To fix the Environment Test at 4:36, set the DOS environment variable before running. SET 87=YES
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@JoaoVitor-cw2vg5 жыл бұрын
makes sense now
@wisteela5 жыл бұрын
Oh wow, I've never heard about this before. I thought it was to do with the use of a V20.
@crayzeape22305 жыл бұрын
@@wisteela The variable is thanks to Borland, any of their languages (Turbo Basic / Turbo Pascal / Turbo C(++)) check for the '87' DOS environment variable and set a language specific variable based on the result (_8087 in the C based languages). Most software of the time was written in a Borland language, and as such, supports the environment variable. You'd usually set the variable in AUTOEXEC.BAT after installing the 8087.
@wisteela5 жыл бұрын
@@crayzeape2230 Thanks for the info. Useful for using on my old computers.
@caffeinepizza5 жыл бұрын
the 1-800 number for the intel program is still, in fact, the intel phone support.
@Trainguyrom5 жыл бұрын
A company I once worked support for had the same support number for over 50 years. Also the products had a nasty habit of lasting longer than that... Possibly even more surprising, we were able to help a lot of the people who called with products of such age too
@previousslayer5 жыл бұрын
@@Trainguyrom Now it's interesting... IBM? Home appliances? Sorry for being a bit nosy 😅, just curious.
@Trainguyrom5 жыл бұрын
@@previousslayer Radio Electronics manufacturer. I won't say who, but we are talking multiple hundreds of dollars for an individual product
@sugarbooty5 жыл бұрын
@@Trainguyrom Ahh, Sears
@83hjf5 жыл бұрын
Nintendo is still 1-800-255-3700 !
@dashrendar995 жыл бұрын
While I might understand why you use the word "fake" in this entire video, the evidence suggests you have either a genuine silicon based co-processor or a compatible. I read a few years ago that the Chinese and other developing nations were taking apart our electronic scrap and repurposing the essential bits of technology. Some were going as far as grinding the surface of components and laser etching their own part numbers on them. It would be far easier (and more of a logical conclusion to draw) that this "fake" part is something that has been reworked rather than completely engineered to be a knockoff.
@FranklyPeetoons5 жыл бұрын
Am I hallucinating, or are there 4 seconds of an ancient pre-Linus-branded Linus Tech Tips at the end of this video?
@lucaspam5 жыл бұрын
you are not alone.
@Iam_Dunn5 жыл бұрын
...I think I figured out why this was put at the top of my recommendations.... kinda shady... LOL
@CBrown4595 жыл бұрын
That's Linus from his NCIX days. Pretty old clip.
@AnonymousFreakYT5 жыл бұрын
Well, he did say it was an "unexpected" edition!
@attaque715 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure he forgot to errase the tape before recording on it......
@themok29913 жыл бұрын
The sounds of the IBM PC starting up as well as the drive chirping... got me right in the feels. Great video.
@himmelsrand75275 жыл бұрын
14:24 Yeah that was really unexpected
@EdwinNoorlander5 жыл бұрын
Yes. I agree.
@phreapersoonlijk5 жыл бұрын
I wonder how, I wonder why.
@Jako19875 жыл бұрын
VWestlife were Linus all along! 🤯
@Krisztian5HUN5 жыл бұрын
Nvidia/IntelTechTips
@Anamnesia5 жыл бұрын
... and I'm, like, "WTF? Did I leave the 'Auto-Play' button switched-on???"
@Gameboygenius5 жыл бұрын
I don't think the "fake" one is fake at all, but a refurb. Notice that it is ceramic, which I don't think they would bother to do if it was just straight up fake. (The "real" one is also ceramic, but of a different type. The "fake" one is production type ceramic DIP with two ceramic plates bonded with epoxy. Whereas the "real" one is a solid block of ceramic with the leads integrated and a pocket in the middle where the die is.) I bet that if you were to rub the top with a q-tip and acetone, the text would come off, together with a layer of black varnish. Also of note, what does the "fake" one look like on the bottom?
@jort93z5 жыл бұрын
well, do you think intel manufactured it? I certainly don't think so. You'd think they'd know when they released their own products. Since it has intel written on it, it would be a fake if they did in fact not make it.
@Gameboygenius5 жыл бұрын
@@jort93z I think it may be, yes, although I can't guarantee it of course. What the chip pirates sometimes do is take new old stock or recycled stock and put a coat of varnish and new text on it to make it look more pristine. If you use acetone to remove the fake Intel marking on top, it's possible you will find real Intel markings below. The issue with such chips is not necessarily that they aren't genuine, but that there's no guarantee that they are tested and will work after sitting over 30 years in a damp warehouse. But that's why I asked VWestlife to rub some acetone on it to see if the top coat comes.
@SvartaSnuten5 жыл бұрын
What about the copyright date?
@256byteram5 жыл бұрын
China has gotten pretty good at 'refurbishing' old chips. They pull them off old boards and scrub the old labels off, then acid etch new labels onto them, often with incorrect specifications to make the part look better. The part might work as the part advertised, but there's no guarantee the speed specification will be correct. The original part was probably made by Intel. China don't make chips like this from scratch, it's too expensive. Instead they get all the e-waste we send over there and strip them clean, 'refurbishing' the parts and selling them as new.
@256byteram5 жыл бұрын
@@tarstarkusz As Halles said, what about the (fake) copyright date? There is zero chance it was made this century, yes, but every chance it was rebadged this century, and with wrong information at that.
@squirlmy4 жыл бұрын
Intel 8087 coprocessors were fabricated in two variants: one with ceramic side-brazed DIP (CerDIP) and one in hermetic DIP (PDIP). All models of the 8087 had a 40-pin DIP package and operated on 5 volts, consuming around 2.4 watts. Unlike later Intel coprocessors, the 8087 had to run at the same clock speed as the main processor. Suffixes on the part number identified the clock speed: 8087 clock speeds Model number Frequency Intel 8087 5 MHz Intel 8087-1 10 MHz Intel 8087-2 8 MHz Intel 8087-3 4 MHz Intel 8087-6 6 MHz They were designed to operate in the following temperature ranges: C, D, QC and QD prefixes: 0 °C to +70 °C (commercial use). LC, LD, TC and TD prefixes: −40 °C to +85 °C (industrial use). MC and MD prefixes: −55 °C to +125 °C (military use). I'm willing to bet these "reproduction 8087"s are actually rebranded chips made for industrial or commercial use.
@Knaeckebrotsaege5 жыл бұрын
I've bought regular retail CPUs from chinese sellers before (mainly because they tend to be cheaper, even if no questionable stuff happens) and in some cases received engineering or qualification samples instead. Sometimes (especially with really old CPUs) they tried to relabel them (something like selling a DX4-80 rebadged as a DX4-100 that barely works at that speed), other times they didn't even bother. One very interesting example is what was sold as an i7-2600, but was actually a qualification sample (!) that was in such early stages it didn't even know what it is yet (model number when in a system comes up as 0000) and the specifications of it do not match any released Sandy Bridge i5 or i7. It's a Quadcore with HT (which would indicate an i7), but it only has 6MB Cache (like an i5) rather than 8MB of an i7. The supported feature set is also all over the place. Overall it seems like it's still in "we'll decide later what this is going to be" mode, which must mean it was fairly far away from the release date of the final CPUs (ie January 9th, 2011). It's core stepping seems to indicate that as well (C0, all release i5-2xxx and i7-2xxx were D2). What puzzles me is that it appears to work perfectly fine so far, but some software completely brainfarts because it can't determine what the CPU is lol. This includes Windows 10s taskmanager, which for some reason always shows double the clockspeed it actually runs at (around 3.2GHz in idle (1.6), 6.2GHz under load (3.1) and 7.2GHz max. boost speed (3.6). No idea why it does that, but it's not the only piece of software that acts very strange in combination with this CPU, but otherwise works normal.
@joshpayne40155 жыл бұрын
Oh, the nostalgia your ST-225 brought back to me. That was my first hard drive in the summer of 1987. That was a banner summer for me -- I earned enough money in my summer job to buy this hard drive, a Microsoft bus mouse, AND upgrade my XT clone to 640 KB RAM. When I got back to college in the fall, I was stylin'! Thanks for the trip down memory lane!
@doubledrats2352 жыл бұрын
in the mid 1980s I bought a NEC V20 chip for $20 to “upgrade” the 8088 in my XT clone. They mailed me an Intel 80287 chip by mistake which I couldn’t use in my motherboard so I saved it for when I could afford to build a 286 clone. When I finally did build a 286 clone I happily inserted the 287 chip and … nothing was faster. I later installed AutoCAD 2.6 which did run faster but then got a board that had sockets for 386 and 486. After using a 386-50 for a year I finally bought an 80486 DX-2 66 MHz chip (for $500!) which at the time was blisteringly fast. But as time went on computers got faster and cheaper.
@dashcamandy22425 жыл бұрын
9:10 - I'd forgotten just how wonderful an XT sounds while booting. First, the crisp snap of the power switch (and accompanying flicker of the overhead lights in the room), then the slow growl of a vintage Seagate spinning up... (Wasn't Seagate the first manufacturer to use a green LED?) Then, the drive check on the 5 1/4"... 10:31 - Thank you for more Seagate noises. For some reason, I've always found those sounds soothing. I wonder if the slight degradation in overall performance has something to do with the co-pro being introduced into the bus in the first place. The CPU has to be able to communicate with the co-pro, I'm not sure how they did it but I imagine in that era it was handled either with a fixed IRQ line (interrupt request) or by forcing the CPU to "poll" it every so many cycles. It's all just theory, as my education started in the 486-era...
@JessHull5 жыл бұрын
I always see these and always wondered about them. I can now rest assured now that I know you have tested them. Thank you. You're easy going style and no frills video production makes you my favorite electronics and HiFi youtubeer.
@Madness8325 жыл бұрын
Could you do a comparison, using something math-intensive (i.e Lotus 1-2-3)?
@d.jensen51534 жыл бұрын
Yes. That's what was bugging me about this video. If you're going to test math coprocessors, please run a math benchmark of some sort and post the results.
@weasel2htm5 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the chip failed the "Environment Test" due to have the NEC CPU instead of an Intel. While it would not be worth another whole video, It might be worth testing sometime, even if only for kicks and grins.
@CommodoreFan645 жыл бұрын
that's honestly the issue here as the programs are looking for genuine Intel chips, and when it does not see that in the microcode of the main CPU it gives a failed test even if the NEC is 99.9% compatible.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I just tried it with an 8088 chip and it gave the same results.
@weasel2htm5 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife Well, it was worth a shot. Thanks for trying.
@Spaztron645 жыл бұрын
PC-9801-33 is a mathco meant for use with v20 and v30 CPUs on early NEC PC-9801 personal computers.
@RedBearAK5 жыл бұрын
Isn’t it possible that the IBM also slowed down a bit when the chip was installed, but the slowdown wasn’t reflected in the results due to rounding? The numbers were all rounded to a single decimal place. The numbers on the Tandy may have just been closer to being rounded down. Like 1.26 vs 1.24 would become 1.3 vs 1.2. But 1.02 vs 0.98 would become 1.0 vs 1.0 after rounding. I think it’s natural there would be some minor penalty in a system for adding another element. It has to interact with the rest of the system somehow even when it’s not doing anything. Must be one of the reasons it was considered optional unless you really needed it.
@wishusknight30095 жыл бұрын
The Tandy uses a weird type of memory interleaving with the co-processor. The IBM 5150 ran them in lockstep so there is no performance penalty. However when instructions are actually being processed on the x87, the main cpu is in wait state, and on the Tandy x86 it is not.
@migry4 жыл бұрын
I agree with the comments below that the "fake" chip is actually a genuine Intel manufactured part, but the date code discrepancy does suggest that it has been remarked (god knows why!). Having said that I would have thought that it was difficult to remove markings from ceramic parts in order to remark them. The marking is also quite crisp, unlike some other parts which have been remarked in China (plastic MC68000 in PLCC) which had poor quality Motorola batwing logos. I also bought some MC68000 plastic DILs from China which were remarked from -8 (8MHz) to -16 (16MHz), because the new marking came off when I used IPA and a cotton bud, to reveal the original markings. When reported to the auction web site, they were not interested in following up. The big surprise was that at least in a basic system test the parts did work at 16MHz (but this was not a rigorous test) Nevertheless I was surprised that it worked at all at double the original marked rating. Googling brought to me to Ken Shirriff's Twitter feed in which he shows a 100% identical part to yours (perhaps he also bought it from the same seller as you?) which he de-lidded in order to see the die. He is an expert in this field and if the chip had been fake (i.e. non Intel) it would have been clear when looking at the die. I was also intrigued by your comment of the splayed legs. This is commonly found in many brand new DIL ICs, and would imply that the part is NOS. No way would Chinese fakers go to the effort to splay legs to make the parts look "new". Anyway the date code discrepancy is a puzzle, as a faker "should" have had no problem in choosing a genuine sounding date code. But it could be like my Moto parts, and was simply given a free speed upgrade! Seems a waste of time and effort given the already low selling price. BTW I've got no problem with the Chinese rescuing old parts from PCBs and re-selling them, but only if the parts are NOT remarked and are sold as re-cycled with a truthful listing.
@rich10514145 жыл бұрын
Yes, quite the unexpected edition of ncix tech tips, seeing as ncix doesn't even exist anymore.
@nameistunbekannt78965 жыл бұрын
Hearing the words "reliable" and "seagate" in one context let my brain fail the Exception Test.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
Seagate _was_ reliable in the 1980s.
@nameistunbekannt78965 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife I know. But saying this today sounds so sureal to me.
@nosville225 жыл бұрын
We gotta turn that ending into a meme
@johnmiller00004 жыл бұрын
An 8087 dated 1978 is obviously fake since it wasn't available until 1980! I spotted that immediately.
@aarongreenfield90385 жыл бұрын
Hearing that computer wind up, chug chug chug, and then beep, brought back so much nostalgic memories. Thanks!
@sideburns20092 жыл бұрын
That USA phone number for support in the Intel Math Coprocessor diagnostics still reaches Intel Support line all these years later lol
@clydesight5 жыл бұрын
I admire how thorough you are in these videos. Great job,
@previousslayer5 жыл бұрын
Yeah Clyde's in here 😎👍 Wondering when the whole squad is going to assemble...
@CptJistuce5 жыл бұрын
Thorough? I was disappointed he didn't actually run any floating-point benchmarks to see if the chips performed equivalently in anything other than a quick and basic diagnostic test.
@user-vn7ce5ig1z5 жыл бұрын
For a moment there, I got my hopes up of adding a math-co to my old Tandy. :-\ It didn't even occur to me to get one (it's probably the last upgrade I'll be able to give it). Thanks for the idea and the warning. Some day…
@johnpriceuk5 жыл бұрын
I think you’re encountering an incompatibility with the V20. It would be interesting to see if it fails that test with a real 8088 installed.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I just tried it with an 8088 and it gave the same results with both 8087 chips.
@sarreqteryx5 жыл бұрын
6:40 The 8088 was actually introduced in 1979, not 1978. The 8086 came out in 1978, the 8088 being a cost reduced version of the 8086 with an 8bit external data bus (as opposed to 16 bits on the 8086); both are 16bit internally. also, @ 5:20, there's a performance hit from just having the 8087 installed because the V20/8086 still has to address it whether it's actively being used or not. It's a latency issue, probably the Tandy has a longer delay between the CPU and the CoPro socket. The Exception test errors may be an issue with the V20, then fixed in the V30. you could try swapping them between the 2 machines. a test with FPU aware software would be a good idea, though. the fake 8087 may pass the diagnostic tests, but it could still either be slower, or just fail hard on any real work. if it's good a modern repro, though, it could be significantly faster than the original.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
The original Intel 8088 had a copyright date of 1978 on it. That's what I was referring to. And the 8087s failed the exceptions test even with an 8088 chip installed.
@morganb9005 жыл бұрын
Yeah I wondering why there was a few seconds of black at the end.
@pgj19973 жыл бұрын
6:22 It's also the line of PCs where Touhou Project got its start
Please don't call functional counterfeits "fakes". It just muddies the waters. Call them counterfeits. There are fake chips that don't work (different chip with the markings sanded off and new markings put in). There are also counterfeits that are a general purpose microcontroller running an emulator, which may result in compatibility, performance and stability issues. This chip is probably a die clone, they get either the original die photolithography prints, possibly from an older pre-release version or take a chip, and sand or etch it off layer by layer, taking photographs through a microscope, literally photocopying the chip, which is pretty cool IMHO. There are also chips that are "clean room reverse engineered", they take the same inputs and output the same outputs but the means to do so are re-implemented from scratch, any similarity in design is either for logical reasons (most efficient or familiar way) or coincidence.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I used "fake" not only because it is more attention-grabbing, but also because I had not tested it before making this video, so I had no idea if it would work at all, or would fail tests that the real 8087 had passed.
@himeccms8934 жыл бұрын
After watching your video, I quickly rushed to grab my box of a single 287XL FPU bought on eBay from China; my heart sank when I saw the copyright mark: '80 '86. Markings and legs looks new even if the gold plate looks scratched.
@vwestlife4 жыл бұрын
You're not the only one who got a fake/remarked 287XL: www.os2museum.com/wp/intel-287xl-from-1986-or-1996/
@rarbiart5 жыл бұрын
the environment-test in MCPDiag may fail due to the NEC-V20 (main) processor (since that is not "genuine Intel")
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I tried it with an 8088 chip and it gave the same results -- the Environment test still failed.
@rarbiart5 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife thanks for testing. Did anyone find a machine where this test passes OK?
@bonnome24 жыл бұрын
It can be a real intel co-processor that they recycled. Removed scratches and re-laserd the intel description on it. If that is the case than the processor is real, just the outer layer is not
@mrt1r5 жыл бұрын
Oh man, I forgot how satisfying listening to old computers boot is.
@mikethinks5 жыл бұрын
El-Fish also uses the math co-processor to speed up the animation pre-renderings you need to do before adding fish to a tank :) It sped the process up a huge amount.
@Fifury1615 жыл бұрын
I'll save you 14 minutes and 27 seconds of your life - yes...
@rogueanuerz5 жыл бұрын
but not answer my curiousity tough
@Marshdweller2 жыл бұрын
That old Seagate gave me chills. And I wasn't even alive then.
@Kundalini125 жыл бұрын
It's a bit harsh to call it a fake if it performs the same as a genuine Intel chip. It's possibly a reproduction for the enthusiast vintage PC users. Old hardware will inevitably fail and there's nothing wrong with someone reproducing these chips for those who still use vintage computers. The only scenario where "fake" would be appropriate is if these chips fail after a short period of time.
@raptorzoz62515 жыл бұрын
It's a fake if it claims to be the original chip, but isn't, if it didn't claim to be real it would be a reproduction
@westelaudio9435 жыл бұрын
I agree, I don't want to pay ridiculous prices for semiconductors pulled from scrap devices on ebay that offer no guarantee whatsoever how long they will last. If companies produce obsolete components in half-decent quality I'm all for that. Of course you can't expect the greatest quality from China but if it's the only solution it's better than nothing.
@CommodoreFan645 жыл бұрын
@@westelaudio943 I agree, except I just don't think they should be putting the Intel logo, and dates on the chips. I honestly would be fine with won hung lo type branding because at least that's more honest, it's supporting a small company doing something good for the retro computing enthusiast, and more KZbinrs could actually point out the sellers they are getting parts from.
@brianv28715 жыл бұрын
Agreed, it may not be a fake 8087, but it is a fake Intel branded chip.
@Booruvcheek5 жыл бұрын
@@CommodoreFan64 definitely a shady practice, but wouldn't Intel sue anyone wishing to make clones of their ICs out of their pants? I mean, surely small companies lack resources to design a bona fide compatible chip.
@alexanderwingeskog7585 жыл бұрын
I always wonder what the FPU (as we know it today) actually was in it's core. Without one you (I never had one until I got a 68882 on my "accelerator" board for my Amiga) if you needed fast floating point you did precalculated lookup tables (yes used a bit more of the precious main RAM) and that was pretty much it. If you did not need it to be really fast use the microcode for FP or some optimized software. But did the early FPU's (like the 8087) use precalculated lookups (i.e a small processor but mostly memory with tables). Or was the 8087 actually doing "real" trigonometry calculations back then? Anyway as I mentioned the Amiga. I loved the use of the "library" system because of it many programs (or at least some) that was using the system/OS calls for FP operations was just by "magic" faster just changing the name of the "68882.library" to "math.library" (can't remember the exact names today) as it had the same functions but the original was CPU/Software FP functions and the other was exactly the same but used CPU/FPU/Software instead... But then again if someone really needed fast FP it still used lookup tables mostly and if it was optimised it bypassed the library/OS call and was compiled with direct FPU calls. But it was a neat function of AmigaOS and would be really beneficial today if it was still around...
@mr.nobody68295 жыл бұрын
Maybe "unlicensed" is a more suitable term than "fake"; the cores of these two chips are probably identical. It's interesting that you assert it doesn't even matter whether they perform identical or not when the result comes out. I wonder would you say the say thing if the "fake" chip proved inferior to the real one?
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I meant that for most people it doesn't matter whether you have any 8087 chip installed in a computer like this, not that it doesn't matter whether the 8087 chip is real or fake/reproduction.
@the_kombinator3 жыл бұрын
My 10 MHz 8087 did not work - I eventually got a refund, the guy wanted me to smash the chip. LOL it's in my collection on the wall, never to be used in a PC.
@lmamakos5 жыл бұрын
I don't think you should mistake the copyright date on the package for a date code that could related to the manufacturing date. The copyright is on the mask and/or design, and you'd want that to date back to when the design was realized to claim priority. Like the copyright on a book; it doesn't change on subsequent printings. The copyright date is there to document and protect the intellectual property, and in theory, could be used to prosecute those that would clone the design by reverse engineering it. Also, I think at the time, there was not an implicit copyright on works upon their creation; you hand to affix a copyright notice and register it. So not surprising that early versions of the 8087 would have a copyright (for the mask/design) in advance of when they were actually first available for purchase.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
But this is not an early version of the 8087. It couldn't possibly be, because like I said, the -1 suffix 10 MHz version didn't even exist until at least 1984. This is a newly manufactured chip with counterfeit markings on it.
@berndp34265 жыл бұрын
From these era's I also know one name very prominently concerning math coprocessors: "Weitek 80C87 Arithmetic Coprocessor" or also known as the "Weitek Abacus". These were somehow "famous" for being very powerful. And they were indeed, compared to those "standard mpu's" from intel. On 286,386 and as well 486SX boards there was an empty socket or even a plain soldering space to have such an optional mathematic coprocessor installed. From the DX series onward, such a processor was included in the main CPU.
@kcrose86075 жыл бұрын
Unrelated, but can you give some updated advice on your 2011 "Tour of my radio station" video? I need to transmit from one building to another about 300 ft. away. Are those 5/15W transmitters with an AUX input any good? They seem to market them to churches for some reason.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
That amount of power is overkill for that short of a distance. A one-watt or even 500 mW transmitter would be fine.
@rzeka5 жыл бұрын
9:12 sounds like a dirt bike
@Madness8325 жыл бұрын
Then maybe he should grab the motocross getup (of several years back).
@1980sGamer5 жыл бұрын
Now what if you were to try running the diagnostic with an actual Intel 8088?
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I just did, and it gave the same results.
@1980sGamer5 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife Interesting. I honestly have no idea what could be causing that.
@datasoftinc5 жыл бұрын
Is that Linus at the end? 😀
@user-pi5xz5je4y5 жыл бұрын
Yes.
@alexandrecouture24625 жыл бұрын
Humm, form the fake name, I would think that it would not work, but since it works... I installed one of these ''fake'' 8087 in my IBM PC XT and the chip is extremely hot. Can you tell if yours runs as hot, fake one versus real one?
@Alexis_du_605 жыл бұрын
Well thing is 8087s were known to run very hot (hence the gold "dip" on them, maybe it was for a heatsink) so that might be normal
@leisergeist5 жыл бұрын
EDIT: The following is incorrect. Pretty sure they don't normally get extremely hot (and aren't supposed to) If it's any warmer than the CPU it might be worth avoiding it
@Alexis_du_605 жыл бұрын
@@leisergeist I think the ones with the gold square did get warm...
@rasz5 жыл бұрын
they did get hot, it was old inefficient design
@leisergeist5 жыл бұрын
Little toasty, but I certainly don't remember them getting "extremely" hot anyway Memory isn't too great though, gotta overclock myself :) Maybe I still have an old one, might give it a look
@jdebultra5 жыл бұрын
Wow, blast from the past. If I recall correctly, software that used the 8087 were scientific academic programs often written in Fortran. I do recall installing a 8087 for a guy that was running AutoCad. Man, that was some time ago. All of a sudden, I feel old....
@jaykay185 жыл бұрын
I got my hands on an 8087 many years ago and popped it into an IBM PC/XT I have, and yes, I ran AutoCAD to see what it would be like. It can be done.
@jdebultra5 жыл бұрын
@@jaykay18 I have one somewhere packed away, a totally complete, working system. I used it for many years. I often think about selling it but I worked my butt off to buy it, so it stays packed away. I think I last fired it up in 2016 or 17.
@jaykay185 жыл бұрын
They are getting expensive for collectors now. Keep firing it up every now and again, and one day when you do decide to sell it, you can make yourself a nice little mint. Nowhere near what you paid for it, but a decent sum anyway.
@kbhasi5 жыл бұрын
Early AutoCAD. Wow.
@jdebultra5 жыл бұрын
@@jaykay18 I will dig it out and fire it up. My son will more than likely inherit it, along with my SGI O2, Amiga 4000.
@givolettorulez5 жыл бұрын
There were Soviet-made 8087 clones, the KM1810VM87 thar are quite rare as collectibles, so I don't think that if one finds a tub of them in a warehouse will rebrands them as the more common Intel chip.
@andrewhall1385 жыл бұрын
Going old school! FYI... The 486 SX did NOT have an FPU in it, only a DX model would. The 486 SX had the FPU disabled "burned out". Motherboards from 486 on down had a dedicated FPU socket.
@C32-d5j5 жыл бұрын
It's great to see fake chips because it means they can reproduce those chips so we are not gonna run out of them any time soon and if they got the 8087 they can surely do the CPU and more
@VoidHalo5 жыл бұрын
Fake chips are very common on Ali Express. I have 74hc595s with a TI logo that's a picture of the USA, not Texas. On others, Texas is just blobby or misshapen. The writing on fakes rubs off if my fingers are sweaty or oily, like if I just scratch my face then insert a chip, the writing comes off. I got a fake 6805 with just an incorrect MOS logo and 6805 printed on it. They work fine, and I wouldn't have even known they're fakes if I didn't know what to look for. I even got some fake 555s and logic ICs in a Radioshack kit I bought locally. The writing on the 74HC32s came off so much I had to label them with masking tape. So I've gotten into the habit of calling out vendors who sell this stuff. I doubt a lot of them even realize they're selling fakes.
@morantaylor5 жыл бұрын
The "Fake" chip may be genuine Intel design they used to outsource fabrication to other manufactures. AMD and Cyrix for example manufactured the 8087. Intel used to licence third parties to make chips. The chip is probably NOS from some third party.
@JasperJanssen5 жыл бұрын
Those would have the Amd or Cx logos, not intel. And they still wouldn’t have the ‘78 date. Google the 8087 - all the images are ‘80 or later.
@budude25 жыл бұрын
Would be good to see same round of tests with 287 and 387 chips.
@wgrantha4438 Жыл бұрын
0:42 is the speaker in your Tandy supposed to be mounted like that? Looks interesting
@vwestlife Жыл бұрын
Yes. If it was the other way around, then it would be blocking the expansion slots.
@wgrantha4438 Жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife very cool, thank you.
@Krivulda5 жыл бұрын
NEC V20 is technically an 80186, so pairing it with 8087 doesn't really make much sense. It's like putting 287 to 386 build. It can be done, sure, but the reason is quite unclear. That's why those tests failed. Also, that is not a fake. You talked about the suffixes, but not about the prefixes. C means ceramic with metal lid, D means double layer ceramic, then there are versions like MD (military), ID (industrial), LD (not sure to be true). And by the way, what you said about the speed isn't exactly true aswell. The speed is not dictated by CPU, but rather by speed of the bus. We did quite a lot of fiddling with those chips and found some interesting outcomes.
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
There was no 80187 chip. The Intel 80186 and 80188 were designed to use the 8087 co-processor. And on these XT-class systems, the CPU, co-processor, and bus all run at the same speed. You're thinking of 286 and newer systems where those three speeds can all be different.
@Krivulda5 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife The CPU doesn't need an FPU unit, that's why those results were worse. It has FPU already built in. That's the problem
@rnc74685 жыл бұрын
@@Krivulda Some sort of a source for your claims would be nice.
@Krivulda5 жыл бұрын
@@rnc7468 Experiments and research were conduced by the head members of the group Old Computers on Facebook
@davefiddes5 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife FWIW there was an 80187 . You can see a picture of one here: www.cpu-collection.de/?tn=0&l0=co&l1=Intel&l2=FPU It is fully IEEE-754 compliant like the 80387.
@bkuker5 жыл бұрын
OMG that hard drive spin up at 9:10 took me right back.
@adamw.85795 жыл бұрын
Wzzzzzzzzz.... click.... tik..tik..tik..tik... click, READY. Old times, I had 5,25" double height, 20MB MFM HD drive, it was louder than nowadays CPU fans @full speed.
@bkuker5 жыл бұрын
@@adamw.8579 And that little chirp at the end that lets you know it is working.
@VoidHalo5 жыл бұрын
I found a ton of fake chips in my parts I got off of AliExpress. Never noticed a single thing wrong with them, functionally. But I don't think TI's logo is a picture of the USA with just an I inlaid on it. For hobbyist purposes, it's not a huge deal. You'd be hard pressed to notice fakes if you don't know what to look for.
@AnOfficialAndrewFloyd5 жыл бұрын
Don't coprocessors share the computing load with the main processor? I've seen systems with significant speed increase with a math coprocessor.
@TheRailroad995 жыл бұрын
I think they add or significantly increase the speed of the FPU.
@DuckGWR5 жыл бұрын
Ugh, I can never get enough of the sound of an ST 225 firing up
@hinzster5 жыл бұрын
How about an IBM PC RT (which is not a PC, model number was 6150) with three ESDI drives? I had one of those at one time, and its sound when spinning up the disks inspired its name, I called it "DC10" :P
@VegasCyclingFreak5 жыл бұрын
Brings back some memories. Back in the early 90s my work computer was a 486DX 33 MHz, basically only used it for AutoCAD. Don’t even know if it had a math coprocessor chip in it or not.
@jeffreyhebert56045 жыл бұрын
I was waiting for you to say the 8087 was mostly used with lotus 123 ...love this stuff
@Nightowl_IT5 жыл бұрын
The exceptions are probably the errata of the coprocessor. It might be because of the different errata every revision of a chip has and they might be testing for a specific one.
@himmelsrand75275 жыл бұрын
Informative and interesting as always 🙂
@MrDuncl5 жыл бұрын
Regarding the Dullnes of the "fake" chip it is in a ceramic package. They always look like that. They are also higher quality (better environmental specs) than plastic ones. For years Military equipments used nothing but ceramic ICs.
@JasperJanssen5 жыл бұрын
... other way round. The real one is in a ceramic package, the fake is a plastic/resin package.
@kaitlyn__L2 жыл бұрын
@@JasperJanssen they’re both ceramic. Ceramic sandwiches look closer to plastic packages because they’re both black/dark grey
@TheNiteNinja195 жыл бұрын
I love seeing all these old machines still running.
@davek125 жыл бұрын
Could it be a take-out from a recycled machine? I can't imagine why they'd make a copy of a chip that's so obsolete as I can't think of something new that would include it.
@romanrm15 жыл бұрын
Unfair to call it fake if it works without any issue, or at least with the same faults as the original.
@JohnJones-oy3md5 жыл бұрын
Would you say the same thing about a fake Rolex watch?
@rnc74685 жыл бұрын
@@JohnJones-oy3md If it offered identical functionality compared to a real one, would it really matter that it is not genuine? Only real downside would be the loss of "status" that comes with expensive watch.
@JohnJones-oy3md5 жыл бұрын
@@rnc7468 I encounter many counterfeit Chinese components in my business. Most of them, if they function at all, are work-alikes, not direct clones. They cause real-world problems. One of my govt customers decaps a sample from every batch of ICs we sell them just to be sure. Go on believing there is no problem if you'd like.
@rnc74685 жыл бұрын
@@JohnJones-oy3md You misunderstand. My point was that IF the fake offered 1-to-1 identical functionality, would it really matter that it wasn't genuine? I know that knock offs are often made cheaply and poorly and rarely work as promised.
@massmike115 жыл бұрын
Dos CAD software. Made extensive use of the 8087. I used generic cad extensively it was way to slow without the 8087. Ounce i put one in to my XT it was at least 3 maybe four times as fast. It was faster that way than on the 286 12 I had at work
@wishusknight30095 жыл бұрын
Back in the days of my mothers home accounting firm, her turbo xt with an x87 was faster in those maths programs than my 386dx 33. It was embarrassing. She used that thing until we finally got her a new pentium.
@JasonStevens5 жыл бұрын
the PC-9801 stamp means it came from a Japanese PC that was recycled.
@ion-shivs5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for answering my question from your last 1000 SX video with an entirely new video. ;)
@myofficegoes655 жыл бұрын
I recognized the sound of that ST-225 right away!
@BollingHolt5 жыл бұрын
I COMPLETELY AGREE about the ST-225! Solid as a rock!!!
@wishusknight30095 жыл бұрын
Mine was a brick... :(
@BollingHolt5 жыл бұрын
@@wishusknight3009 :(
@Patchuchan5 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the fake 8087 is actually a pull and they sanded it down and redid the writing to make it look new?
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
No, like I said in the video, it is definitely a new chip. The legs were splayed out and there was not a single scratch or scuff on it.
@agentorange64413 жыл бұрын
im 10 but i watched all these videos from the 1st video, i dont understand a lot of things but i also learnded a lot too great channel and great videos sorry for bad english i live in brazil
@AteuCu5 жыл бұрын
So, if it's fake, is unable to work [period]; if its just an 'unauthorized copy', actually, can be work. Possibly.
@Sypaka5 жыл бұрын
But, if the fake chip passed all tests and has no negative impacts, is it still a fake?
@HBC101TVStudios5 жыл бұрын
It's good to see China still making vintage models of microprocessors despite their current EOL status in modern computers these days. At least it's better that nothing.
@ColgateLP5 жыл бұрын
interessting. But why is there a antique Clip of Linus at the end?
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
Unexpectedly.
@NotMarkKnopfler4 жыл бұрын
That's not a fake. They don't make fake ceramics. Way too expensive. It will have simply failed one of the steps of the quality control process, that's all.
@mariobrito4275 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, that brought back memories :) (also, subscribed!)
@codebeat41924 жыл бұрын
Try to use some alcohol or acetone on the fake one, I have seen some are 'painted'. If the surface is real (laser encraved) nothing will happen but if it is fake, black stuff wil come off. Wear handcloves while doing this, because you never know what exactly they used to 'paint' the surface.
@bloodyl_uk5 жыл бұрын
Would you be willing to try the tests again with the SET 87=YES dos environment variable declared please?, thank you. 🤞
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
I tried it. MCPDiag still reported the Environment error.
@bloodyl_uk5 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife Thank you for trying, I knew I wouldn't be that lucky for you, but thanks anyways. :)
@maxheadrom30885 жыл бұрын
Thanks, dude! I got a 8087 for my IIgs pc board - havent tested yet but it is the golden one so hopefully I'm ok here!
@elouisevanhelsing34305 жыл бұрын
Don't you need to set the 87 variable in the config.sys to clear that error? I don't think that chip is fake, but that they were all make by Intel in China. The 8087 was made in large numbers but didn't sell due to the price, so those are probably just old stock. I doubt even 5% of them that were made were actually sold, as the 286 came out before the 8087 became popular.
@TechMaxWare5 жыл бұрын
Seagate Drives are just the best. Hands down. ALL my old Seagate drives are still around.
@jklax5 жыл бұрын
Odd every Seagate I had in the 90's failed me.
@TechMaxWare5 жыл бұрын
@@jklax I think for a while in the 90's Maxtor was a the option for a while. I could be wrong though.
@Jewsh5 жыл бұрын
Quantum drives were alright in the 90's.
@MultiSteveB3 жыл бұрын
14:24 - Holy crap, that's a very young Linus.
@vwestlife3 жыл бұрын
And a very cute Linus! Before he got all hairy...
@MultiSteveB3 жыл бұрын
@@vwestlife Well, "YMMV". :D
@memadmax695 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the environment check on the intel diagnostics is in reference to some config.sys/autoexec.bat areguments that are missing.
@ovalteen44045 жыл бұрын
"Environment" probably refers to the Floating-point Environment. software.intel.com/en-us/cpp-compiler-developer-guide-and-reference-floating-point-environment This specifies how the processor handles rounding, and also includes the status flags, including exceptions. The original PC connected the FPE interrupt pin to the processor's NMI pin (but first you had to flip the NP switch to gate the connection, then leave NMI enabled by writing 0x80 to port 0xA0). Chances are it was enabled, as memory parity errors also triggered NMI. The Tandy may not have made that connection, or requires some nonstandard port command to enable, or maybe even wires the pin to the interrupt controller instead. This is probably why the exception tests failed. Doesn't explain the overall environment failure on the IBM PC though. But there are a huge number of status and control bits, therefore many opportunities to fail.
@steveschulte86965 жыл бұрын
Both 8087 are genuine Intel co-Processors. The copyright date may indicate the mask copyright year. The 1978 copyright would be very young production date. The 8080 was released in the late 1970's. The main other differences are the different ceramic dip design. On design has the lead frame internal to the ceramic, with a soldered lid. The other is a "Oreo" ceramic package. One may be a Mil Spec device, the other may be an industrial device.
@chainedenintenloup5 жыл бұрын
I have that black version of the 8087 you show here and on My 1000 SX I have the same results as you, the computer becomes a bit slower and I did the tests with the 8088 and the v20 and it's the same thing, a tad bit slower. I dunno if it's a thing with tandys, but there you go.
@nikolalovrencic50265 жыл бұрын
You now software's back then, even system tools are not perfect. So how easy is to make old fpu and logic chips nowdays?
@jq7475 жыл бұрын
11:15 looks like you wrote that note with a pen held in your mouth. Lol
@FortyTwoAnswerToEverything5 жыл бұрын
I LOVE the way those old Seagates sounded.
@teoextreme5 жыл бұрын
So you say that the ST-225 is the most realable mfm hard drive... I didn't know that, now it feels good to have two of them in my collection.
@ion-shivs5 жыл бұрын
I just installed one of these into my 1000 SX. I notice that the chip runs really hot. Hotter than any other chips on the board. Should I be concerned about that, or is that normal? Is that why they made it out of ceramic?
@vwestlife5 жыл бұрын
No, it's normal for the 8087 chip to run hot. Yes, that's why it's made from ceramic, to help dissipate the heat.