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Shyzah

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  1. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from AudiTTFan in vintage alienware pc case   
    In case anyones wondering what happened. I bought this computer over a year ago and wanted to give an update.

    I did a few period correct modifications such as the power supply with silver tube wire covering over it (pulled from a PC from the same era) as well as period correct IDE cables. Also added a dragon on the outer vent that goes over the filter (before it was just a filter). 

    It was in fact the 1.2GHz AMD "thunderbird" Athlon variant (making this a Alienware Area 51 Aurora shipped with Windows ME).

    Here it is currently with the original motherboard/CPU and a MSI nVidia GeForce4 4200Ti installed running NFS Underground.
     
    Plans are to add some period neon lighting inside and a matching SoundBlaster Audigy 2 bay unit for the sound card currently installed. 


  2. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from RokinAmerica in vintage alienware pc case   
    In case anyones wondering what happened. I bought this computer over a year ago and wanted to give an update.

    I did a few period correct modifications such as the power supply with silver tube wire covering over it (pulled from a PC from the same era) as well as period correct IDE cables. Also added a dragon on the outer vent that goes over the filter (before it was just a filter). 

    It was in fact the 1.2GHz AMD "thunderbird" Athlon variant (making this a Alienware Area 51 Aurora shipped with Windows ME).

    Here it is currently with the original motherboard/CPU and a MSI nVidia GeForce4 4200Ti installed running NFS Underground.
     
    Plans are to add some period neon lighting inside and a matching SoundBlaster Audigy 2 bay unit for the sound card currently installed. 


  3. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from Aveniform in My Retro sorta sleeper build   
    Welcome to the Sleeper/Old modded case club!
     
    Would also be nice to share on SleeperBattlestations on reddit.
     
    Here's mines.
    Old pic, ignore my hideous GPU filler after selling the previous one.
    It has an evga gtx 980 ti in it now... still sad 😢
     
    Compaq Presario Sleeper & Megabyte Computer INC Server by Shyzah, on Flickr
  4. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from A1200 in My Retro sorta sleeper build   
    Welcome to the Sleeper/Old modded case club!
     
    Would also be nice to share on SleeperBattlestations on reddit.
     
    Here's mines.
    Old pic, ignore my hideous GPU filler after selling the previous one.
    It has an evga gtx 980 ti in it now... still sad 😢
     
    Compaq Presario Sleeper & Megabyte Computer INC Server by Shyzah, on Flickr
  5. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from Meet_The_NASA in My Retro sorta sleeper build   
    Welcome to the Sleeper/Old modded case club!
     
    Would also be nice to share on SleeperBattlestations on reddit.
     
    Here's mines.
    Old pic, ignore my hideous GPU filler after selling the previous one.
    It has an evga gtx 980 ti in it now... still sad 😢
     
    Compaq Presario Sleeper & Megabyte Computer INC Server by Shyzah, on Flickr
  6. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from brob in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Update! It's been complete for some time. Will post photos at the end of this post.

    As for the previous replies, I completely missed the posts about the Model M.

    I've been using the Model M as a daily since it was restored and I love it. 
    It's been attached to my sleeper with an MSI mobo thru the PS/2 slot with no problems
    I purchased a AT cable for the Model M as I needed it to work some 486 systems.
     
    I sold off the other Model M after bolt mod + new missing key caps for a little under $300 on eBay.
     
    IBM 35sx After Restoration by Shyzah, on Flickr
     
    I was able to find an original power button on eBay.
     
    Staff! Anyway this could be moved to "Build Log" thread as Bombastinatior recommended?? 
     
  7. Like
    Shyzah reacted to Bombastinator in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    If you’re curious this sort of thing often goes in the “build log” section but it’s cool enough it could sit in multiple areas.
  8. Like
    Shyzah reacted to Trentent in The $10,000 HP Gaming computer that never was (A brief history of VoodooPC)   
    VoodooPC was a little known boutique computer shop based in Canada!  Calgary, Alberta, Canada to be precise.
     
    I joined VoodooPC in 2002, when it was around ~15 people. Voodoo's claim to fame at the time was high-end PC's -- and when I started it had just started to ship laptops from various ODM's.
     
    Voodoo was trying to differentiate itself from other players in the space. It took existing chassis's and laser cut the side panels with Voodoo branding.
     
    To try and go further Voodoo partnered with another startup -- CoolIT -- to ship a unique CPU cooler that used TEC's to try and cool the CPU to a greater effect than air-cooling.
     
    You can barely make it out in this picture:

     
    However, these chassis were bog-standard off the shelf chassis that were painted in an automotive shop then branded. Not overly unique.
     
    Forward to end of 2002/2003-ish and Voodoo worked with LianLi on customizing a chassis with Voodoo branding and some unique features only available to VoodooPC the Rage F1 (Based off the LianLi PC-60).


    However, problems started to arise. The custom CPU cooler was running against the scorching hot Intel CPU's of them time -- and was being overwhelmed. It didn't help that the TEC's were adding additional heat to a heatsink incapable of dissipating it -- Voodoo advertised and overclocked CPU's out-of-the-box. This added even more heat.
     
    With the CoolIT solution unable to cope, I took on a project to try and add more differentiators based around cooling.  A custom water-cooling loop was the obvious choice. We quickly found a solution and pivoted to using custom water-cooling loops. This was much more reliable, cooled the components allowing for higher overclocks and was much, much quieter. Voodoo won awards and was cranking out machines. There was a problem with the unexpected pivot though. The water-cooling took away a 5-1/4" bay and some hard drive capacity.  The chassis was a tight fit.
     
    During this time, Voodoo partnered with Zalman and was shipping fully built PC's in Zalman's completely fanlass chassis -- branded the Rage F-15.

     
    It was a monster chassis -- weighing ~60lbs without components. Heat pipes cooled everything! From the CPU to the GPU, it was completely silent. The original version came with a 250W PSU eventually upgraded to a 300-350W IIRC.  The largest problem of this chassis was the coil whine of the components. When it's completely silent, coil whine was VERY noticeable.
     
    I assembled a team of the 3 desktop tech's -- Myself, Casey and Allan and we got to work on designing a chassis to replace the RAGE F1. We got a LianLi V1000 as the base and started to tear it apart.
     
    We redesigned large parts of the internals. To maximize for features we offered and no extras -- and to make it one of the first (the first?) mainstream chassis that was designed with custom loop cooling in mind. We went through 2 iterations before shipping the first Voodoo RAGE F5 (later renamed OMEN)

     
    To my knowledge, this was the first "mass" produced machine with custom-loop cooling. The cost of the chassis was around $300USD IIRC, and our MOQ was 100 units. We shipped an average of one machine every day-day and a half. But the cost of the Voodoo RAGE F5 was ~50% higher than previous units -- including the profit margins.
     
    I had made modifications to the chassis for the next order (things like tube holes in the chrome to go straight into the radiator, lowering the 5-1/4" bays to have a 'hidden' 5-1/4" bay for a new reservoir/pump combo on top -- and other things to ease building (additional hard drive bays, holes for cable management, giant hole in the mobo tray to allow easy access to back to the CPU -- his wasn't common back then and I think we were the first to do it).
     
    This 'rev 2' was rebranded OMEN.

     
    I was doing all the desktop review systems at the time and we were crushing it. The custom water cooling loops with 120x240mm rad made us quiet, made the CPU exceptionally cool, and when GPU blocks came out we were quick to adopt them. Voodoo was at it's highest revenue that year IIRC. Voodoo gold plated a Voodoo OMEN as a publicity stunt, brought it to CES and eventually, actually, sold the machine!

     
    As we moved closer to exhausting this chassis supply, we made further modifications, ordered the next batch, etc. We eventually corrected the motherboard orientation so it wasn't upside-down, etc. Things were clicking. I still maintain these are among the most enjoyable chassis to work on. Roomy.  Solid. 
     
    In early 2006, I left Voodoo for ~6 months then rejoined the company.  Shortly after HP acquired Voodoo. The first week we flew down to Cupertino to meet the HP Gaming team and see the first product they were developing. We got to see Blackbird 002, some other concept products and the roadmap HP had laid out. We gave some input into the roadmap and worked on the layout and architecture of Blackbird. We focused a ton on niceties we weren't sure we'd ever get.  Things like tool-less PCI slots, tool-less hard drive slots, etc. Blackbird wouldn't come out for another year though.
     
    So we got to work on the last revision of the LianLi OMEN chassis and I wanted to update the look.
     
    My little brother, Troy, was taking some graphic design classes at the time and through our youth we marvelled at things like the Apple Blue-and-White G3 design, the internals, the ease of use. We would design systems or products in 3D and imagine what it was like to have them made. He had made some concepts for the new OMEN and I forwarded it HP Gaming's head of design, Mark. Mark made plans to come to Calgary to meet the team and the space where the machines would be built and he mentioned he would like to meet Troy. Troy skipped class, drove 6 hours and only got to speak to Mark for about 20 minutes. But he made a big enough impression that Mark hired Troy out of school and assigned him to work on the HP Gaming products.
     
    One of Troy's concepts made it into the Voodoo OMEN.  We called it 'floating face' OMEN.
     

     
    With LED's recessed  in the gap, the face appeared to 'float' in front of you -- especially in low-light.  Further modifications to the internals included a removable PCI stability bar -- this is was done to avoid the 'blow up foam' that @LinusSebastianfound in his most recent secret shopper videos.

     
    This was the last of the VoodooPC OMEN's.
     
    HP OMEN's.
     
    Blackbird 002 launched and we wanted to follow up with 'the tower to end all towers'.  It was supposed to be the ultimate gaming PC. Asetek had their AIO cooler which HP adopted for blackbird but it had drawbacks. At the time, I think the pump was louder than the D5 , it's cooling was adequate but not exceptional and cooling anything more than the CPU was not feasible. The lag time between design and production meant cooling a GPU or two GPU's had to built into the product -- and if you upgraded the graphics card you'd be left with a dangling bit.
     
    the HP OMEN was going to address this and keep with the custom loop.  The design was to be as thin as possible (because thin was in) but this made trade-off's that in hindsight, maybe weren't the best. At the time, AMD and Intel had come out (or were going to come out) with dual-socket gaming motherboards (Intel Skulltrail -- I can't recall the AMD platform).  We got early engineering samples and I stressed and overclocked and tried to murder the hardware. Between the two, I think we measured ~800W from the wall (with GPU's). So we wanted our new tower to be able to cool all of that -- and quietly.
     
    I made a checklist and worked with design on making it happen.
     
    Dual-pass 480x120mm radiator. Double-thick fans with PWM control. EATX. Quick-connects. Copper tubing for fluid routing. Water-cooled PSU, 32bit RGB. Dual slot, thin, HP light-scribe CD/DVD burners, 6x3.5 toolless hot-swap HDD's.
     
    I'm not sure who wanted the screen on the tower, but we added a 7" LCD too.
     
    In order to minimize wasted space we found the orientation of the motherboard would have to be vertical. This is what was designed:




     
    The 7" LCD was powered internally by USB. DisplayLink -- IIRC. They were the first vendor with Windows 7 drivers, were USB, and could operate completely off USB power. Plans were to make the display removeable, but at the time this wasn't feasible. The primary blocker was the lack of a wireless protocol. Wireless USB was still being finalized and once done I was hoping we'd adopt it for the next revision.
     
    We hit all the bullets and more. To remove the side panel, you'd take the top off, and slide a switch. This would activate (at the time) super-bright WHITE LED's, illuminating the internals for you to work on. This was powered via a rechargeable battery pack, so it worked without power plugged in.
     
    Youtube has a great video of this chassis when we were trying to get ready for launch.
     
    I was actually at this event. I was supposed to make sure all the hardware worked smoothly for the review as these were fragile engineering samples.  We had the new HP Envy laptops too. Crazy things kept me scrambling at this event. We actually shipped two OMEN's but only one would power on. The HP ENVY laptop's pre-production chassis were splitting, etc. I tried to make it all work at this event. Stressful, fun and crazy. I wrote the software that is cycling the RGB lights.  The coolest thing is the PCI card holders. They were borrowed from HP Server division and they were mostly transparent. This was perfect for when the LED lit them up!
     
    These towers started at $10,000. Only 10 were ever made. They were all recalled.
     
    When HP Gaming was shutdown I was lucky to have two PVT units in my possession. They might be the last two in existence.
     
    Anyways, thought I'd share. This seems like the kind of crowd who might enjoy this.
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     





  9. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from freeagent in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Just and update.
    The CRT has been successfully restored on <removed by staff>.
    PC is basically done as well!
     


  10. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from Drama Lama in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Just and update.
    The CRT has been successfully restored on <removed by staff>.
    PC is basically done as well!
     


  11. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from CT854 in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Just and update.
    The CRT has been successfully restored on <removed by staff>.
    PC is basically done as well!
     


  12. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from kingmustard in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Just and update.
    The CRT has been successfully restored on <removed by staff>.
    PC is basically done as well!
     


  13. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from Drama Lama in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Forgive me if this is the wrong section of the forum.
     
    Not done with the restoration, but I am done with one of the IBM Model Ms as well as the Bolt Mod. 
    I found two IBM Model Ms in a abandoned mental asylum. Also IBM 35SX computers. CRTs had wires cut and everything was supposed to be junked 26 years ago. Surprised I found them in the half burnt down building. Doing a full restoration. Computer fired up. Restored + bolt modded one of the Model Ms and got one more to go.
     
    The cleaning process was very rigorous, more rigorous than the getting out of the place with a giant ass computer without getting spotted by po po (Lets just say, it aint my first time saving old tech). I wanted to make sure there wasn't a single germ left on this. It was basically a raccoon, rat, and coyote bathroom for 26 years. The animal piss also denigrated part of the traces which had to be painted in which was fun.
     
    I'll upload the restoration on YouTube when I'm done editing. (The PC/CRT will be in another video).
     
    The place I found it in was more than scary and pretty remote (Especially the part that was burnt to crisp). However, as soon as I saw old computers I hopped right thru that tiny window lmao.
    Computer appears cleaner in the first photo because it was dusted off a little.
     

     
     




  14. Like
    Shyzah got a reaction from mockedarche in 26 Years Abandoned Computer Restoration (+ IBM Model M Keyboard)   
    Forgive me if this is the wrong section of the forum.
     
    Not done with the restoration, but I am done with one of the IBM Model Ms as well as the Bolt Mod. 
    I found two IBM Model Ms in a abandoned mental asylum. Also IBM 35SX computers. CRTs had wires cut and everything was supposed to be junked 26 years ago. Surprised I found them in the half burnt down building. Doing a full restoration. Computer fired up. Restored + bolt modded one of the Model Ms and got one more to go.
     
    The cleaning process was very rigorous, more rigorous than the getting out of the place with a giant ass computer without getting spotted by po po (Lets just say, it aint my first time saving old tech). I wanted to make sure there wasn't a single germ left on this. It was basically a raccoon, rat, and coyote bathroom for 26 years. The animal piss also denigrated part of the traces which had to be painted in which was fun.
     
    I'll upload the restoration on YouTube when I'm done editing. (The PC/CRT will be in another video).
     
    The place I found it in was more than scary and pretty remote (Especially the part that was burnt to crisp). However, as soon as I saw old computers I hopped right thru that tiny window lmao.
    Computer appears cleaner in the first photo because it was dusted off a little.
     

     
     




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