Putting Together My Own Retro Desktop PC

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This Does Not Compute

This Does Not Compute

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 581
@abd0ne
@abd0ne Жыл бұрын
Collin, you have no idea how this video made me feel tonight. Back in the 1997-2005 era I used to have my own custom PC shop and these parts were my day to day thing and I just felt like I was there, 25+ years ago doing a custom built for a client. Love it. You just made me feel young again by looking at old stuff haha. You are the best. Love the content. I might start my own retro build. Thanks again.
@sennthemanwin98
@sennthemanwin98 Жыл бұрын
Happy to keep older stuff alive, great to see them awaking from a long time.
@slvclw
@slvclw 10 ай бұрын
I hear ya. I built at 486 and now I’m building 6 more haaa
@francescotanganelli3424
@francescotanganelli3424 21 күн бұрын
same here, from italy. How many pcs.. for all my friends, colleagues, family, and first customers. Now, I am working all day long on cloud with no soul Dell Notebook. no feeling about these modern pcs.. I wish to back in time and re live again and again that era. every single day a new technology comes out, every day something wonderful on internet did happened, movies, musics, before social era, with my friends in the basement playing Unreal tournament on local ethernet hub. tears
@bigsnyder01
@bigsnyder01 Жыл бұрын
Just in case it hasn't been mentioned, Crysis required a card with at least 256MB of VRAM and 1GB minimum. Recommended is 512MB/2GB respectively.
@Synthematix
@Synthematix 10 ай бұрын
It also required very high clockspeeds
@dshadow01
@dshadow01 9 ай бұрын
The issue wasn't VRAM specifically The cards probably didn't have the required instruction sets. I'm guessing Crysis needs pixel shader 3.0
@bigsnyder01
@bigsnyder01 8 ай бұрын
@@dshadow01 You might be on to something. Crysis requires shader model 2.0, but recommends 3.0. The Geforce4 Ti supports version 1.3. The Radeon 9200 LE tops out at 1.4
@devaraft
@devaraft 8 ай бұрын
LTT video from back then shows that to push the best graphic it consume 3GB VRAM
@WH_J-x3x
@WH_J-x3x 4 ай бұрын
@@devaraft Did you snorted something? You got the good stuff innit?
@draggonhedd
@draggonhedd Жыл бұрын
I love this period of building, this is abotu where I got on the PC bus. Really brings back memories. One of my cable management tricks for this era was to put the optical drive in the second slot down from the top and use that space above it to store the "extra" power leads off the PSU. Helped keep the clutter down. I love the knockoff platinum and candy plastic aesthetic of this era, it really did have some character. And that light mod? Perfect. Needs a neat case badge now too.
@IvanIvanov-ni4rs
@IvanIvanov-ni4rs Жыл бұрын
And the DVD drive really does fit nicely with the case.
@Lee-vg4yt
@Lee-vg4yt Жыл бұрын
Love the little light mod at the end, look forward to seeing more of this machine.
@SteveMaves
@SteveMaves Жыл бұрын
Glad I stayed to the end!
@Match451
@Match451 Жыл бұрын
An alternative to cutting the 3 pin power LED header is using a pin to release the pin from the plastic header, and then move it to the 2nd position. Or you could remove both of them, and use a 2 pin header instead.
@fluffycritter
@fluffycritter Жыл бұрын
Came here to post the same thing. It’s way safer and easier IMO.
@psilimit
@psilimit Жыл бұрын
I came to the comments to say just this.
@kelvinstokes996
@kelvinstokes996 Жыл бұрын
Truth told, cutting the connector was an extremely common of-the-era technique. I did the same thing literally hundreds of times while working at a small computer shop in 2000-2001. You had to bash together a PC in about ten minutes: there was no time for fooling around re-pinning connectors!
@judenihal
@judenihal Жыл бұрын
It's also a waste of a retro case to modify the cables that came with it!
@tobias1170
@tobias1170 5 ай бұрын
Came here to write the same. Cutting the plug while you could just move the contact to the middle pin is pretty barbaric.
@stuarthtodd
@stuarthtodd Жыл бұрын
I love watching videos of how to build PC's from "way back when". All I'm remembering fromy my days of doing, it are ripping my fingers to shreds taking out the breakaway expansion slot covers, and for the fingers that I didn't destroy, I'd get those cut up by putting the expansion audio, and graphic, cards into place! Ah those were the days. Brilliant to see this video, and the components have stood the test of time.
@SeeJayPlayGames
@SeeJayPlayGames Жыл бұрын
5:37 the DOF zoom changing the focus on each connector as you progress from right to left across the ports... brilliant. I'm subscribing just for the cinematography of that one sequence.
@kaitlyn__L
@kaitlyn__L Жыл бұрын
I miss when it briefly fashionable to just stick translucent turquoise on every computer thing, even otherwise typical beige boxes. Turquoise is one of my favourite colours, and I have to wonder if that would be the case had I grown up a few years earlier or later than I did. I think Windows 98 and various vintages of Linux would be pretty interesting! I also have a hunch that the driver program might work just fine the second time round, though of course it could be even worse! Those re-usable knockouts are nice though, especially since it doesn't really cost them anything else in production to slightly alter the shape they punch out - but it helps the end user dramatically.
@tommynobaka
@tommynobaka 6 ай бұрын
It reminds me of the fish bowl aesthethic of literally everything. From hand soap bottles to shower curtain lmfao. Some type of pastel fish bowl aquatic vibes
@DFWTexan42
@DFWTexan42 Жыл бұрын
I also worked in a small computer shop at the turn of the century, and this is almost exactly the kind of PC we would build for the customer, or they would build for themselves, with parts from us. XP, despite its lousy WiFi support, was a very solid OS, which made most tasks a breeze. They didn't call XP the 'F1sher Price' OS for nothing! :D
@phuzyb
@phuzyb Жыл бұрын
Try adding a 100-330uF capacitor in parallel to the fan power pins to see if it will spin up - it's a trick the 3d printing community uses for Noctua fans.
@JamieBainbridge
@JamieBainbridge Жыл бұрын
That's genius. I need to remember this.
@JamieBainbridge
@JamieBainbridge Жыл бұрын
@Timothy Hoogland I'm DEFINITELY not an electronics expert, but I think it works like this: The low voltage supplied is not enough to start the fan, so the fan has large resistance and the capacitor charges. The cap then discharges and starts the fan. The fan then falls to much lower resistance and so most future current goes to the fan. Maybe the cap occasionally charges and discharges, but one is able to run the fan lower than 100%. If you know more than me, feel free to explain. I'm hopeless at circuits and components.
@Coxis67
@Coxis67 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE this video. I remember fondly when computers had this aesthetic, and I can't believe you got such a beautiful new case. I 100% would've gone for W98, though. Everything in this system screams it: socket 478, AGP, CRT monitor, the case... I wish I had such nice hardware for my W98 machine. Greetings from Mexico, from a fellow retro machine enthusiast.
@outaspaceman
@outaspaceman Жыл бұрын
“Swoosh..” is a great forgotten word I’ll be using in casual conversation from now on…
@TheKCsaba
@TheKCsaba Жыл бұрын
I heard and read horror stories about the IBM hdd manufacturing plant here in Hungary. Because of the low wages the really low-end of the working class wanted to work there. I heard that some of them were smoking (!) in the clean rooms, and putting the cig butts off in the still opened drives. Crazy times...
@skieinc
@skieinc Жыл бұрын
Wow, I did not know these IBM drives were manufactured in Hungary. This comes as a surprise. I remember having an IBM drive back in the early 2000's and it was actually smoking. But as far as I can remember, it still worked. 😅😅
@talos86
@talos86 Жыл бұрын
@@skieinc HP machines and printers are made too in Hungary till' 2005.
@kebab_hill
@kebab_hill Жыл бұрын
@@skieinc it's also said on the Hard Drive itself 11:43
@brostenen
@brostenen Жыл бұрын
20gb IBM are solid. 40gb and 80gb are crap. And then IBM sold to someone. Hitachi or something. And their first 80gb's were good, yet noisy. They just solved stability and toughness before looking at noise.
@BrianAndrewParker
@BrianAndrewParker Жыл бұрын
The ATI 9200 was the first PC component I ever purchased when I was first learning PC hardware in the early 2000s. I recently picked one up on ebay to put in a shadowbox (non-destructively). Really takes me back. Thanks for the walk down memory lane!
@DioBrando-qr6ye
@DioBrando-qr6ye Жыл бұрын
Me too. It was the GPU of my first custom built PC (although mine was the low profile version). Isn't it funny how he went out of his way to put a Nvidia card in this PC? KZbinrs can't help themselves, it's as if they allergic to ATI/AMD or something. Maybe they think that using an ATI/AMD card will make them look poor.
@abrahamalviarez5870
@abrahamalviarez5870 Жыл бұрын
ah man, the AGP connector, I feel old 🤣 beautiful build, that translucent blue tray in the cd reader is just FANTASTIC
@_techana
@_techana Жыл бұрын
This brings out memories! I had my own "PC shop" in the late 2001 and throughout 2002! Most customers back then had no idea what to look for in computers. So, they were running after prices only! Shops were competing to build the cheapest computers running the glorious Pentium 4 and Windows XP! That era saw the wide spread of SW piracy and HW counterfeit! CPUs speed were faked to appeal to the customers. I even heard of some tricks to alter the amount of RAM readout during boot! I refused all those trickeries and chose quality, specially being a computer engineer myself. The market did not go as I hoped and the junk from china kept flooding the market! I closed the shop and switched to real estate business and never looked back to the computer market again!
@emily_embers
@emily_embers Жыл бұрын
That disc drive and case combo... I'm drooling over here.
@frstwhsprs
@frstwhsprs Жыл бұрын
Maybe it was just me, but the shade of blue on the disc drive doesn't fit, but alas, it does look so good.
@geekehUK
@geekehUK Жыл бұрын
I never was a fan of the Apple colours, even when every other manufacturer copied them. I was firmly entrenched in the "being black makes it faster" camp. Although that CD drive would look sick with LED illumination (I don't think it would screw with reading the disc since the laser is IR)
@volvo09
@volvo09 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I wasn't a fan of that design either. Especially in consumer products where everything had to look "melty" or like it was designed in a wind tunnel. Like an mp3 player? Can't just make it a rectangle, have to make it all curvy and weird. I was actually thrilled with the iPod because it looked normal to me.
@DioBrando-qr6ye
@DioBrando-qr6ye Жыл бұрын
If I'm not mistaken the black PCs came after the Apple colored ones, before that it was all beige.
@GreySectoid
@GreySectoid Жыл бұрын
Nice build! This era is my favorite of the entire history of PCs.
@SeeJayPlayGames
@SeeJayPlayGames Жыл бұрын
me too, although I was busy with AMD Athlon XP chips and not P4's...
@Aruneh
@Aruneh Жыл бұрын
Having built several retro PC's, finding a period correct case has always been the most challenging, since most got tossed because they take up a lot more space than the rest of the hardware.
@nalinux
@nalinux Жыл бұрын
I used some to fix car body :)
@JamieBainbridge
@JamieBainbridge Жыл бұрын
I built so many systems exactly like this, also working in PC places in 99 to 05. This was like watching a video replay of my own old memories. Quite a strange experience.
@matrixcodex
@matrixcodex Жыл бұрын
I had that exact same case for my main PC back in the day and I've been looking for one now for YEARS to do a retro build in. Nice work building that thing!
@matrixcodex
@matrixcodex Жыл бұрын
And that was my same EXACT processor, P4 2.4c wow you literally built my PC haha
@MaxHarrison
@MaxHarrison Жыл бұрын
Same here, I had a PC with this case back in 2000. Did you ever locate one?
@askikr79
@askikr79 Жыл бұрын
brings back memories. Thanks for the vid. I worked a e waste day for a affluent city in the early 2000s and I had a field day. Still have a Antec case that I need to see I I can do a build similar
@S1Pack
@S1Pack Жыл бұрын
I love the light on the front of the case. Beautiful build.
@Mac84
@Mac84 Жыл бұрын
Great video! It's so nice how clean your case is. I love the light mod you did too... I'll have to borrow the same idea for mine. And thanks for the tip on the TDK drive, I think I need to grab one too.
@HWMonster
@HWMonster Жыл бұрын
So satisfying to see! I worked in a computer store in the early 2000s and built many P4 systems. Exciting time with all the changes and developments. 20 years later I'm still into computers and testing new components on a regular basis.
@mbertolijr
@mbertolijr Жыл бұрын
That CD-R drive with the peel still on was a great score.
@ssjaken
@ssjaken Жыл бұрын
I love this build. I love the aesthetic you went with. Right up my vaporwave loving alley
@dalmocalmo420
@dalmocalmo420 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that's a pretty case, clean design... - turns on the light - I WANT IT!!!
@GoTeamScotch
@GoTeamScotch Жыл бұрын
Your videos feel like visiting a zen garden. 21 minutes of raking sand. 10/10
@Quietruck
@Quietruck Жыл бұрын
Nice ending with the front case light.
@malicious217
@malicious217 Жыл бұрын
I love this video. Istlll have my old p4 3.0ghz in a Chieftec case with 2gig corsair ram 200gb Seagate sata, liteon cd writer, and a 7800gs such hard nostalgia!
@grtitann7425
@grtitann7425 Жыл бұрын
I miss those cases😢. Thank you for such amazing videos❤
@2Mourty
@2Mourty Жыл бұрын
OK, just saw the front panel light on the front of the case at the end of the video. That rocks. I have an old Antec case from that era, arguably a better case, but man doesn't have that awesome bling on the front!!
@kman316
@kman316 Жыл бұрын
Man, this video hit all the nostalgia buttons for my life right after college. Cases with a ton of fans, side panel window and interior lighting mods, such a fun time. I think I spent more time over clocking and Tweaking then I did playing sometimes.
@milendimitrov8480
@milendimitrov8480 11 ай бұрын
I had Radeon 9250 at some point - shitty card. It was in a new PC my Dad got me. I couldn't wait to change it to something supporting Direct X 9.0c. I upgraded to GeForce 6600GT afterwards. This started the whole GPU craze I still have ongoing. Such a great card and so many great memories with it - pure nostalgia! Cheers for the great video!
@mohammadmo1936
@mohammadmo1936 Жыл бұрын
Early 2000 era wasn’t the most fancy for pc parts but its was the most time of enjoyment having a desktop machine back then was a dream I remember getting my first pc with pentium 4 and playing gta and fifa 2002 😅 and use dial up internet .
@harrisonkilai4453
@harrisonkilai4453 11 ай бұрын
I love it. Nostalgic, I was doing this on a daily basis in Mombasa from about 96 - 2002. The small square in the front was meant for custom 'branding'. Good times.
@tagesvaterpatrick8780
@tagesvaterpatrick8780 Жыл бұрын
I love XP Retro PCs! Especially when they are from the original era. ❤
@SrtRacerBoy
@SrtRacerBoy Жыл бұрын
We had this case growing up. it was my favorite "family pc" from the 90's. I still have the case, tho its pretty beat up now, I'm pretty sure we purchased it from MicroCenter in Saint Louis Park the summer of 1999, during the launch of the Athlon 1GHz cpu's. I remember that pc's specs well, even though I was only 12 at the time. I really wish I had seen free geek had a new (old stock). I've actually been searching for a few years to find a better condition case than our old one. That is a super special find you have there, I really hope you take great care of it.
@upgrade1373
@upgrade1373 9 ай бұрын
I used to have one of those TDK drives and I LOVED it! I was so sad when it started to malfunction.
@razorsz195
@razorsz195 Жыл бұрын
My XP build in the same case has had its fair share of upgrades overtime aswell, originally a Socket 754 Sempron 2600+ and FX5200, i learned to solder with this machine after overclocking, changing hardware throughout my young years of owner ship as a child, it couldn't run Doom 3 or Farcry like my dad wanted when he bought it as an upgrade from a 486, i promised one day i'd have a job and upgrade it so he could finally play. 12 years later such upgrades happened, a Socket 939 XGP/Pci-e combo board, A64 3400+ and my dream card, an IceQ UV reactive Ati X1650 Pro, though performance in early game engines seemed to rely on raw IPC and high clock speeds, so a recent purchase of an uncommon Dual core 4200+ for this platform didn't give me the big jump i was seeing, old games saw identical peformance clock for clock with the previous chip..but a recent upgrade to an IceQ 2600XT showed double the performance in some areas, but in Farcry the game engine did utilise the CPU more and the synthetic 3DMark 03-06 runs showed double the performance in the CPU and GPU tests leading to a big score increase, definitely better paying £35, not £300+ for an FX-53. Especially on the board that does not overclock well, biostar was never known for it..perhaps the Asus A8N32SLI-Deluxe that came with the chip may go in so i can push both chips and see if they're capable of the golden 3Ghz known to overclockers if you won the silicon lottery.. Athlon was the better option at the time unless you later on went for a S775 HT pentium 4 example, but my roots were with AMD so i wanted to keep the build as original as possible and re-use what i could, when my dad heard the Farcry intro spring to life out of the Audigy 2 ZS, he finally got to sit down all those years later and play it while running in the hundreds, not the single digits, it was a bit emotional seeing him play those old games with a smile on his face while i played the later successors alongside, it was like 2 eras mirroring eachother, from old to new, the enjoyment they gave the user, was just as fun as it was back then.
@RobertoRodriguez-tm2op
@RobertoRodriguez-tm2op Жыл бұрын
Great video! I had that exact same TDK CD burner! I upgraded the one I had in my Compaq Presario 7000.
@MuhammadAnees7296
@MuhammadAnees7296 Жыл бұрын
I had this case back then and had P1 in it... man those memories
@michelefarroni93
@michelefarroni93 Жыл бұрын
Next time you use Snappy, be sure to use the Origin one, and check every component hovering your mouse while pressing ctrl. So you can compare time and release version between your current driver and the new one, since the system is automatic and sometimes misfires and installs the wrong one (ex. Intel often signs new drivers in the year 1968)
@ss95248
@ss95248 Жыл бұрын
is there a reason for this? 1970 is where most systems seem to have a cutoff so i'm trying to see if there's a connection here
@Kurtmind
@Kurtmind 7 ай бұрын
What an awesome build bro. I love it! I want to build myself a retro PC as well soon.
@OnTheRocks71
@OnTheRocks71 Жыл бұрын
Man this takes me back. I was rocking an Athlon XP1800+ and GeForce 3 Ti 200 back in those days. A very solid combo that powered many late gaming nights. Even had that same Sony Trinitron monitor which was absolutely glorious.
@vvlist
@vvlist Жыл бұрын
I had the case in this video and that CPU/GPU combo. This video is a crazy flashback for me! I even had that 80GB Western Digital.
@kalark
@kalark Жыл бұрын
wonderful video! That Pentium 4 era takes me back to the first pc that I helped build as a kid, kinda wanna build one now haha
@loganmiller8166
@loganmiller8166 Жыл бұрын
weird enough I have that same motherboard that I just got parts to fix. except mine is slightly older and has 3 ram slots of ddr1 memory. awesome to see someone have a motherboard like mine!
@danwake4431
@danwake4431 Жыл бұрын
was just digging around on an old XP pc i have in the basement. Brings back a lot of memories, some of those old programs like PSP Converter, Deep Burner, Flock, Yahoo Messenger, AIM, MSN, a saved Myspace html folder, tons of stuff. Did anyone else use Omega drivers for their Radeon card back in the day? Optimized for gaming and always worked better than stock ATI drivers.
@DataWaveTaGo
@DataWaveTaGo Жыл бұрын
Congratulations on a decent retro-thingie build. Subed & upvoted. Looking forward to more with this rig.
@CaptainFabulous84
@CaptainFabulous84 Жыл бұрын
Ooof now this is a serious flashback. I had both that case and the VeloCD back then.
@siliconinsect
@siliconinsect Жыл бұрын
Great vid as usual! You finally have your own vintage PC. With the Intel mobo its so average I'd name it "Not Sure". I have a few 1TB Samsung Spinpoint F1 RAID-class HDDs that have been spinning for over 83,000 hours. This was right before Samsung sold their HDD storage division to Seagate so I guess it was a last hurrah for the engineers. Good thing the 7-year warranty was never necessary.
@bryans8656
@bryans8656 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, I enjoyed this blast from the past. I'd forgotten about those rounded IDE cables, they really improved the look of my builds.
@landonpool
@landonpool Жыл бұрын
Yay for the new TDNC computer! You should give it a name!
@judenihal
@judenihal Жыл бұрын
Good video. First time watching a youtube video from start to finish.
@meaghaneliz
@meaghaneliz 11 ай бұрын
I just put together an "ultimate" XP machine -- all late 2012 parts. It still can't run Crysis on Ultra High. Game's insane.
@tarajoe07
@tarajoe07 Жыл бұрын
Totally forgot I had this case. The added lighting is awesome
@MrAllenmath
@MrAllenmath 5 ай бұрын
What a great video! Well done, sir!
@mrtnsnp
@mrtnsnp Жыл бұрын
That square on the from of the case really asks for a "This does not compute" badge.
@90adriaan
@90adriaan Жыл бұрын
17:40 I like how that "wow" sounds like the one that was given when the bsod happen during the Windows 98 live demonstration with Bill Gates in 1998 (search for "windows 98 bsod presentation" if you want to know more)
@geekehUK
@geekehUK Жыл бұрын
I'm reminded of the South Park movie "f*cking windows 98, get Bill Gates in here!"
@arniejonassen
@arniejonassen Жыл бұрын
Ahh the old IBM DeathStar. I had a ton of those go bad after less than 6 months. This was when PC building was awesome. We would do to the computer shows and buy everything there. If you paid cash they wouldn't charge tax. I miss those days.
@CYON4D
@CYON4D Жыл бұрын
Beautiful PC, I love it.
@Rabbit_AF
@Rabbit_AF Жыл бұрын
For missing I/O shields, I use Plastic Canvas or I 3D print a universal one shield. With both these methods, I just cut out the little squares to match the I/O. Plastic Canvas is a grid that is used with yarn to make craft projects.
@annihilatorg
@annihilatorg Жыл бұрын
Nice build, neatly mirrors specs to my own in 2002. But for my money today, I would have to go with a 2004 themed build with a 800mhz fsb P4, 865 chipset board, and dual-channel ddr-400 ram. Getting up to the 9600/9800 ati cards or the much newer nvidia 6600/6800 agp would also be a great move, but I saw prices of those cards today is eye-watering.
@SeeJayPlayGames
@SeeJayPlayGames Жыл бұрын
not surprised, since few people had those higher-end cards at the time. I had a 9600 but never a 9800/6600/6800. I had a 5600, though. Maybe Crysis will run with 128MB? Or would you need 256?
@vvlist
@vvlist Жыл бұрын
Had this case as my first computer build. Thanks for making this video! Looking forward to future updates. Mine had either an EliteGroup or Asus motherboard, AMD Athlon 1800+ cpu, 512mb ram, the Western Digital 80GB hard drive you showed in the video and a Nvidia GeForce 3 Ti200. Wish I still had it to mess around with! Thanks again!
@Hadisabetghadam
@Hadisabetghadam Жыл бұрын
asus has better Becuase asus still hosting drivers for old motherboards
@lemonapocalypse414
@lemonapocalypse414 Жыл бұрын
My first 3d accelerator was in that exact case so this invoked much nostalgia.
@RyanMercer
@RyanMercer Жыл бұрын
*strange desire for Newport cigarettes intensifies*
@Gent82
@Gent82 Жыл бұрын
So weird seeing that "swoosh" case again. That was the case on the PC I used for years, from 2002 to 2009.
@mannye
@mannye Жыл бұрын
A case like this is exactly what I want to make my next PC. The "funny" part is I will build a completely modern PC with as much RGB as possible, then cover all of it up with the case. A tip of the hat to Andy Kaufman where only I will be in on the joke.
@shmehfleh3115
@shmehfleh3115 Жыл бұрын
If I was gonna build an XP retro gaming machine, I'd go with a core 2 quad or even an early Ivy Bridge/Sandy Bridge setup. Something with a decent multicore CPU, PCIe graphics, and Sata or even M.2 SSDs. The days of having to worry about games running too fast were long gone by the time XP came out, and it was such a long-lived OS it supported a huge range of hardware.
@nep-nep6575
@nep-nep6575 Жыл бұрын
But at point…why bother with xp? Ivy bridge and Sandy bridge are perfectly useable as daily computers or windows 7 machines. Putting Xp on them is more of a hindrance.
@howaboutsomesoyfood
@howaboutsomesoyfood Жыл бұрын
Antec always made reliable power supplies. I had one in my XP machine for over ten years and never had a problem.
@ghinckley68
@ghinckley68 Жыл бұрын
I built so many PCs back them like hundreds plus. I cant not imagine wanting one of those POSs.
@branhicks
@branhicks Жыл бұрын
I also owned this exact case. That teal cover pops off. I put some leds in there back in the day
@Un_Pour_Tous
@Un_Pour_Tous Жыл бұрын
The build you did is the exact one i used to have.
@mazziecat
@mazziecat Жыл бұрын
This is so my thang. Nice!
@1sonyzz
@1sonyzz Жыл бұрын
Love myself a fresh *This Does Not Compute* video before sleep
@fabiospiesanzotti
@fabiospiesanzotti 11 ай бұрын
I HAVE 5 OF THOSE CASES IN ITALY AND IS MY FAVOURITE CASE OF ALL TIME ... I'VE BUILT SERVERS AND DESKTOPS WITH THAT CASE IS VERY GOOD
@theshadowman1398
@theshadowman1398 Жыл бұрын
Windows XP era is when I properly got in to computers. Have a dedicated core2quad Q9550 XP rig with a GTX 750TI which can handle pretty much any XP game like a champ. And of-course tons of old software.
@chriswilson8584
@chriswilson8584 Жыл бұрын
I had that exact same case. Man, that brings me back.
@KomradeMikhail
@KomradeMikhail Жыл бұрын
This combination of hardware would make a blazing fast Win98 retro box... You should go more recent for WinXP.
@adafrost6276
@adafrost6276 3 ай бұрын
Oh snap, that case is the same case I built my first PC in back in 1999. I've been looking for one of those to rebuild my first system now.
@vitsu_
@vitsu_ Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah Free Geek!! I just picked up an IBM 5150 there last week
@dogeymon83
@dogeymon83 Жыл бұрын
Playing Prince Interactive from 1994 is the only reason to own a classic PC. I’m sure we all agree
@ljrretropcs
@ljrretropcs Жыл бұрын
Lovely build that mate!
@jonchapman6821
@jonchapman6821 Жыл бұрын
16:34 That’s a little presumptuous. I’d certainly be cleaning the AGP contacts with an eraser and reseating it a few times before declaring it dead. 80%+ of old AGP cards I test don’t work at first but the vast majority will spring to life after a little cleaning.
@krumpetwithhoney8567
@krumpetwithhoney8567 Жыл бұрын
I love this video/PC so much, it's so, so similar to the system I had back then! Back in its day, I bought the same CPU 2.4Ghz. I had a very similar motherboard, Intel with the i845 chipset that supported the 533mhz bus. But I also had an nVidia Ti 4400, one step up from the 4200 you used. It was an absolute beast back in the day. I had to sell it for finacial reasons, but when I bought my next PC (AMD Sempron 3000+) I had an ATI 9200 in that! The Ti 4400 was around $550 AUD at the time, and the 9200 was about $120 AUD when I bought them. I remember this early period of the 2000's so well because I had so much fun buying and building PC hardware.
@oldguy9051
@oldguy9051 Жыл бұрын
I liked the invisible speakers you hooked up to your Soundblaster Live! the best. They really complement your setup! ;-)
@wettuga2762
@wettuga2762 Жыл бұрын
I've got that exact same case. Actually I got four! Some are more yellowed that others, and the teal piece becomes slightly green due to the color mix. I've had one working 24/7 for over 10 years at my work place running XP, and it will now become a retro machine for Windows 98/2000 era games and software 🙂
@wjadams2
@wjadams2 Жыл бұрын
Such a good build. I had that same TDK drive with my translucent blue Antec ATX case. I wish I had that still.
@AD7Films
@AD7Films Жыл бұрын
That’s awesome, nice work.
@andrewsveikauskas
@andrewsveikauskas Жыл бұрын
Rounded IDE cables! I had completely forgotten until now that back in the day, i separated the lines in the IDE ribbon cables by hand and duct taped them together to simulate the air flow of the rounded ones. I probably read about it on slashdot or something.
@RenanSpolon
@RenanSpolon Жыл бұрын
Here in Brazil I built many computers with this case, it was for Pentium 3 or Athlon/Duron, that's why the rear panel didn't match, besides it came with a big speaker, from the Windows 98/Dos era. Pentium 4 is a little too modern for him, but until it fits like a glove, this computer of yours was wonderful. 👑 *** Aqui no Brasil eu montei muitos computadores com esse gabinete, ele era para Pentium 3 ou Athlon/Duron, por isso que o painel traseiro não combinou, além de ele vim com um speaker grande, da era dos Windows 98/Dos. Pentium 4 é um pouco moderno pra ele, todavia até que encaixou como uma luva, ficou maravilhoso esse seu computador. 👑
@nR-kv7xo
@nR-kv7xo Жыл бұрын
WOOO this case was top notch, with AT shield, thats amazing.
@Carstuff111
@Carstuff111 Жыл бұрын
Hahahahaha, I just put Arctic MX-4 paste between on my brand new AMD Ryzen 5 5600X! Been using the stuff for YEARS now. In 2003-2004 I had an AMD Athlon Thunderbird core that was clocked at 1GHz, and a heavily BIOS modded Nvidia Geforce 4 4400 I believe it was, and loved that machine. Upgraded in late 2005 to a 2.8GHz Prescott core Intel Pentium 4 with the same video card. I took a side grade to a cooler running, 2.5GHz Northwood B core Pentium 4 that overclocked to 3.45GHz without breaking a sweat, and a HEAVILY modded and overclocked Sapphire Atlantis (ATi) Radeon 9800Pro 128MB graphics card. After another run with a much faster Prescott, I went AMD for processor and ATi/AMD for graphics. Sorry for the rant, just miss these days when overclocking REALLY could make big performance gains.
@cypherian2
@cypherian2 Жыл бұрын
Oh the Memories! I bought a pre-built machine very close to this in 2003! It was from a Mom & Pop computer shop and had been built for another customer that for some reason never came to pick it up... I remember playing DOOM 3 on it beautifully! Later on, I was able to get Guild Wars and World of Warcraft running on it as well. I'm more of a Linux/MacOS kind of guy today, but I do miss Windows XP! It was probably my favorite version!
@skieinc
@skieinc Жыл бұрын
I LOVED the 4200Ti and that Microsoft mouse! This brings back good memories.
@Rivenworld
@Rivenworld Жыл бұрын
Great video, love the look of this. One of my work colleagues gave me a 'Cube' pc which I recently stuck an AMD video card in and a Pentium 4, great for my 'Vintage' games, love your videos Dude, always informative, instructional and entertaining. And its thanks to you that I now have no fear of taking laptops apart and repairing and upgrading them.
@vtvincent4893
@vtvincent4893 Жыл бұрын
My first self-built PC was an Athlon 900 system built in the full tower version of that case, it really brings back memories. You were very diplomatic though, the case had some of the worst airflow I'd ever seen. I recall removing that front cutout as you did, but I also drilled a 120mm fan hole in the side panel over the CPU. This was years before they'd become standard with the cone setup.
@Markimark151
@Markimark151 Жыл бұрын
That’s a cool computer build, I wish you put a DVD drive since you put a floppy drive and a Zip drive! That’s a great machine to play those games that were on CD rom and floppy disks!
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