Synology DS423+ NAS Review!
24:14
Жыл бұрын
The 486 Upgrade CPU Showdown!
29:59
The 3dfx Voodoo 3 3000 Repairathon!
20:29
My Daily Use 486 Build - Part 3
28:35
My Daily Use 486 Build - Part 2
24:59
Пікірлер
@0wnz0rz888
@0wnz0rz888 Күн бұрын
Legendary is not the title I would give this card, so the price today was nuts. I owned it in the past and it was really unreliable even when new
@RetroInside94
@RetroInside94 Күн бұрын
Woow what a smash! You literally doubled the performance and the clocks! I love this thing! Very very nice video! Oh and yes i am the distibuitor of the PSU 😂😂 (see the sticker)
@ferencszabo3504
@ferencszabo3504 7 күн бұрын
When they shared the same socket type, those were the good times!
@cptcrogge
@cptcrogge 7 күн бұрын
Getting 15 FPS on a 386 40 with the 386 optimized build, maximum screen size.
@blechtic
@blechtic 9 күн бұрын
I always wondered how much performance you gained from using GUS instead of SB on a slow CPU. You know, that hardware mixing..
@PaulAngileri
@PaulAngileri 10 күн бұрын
I remember that once I had convinced my parents to buy a quite expensive 486 DX2 66 in 1993, I soon started seeing the Pentium 60 and 66 hit the shelves. Then AFTER that, I started seeing DX3-75s, DX4-100s, and a dozen other permutations.
@pedrodaniellopesferreira2916
@pedrodaniellopesferreira2916 11 күн бұрын
I was at school in 1995 when my dad bought a 486dx2. Pretty quickly, I found that there was no real difficulty swapping CPUs, upgrading RAM, installing sound cards, etc. So I started to do these things for friends and school colleagues in exchange for their old parts. Then these people would refer me to their friends and family, and so on.... you get the picture! As a result of doing this, I had the dx2 80, the dx2 100, the pentium 100 (socket 7), several cirix, amd and intel systems followed, and I would still put my old systems together enough with used parts to sell them cheap. I don't recall all my computers during that era, but let's just say they were changing every couple of weeks or so.
@egram-fh7si
@egram-fh7si 11 күн бұрын
i have the super one if you want it only for 0.0 $
@Knowbody42
@Knowbody42 12 күн бұрын
Why does the socket seem to have a bunch of holes for pins on the outside that aren't used?
@carlnauwelaerts4802
@carlnauwelaerts4802 15 күн бұрын
FYI about the Cyrix 5x86-133Mhz: I remember reading an article back in the 90's stating that all Cyrix 5x86s at 133Mhz were sold to Evergreen (or another upgrade company?) to make upgrade chips out of them. So that would explain why they are very difficult to find. 1. I still have a Cyrix 5x86-120Mhz Windows 95 machine which I use to play old games like the first XCom DOS games. 🙂 2. And I also still have a Kingston AMD 5x86-133Mhz chip, which I used to upgrade my old 486-66Mhz. That also was a nice boost. 3. CPU upgrade nostalgia: The last "upgrade CPU" I bought was a Powerleap Tualatin Celeron at 1.2Ghz... I used this to upgrade my Pentium 2 400 to a Tualatin Celeron at 1.2Ghz... wow, that Celeron had a motor on it. 🙂
@bigdawg1353
@bigdawg1353 17 күн бұрын
Awesome video. Brings back a lot of memories 😢
@danielktdoranie
@danielktdoranie 18 күн бұрын
Where do you buy those plastic holders for your CPUs?
@jeabee7
@jeabee7 18 күн бұрын
“Turbo mode” I remember seeing that back in the day. What does it even do?
@phatputer
@phatputer 18 күн бұрын
You don't happen to have any reference material to what the SMD capacitors are that sit between the memory modules? I have one that is damaged and was hoping to work out what it was, the alternative being to pull one of the other ones off and measure it.
@tonguescum5137
@tonguescum5137 20 күн бұрын
great vid!
@gh975223
@gh975223 21 күн бұрын
DOOM needing a 486???? FFS it needed a Pentium to run! yeh early levels was ok but you definitely needed pentium for the last level!
@cpufpu
@cpufpu 21 күн бұрын
how much time and memories...Jan Steunebrink sent me a beta to test UMC DX2.
@evolancer211
@evolancer211 21 күн бұрын
Are those Gameboy cartridge cases?
@CableWrestler
@CableWrestler 22 күн бұрын
Do you know or are you related to the KZbinr SUPERFASTMATT? YOU SOUND EXACTLY THE SAME
@unperrier5998
@unperrier5998 22 күн бұрын
The tolerance on crystals is very tight, typically 0.02% (20 ppm) Using a 19.6608 MHz instead of 19.7568 results in about 0.5% variation, so you're way out of the normal tolerance. But for sound, 0.5% difference in speed is just not perceptible, especially when using wave samples (patches) that last for about a second or so. Great find.
@Indrid__Cold
@Indrid__Cold 22 күн бұрын
I can so relate to the early days of computer gaming.
@David-h5r1x
@David-h5r1x 23 күн бұрын
I used to play willy bemish all the time back in the day I was surprised to see it
@primarydataloop
@primarydataloop 23 күн бұрын
You have a speaking voice like creamy vanilla custard.
@Otakunopodcast
@Otakunopodcast 24 күн бұрын
I burst out laughing when at 9:18 the music turned from a happy classical piece into some sort of grotesque eldritch horror abomination.
@TheCarlos206
@TheCarlos206 24 күн бұрын
Nice !
@PixelRefresh
@PixelRefresh 24 күн бұрын
Amazing had no idea this was possible. Thanks for sharing this great vid.
@TheFlagshipLab
@TheFlagshipLab 25 күн бұрын
That's an OC.
@TheFlagshipLab
@TheFlagshipLab 22 күн бұрын
Would low temps help?
@steampunkstar_raisin
@steampunkstar_raisin 25 күн бұрын
#verynice
@tabeschektabeschek1852
@tabeschektabeschek1852 25 күн бұрын
I had a 486sx25 overclocked at 44MHz. Good times.
@SockyNoob
@SockyNoob 25 күн бұрын
If only it worked like this for modern systems. Imagine a 100% in performance.
@SockyNoob
@SockyNoob 25 күн бұрын
12:07 almost 30 FPS out of a 386? Holy crap.
@SockyNoob
@SockyNoob 25 күн бұрын
Very impressive chips. A shame Intel sued them from existence. They were clearly mad they were being destroyed by UMC. An efficient chip is always best and literally became AMD and Intel's focus by the mid 2000s and everybody focuses on it now.
@drkamilz
@drkamilz 25 күн бұрын
I remember the same issue back in the day. My 486DX machine with overclocked ISA bus to 16MHz worked fine until the SB16 Vibra card was installed.
@paulmichaelfreedman8334
@paulmichaelfreedman8334 25 күн бұрын
Pretty sure I had this motherboard in my PC, somewhere around 1994/1995. That said, my PC has seen MANY mobo's over the years.
@vabello
@vabello 25 күн бұрын
I was going to say, that Doom performance seems atrocious from what I remember on my 486SX 25. I think I had a VESA video card though, but I can't recall. I used to play Doom on 25MHz 386 machines (I can't recall if they were SX or DX). This was in my computer lab in high school. We shrunk the screen down much smaller, but it was perfectly playable. We did multiple simultaneous 4 player Doom matches over the Novell network.
@RandomInsano2
@RandomInsano2 26 күн бұрын
I’ve been watching your back catalog here on KZbin and I’ve been very impressed by the depth you manage to get into while still being a reasonable time investment. Really enjoying it so far!
@vswitchzero
@vswitchzero 24 күн бұрын
Thanks so much! 🙂👍
@BuddyTheWolfYT
@BuddyTheWolfYT 26 күн бұрын
We should start putting heatsinks on these older cards chips to extend their lifespan
@AiOinc1
@AiOinc1 26 күн бұрын
I have one of these, but it's 14.4K. lovely modem but the speaker on the bottom butchers the sound lol
@dgmt1
@dgmt1 27 күн бұрын
In reference to you comment @1:41 where you said "I have no doubt that the release of Doom pushed some people to upgrade or buy new systems in 1993 but most people who shelled out you know three or $4,000 for computer back in the early 90s well they play Doom anyway" A $3000-4000 PC from the early 90s would have been a very top end 486 and would have had no trouble running doom. Based on advertisements found in Byte and PC Magazines; in 1991 386SX-16 systems were selling for $700-800 (including VGA and a hard drive) while a 486DX33 system could be bought for $1500. In 1993 when Doom released budget 486SLC-33 systems sold for under $600, 486SX33 systems were $800-900 while $1500 would get you a 486DX2-66. There is a persistant myth that PCs in the 80s and 90s cost thousands of dollars but the reality is that the majority of PCs sold to home users in this period were these kinds of cheaper locally assembled ones.
@jrherita
@jrherita 27 күн бұрын
Just curious - how much power (watts) does this 486 set up use without monitor?
@jrherita
@jrherita 27 күн бұрын
I never saw a 486SX packaged in that way before; I always remember seeing 386SX’s in this packaging and thought it looked advanced for the time. This looks like a pretty good budget choice for 1992! Subbed. (My first OC was a 486DX-25 laying around that I finally put in a ‘33 MHz board’ in 1992 or so.. eventually a Digikey oscillator assortment got that combo to 48 MHz stably :) ).
@TheCarlos206
@TheCarlos206 27 күн бұрын
THX!
@pvc988
@pvc988 27 күн бұрын
I wonder if VLB (or even PCI) adapter for CPU socket could be made. Something like you wold see in an Amiga.
@Phil-D83
@Phil-D83 28 күн бұрын
Cool to mess with. That powerleap 5x86 133 seems to be the apex of 486 performance
@noanyobiseniss7462
@noanyobiseniss7462 28 күн бұрын
Not sure if it was your channel but I commented to someone doing doom trials that I used to put the demo on loop under win3.1+3.11wfw back in the day overnight as a burn in and stability test before delivering a system. If you can do that without a blue screen then you know what your doing and your real mode drivers are rock solid.
@PROSTO4Tabal
@PROSTO4Tabal 28 күн бұрын
Dommaholic lol
@LotoTheHero
@LotoTheHero 28 күн бұрын
That 2X Overclock is awesome!
@Ale.K7
@Ale.K7 28 күн бұрын
Amazing! :D
@MrElectronicFan
@MrElectronicFan 28 күн бұрын
So good stuff. Also have this cards untested. if they fail i now know what and how i can check them :) Thx for sharing^^