. Informative
    Totorus reacted to Dedayog in Will a 3060 12 GB VRAM (Rev. 2.0) with LHR be limited or have low performance in other scenarios?   
    NVIDIA's hash rate limiter doesn't affect any other aspect of GPU performance except crypto mining.
  3. Like
    Totorus reacted to Stefan Payne in Asus Prime A320M-K, grey heat sink chipset overheat until self reboot or shutdown.   
    then pls do not use your old PSU with the new Components.
  4. Like
    Totorus reacted to Stefan Payne in Asus Prime A320M-K, grey heat sink chipset overheat until self reboot or shutdown.   
    Dude, why?? WHY??
    WHy your continue to use your new, good system with that ancient piece of shit PSU?!
     
    Wanna destroy hundreds of €uros because you cheaped out on the PSU and got a shitty one?!
  5. Like
    Totorus reacted to dgsddfgdfhgs in Asus Prime A320M-K, grey heat sink chipset overheat until self reboot or shutdown.   
    maybe, that part is suppose to be hot, same as my b350 plus.
    like 60~70C feels burning, but its normal temp.
     
    update bios/ chipset first. 
  6. Like
    Totorus reacted to dgsddfgdfhgs in Asus Prime A320M-K, grey heat sink chipset overheat until self reboot or shutdown.   
    what are you specifically doing and it overheated?
    overheated about what temp? on chipset heatsink?
     
    Even a320 is cheapest of the line, while not recommended, shall still be able to hold a 1700 stable at stock. what is your psu?
  7. Like
    Totorus reacted to asand1 in Asus Prime A320M-K, grey heat sink chipset overheat until self reboot or shutdown.   
    It WILL have a problem before long BECAUSE it is old. They don't last forever, capacitors and other components have an expected lifespan and 13 years ago there were a lot of Chinese counterfeit capacitors in circulation that had shorter than advertised lifespans. 
     
    Remember everything worked until it didn't including Chernobyl. When a PSU decides to die it takes everything else with it.
     
    Chipsets are intended to run at temps that would burn you, you are not copper and silicon.
     
    Sounds like your GPU is the problem, RMA it.
  8. Like
    Totorus reacted to AshleyAshes in The eMachines eMonster 500a Restoration And Modernization   
    #NeverObsolete
     
    Christmas 1999, I had recently discovered basic A-B video editing by using two VCRs and a CD player to make The Simpsons music videos to Weird Al.  I then discovered that I could actually put video into a computer and edit it that way, I just needed one magic piece of hardware: A Video Capture Card.  I wanted that for Christmas.  The wallpaper for the ATi All In Wonder 128 became our wallpaper on or Pentium II 200 machine.  I loved tinkering with A/V stuff and I thought this would be a game changer.  I didn't understand that our Pentium II wasn't even really up to the task and so I couldn't simply get the AIW128 for Christmas and have at it.  So what was under the tree that Christmas morning?  An All In Wonder 128 for sure but also an eMachines eMonster 500a 'The Worlds Best Gaming Machine!' the stickers on the front said.  (They lied.)  In my eyes however, this thing was a super computer.  Coppermine Intel Pentium III at 500mhz.  64MB of RAM.  13GB hard drive.  8X DVD-ROM drive.  It shipped with an ATi Xpert 128, which was the same Rage 128 chip in my AIW128, my card just came with the giant analog tuner hardware and VIVO hardware.  This thing did everything I could ever want it to do at the time.  This is the computer that got me into doing Anime Music Videos.  Playing with VCD, SVCD, and DVD authoring.  This was the machine that I ran my first torrent on.  This was the machine I watched my first anime fansub on.  This computer played my games because we didn't have a console.  This computer let me run countless hours of Half-Life, which I explored every inch oflike a kid who had found an abandoned building, it was my escape into while my dysfunctional family melted down at the time.  This wasn't 'my first computer' but it was 'The first computer that was mine' and for four years it served me faithfully.  This computer is why I now work in the film industry doing visual effects and stereo conversion.  All it it started from this little eMachine.  ...Naturally I put it right into the trash when I got my Athlon XP 2500+ because I'm an idiot.
     
    Good thing I make real money now, I can spend it on all the nostalgia that I want!   December 2016 I said to myself 'I could hunt down, rebuild and get this thing going again as a modern PC.  If I don't do it soon, I'll never find the external components if I wait much longer.  For 2017 I would get my eMachine back.  The challenge is I didn't want 'Some eMachine', or 'Some Pentium III'. I wanted a box that had all of those classic stickers and the words 'eMonster 500a' on the front, even if I planned to entirely modernize the internals.  I succeeded.
     

     
     
    The Treasure Hunt.
     
    I did a lot of searching for an eMosnter 500a but never quite found it, I had some hits for an eMonster 600 but it was damaged and well over priced.  I needed that front 'Gem' and the stickers, they were the most important aspect.  Finally in a Google search I find an 8 month old Reddit thread of someone selling an eMonster 500a along with a big hoard of other old, unremarkable PC parts.  I messaged him.  Two weeks later he still hasn't answered my message.  ...So then I stalked him with Google, like any healthy individual would do.  I find his Steam account, send a friend request and go to bed.  By morning it was accepted and I'm like 'HI I WANNA BUY YOU'RE EMONSTER I HAVE MONEY'.  He rid of it, some of it, he trashed the case but he kept the face plate.  I can can work with that, countless eMachines used the same case, they just had different 'gems' in the front and stickers.  Shut up and take my money.
     
    $74.20 CAD for this:

     
    Not enough!  We need a case!  The optical drive that matched the face plate!  The missing front port cover!  Off to eBay for an eTower 566ix for donor parts.  Found one with the CD-ROM and original floppy drive.  (Close, but I need the DVD-ROM, it'll do for now)  $171.77 CAD after shipping from eBay.  ...Yes, I paid $171 for a Celeron 566.

     
     
    Finally the case was missing the HDD caddy, it's a piece of steel that holds the main system drive vertically against the front inside of the case.  Somehow a UK PC parts store had it as reclaimed stock.  $27.40 to have it shipped to Canada.  If you're keeping count, I've now paid $273.37 CAD all in for what, let's not deny, subtract the 'Nostalgia Value' and it's 'Just come crappy old mATX case with an SFX PSU mount and no place to mount a ventilation fan'.
     
    So, the build!  This is not going to be like your typical build that starts off with the shiney case and then the CPU/Mobo/GPU combination.  While I have selected the case I have not chosen any main system components yet.  They will be the last stage but they will be Kaby Lake or Ryzen, TDPs are a major concern.  But where would the fun be if I just stuck a modern mATX board in and called it a day?  I am going to make this thing complete.
     
    First, the face plate.  Scroll back up and you can see that the stickers are damaged and faded.  This weekend I will be covering the efforts to take high resolution images of the original stickers, vectorize them carefully in Adobe Illustrator and then reproduce fresh new stickers with the aid of a professional printing shop that I've previously used to print artwork for arcade controllers I've built.  Those stickers are pure late 90's PC cheese and they are mandatory.
     
    Second, the optical drive.  This Samsung CD-ROM drive will have it's faceplate removed and we'll be installing a modern, beige DVDRW drive that runs on the SATA Bus.  There will be some physical modifications necessary to affix the old faceplate to the incompatible new optical drive.

     
     
    Next up, the floppy drive.  Oh yes, we are going to make the floppy drive work.  This will likely involve some kind of FDE to USB adaptor.  Mark my words, this fully operational Windows 10 PC, will read 1.44" floppy discs.
     

     
     
    But wait!  There's more!  How could you tell this machine was made for serious gaming?  It had a USB 1.1 port as well as a GamePort right on the very front.  Like it was some kind of gaming console!  I will be installing a USB3.0 port instead but also a GamePort to USB adapter.  Sadly, Windows has long dropped native support for the GamePort so only an adapter that can convert it to a dumb USB gamepad will work but it will be installed internally so that from the outside, old GamePads and JoySticks can be plugged in and used in modern games.  However this will not offer full compatibility with some later era devices or with MIDI.  This stage will involve some wiring and the usage of a drill press for modifications.
     

     
     
    The power supply.  Okay, this old SFX PSU running at 120w and lacking even the necessary connectors for modern hardware obviously won't work it.  Thankfully it's just an SFX PSU so this will mount a modern SFX PSU just as well.  The Corsair SF450 has been selected to go in.
     

     
     
    Now, I said that the final main PC components have not been decided but I will be dropping in temporary components while I do testing.  I'll be using an ASUS F1A75-M PRO motherboard and an AMD A8-3870K as the testing hardware.  Basically, I have these sitting around so they'll let me ensure that all modernization and adapters actually -work- before I commit to a final motherboard and CPU.  The final hardware needs some serious considerations since TDP is a big concern with this machine.  I may be looking at drilling holes in the bottom to allow additional intake fans to cool the CPU and GPU.  Even with additional vents, this will be a very TDP conscious build to ensure that it can run fully closed up.  In short, 1999 on the outside, 2017 on the inside. 
     
    Finally, a last shot of the stripped down chassis so you can tell what I'm working with here for the winter and spring.   Open to any comments or suggestions.
     

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