I should not be receiving mail from you, please take my email, mc@fastq.com, off your list. At 11:43 PM 10/17/00 -0700, you wrote: >At 01:28 PM 10/17/00 -0700, you wrote: >>Steven Martindale wrote: >>> Hmm, could always offer to trade parts for a pentium 100 system for a >>> working quiet system.. :> (Well, see if I can get it working first) >> >>What exactly is in a "quiet system"? Even if you >>underclock/undervoltage the CPU so you can get away with next to no >>fan, you still have the HD turning some number of RPMs right? (this is >>where lower performance HDs will pay off - lower RPMs means lower >>pitch means lower percieved volume) >> >>The quietest system I had had a single Maxtor HD and was actually >>overclocked, but cooled by a water-cooled peltier element. > >Well, my purely objective answer for what I want in a quiet system would be >a computer that didn't keep me from falling asleep at night. > >Oh, that's a subjective answer? :> > >Well, I've got the old parts partially put together. Would have done more >today but ended up with to much else happening. It's looking promising, at >least if it will boot once the video card is in and a monitor hooked up. >I'm wondering if the harsh noise I remember wasn't the power supply but the >original hard drive. Or perhaps something not snuggly mounted, since it >seems to be running pretty quiet. > >Anyway, the parts: Cheap socket 7 motherboard (no frills, non-integrated >amptron board, no built in sound/etc), an ISA sound blaster 16 clone, a two >port seriel card (originally purchased so I could use a modem and mouse at >the same time, the board only had one seriel port built in), a 4.5 gig (if >I'm remembering correctly, about to turn in for the night and don't feel >like pulling the box back out and opening it up) fujistsu 3.5 hard drive >Fry's was offering at a discount when they decided to drop the model. Soon >to get added, a 2 MB S3 Virge based video card (yeah, I know, the >3d-decelerator, it was however at the time a step up from my 1 MB "Oh, >surely you'll be happy running your monitor at no more than 640x400) VGA card. > >I don't plan on loading the box up with drives and doodads, less moving >parts inside it, the quieter it ought to be. And cooler, which reminds of >one of the things I noticed shortly before moving to my celeron system, the >heatsink/fan on my p100 is only working as a heatsink, the fan doesn't spin >(it's got a pass through connector to tap into one of the 4-pin power >supply cables, which is connected). Can a pentium 100 be run safely on >just a heatsink? Well, this one was for a few months minumum. Who knows, >I hardly even ran it with the case open till I got to playing with it >towards the end, for all I know the fan never worked (or maybe the noise >was the fan failing..) > >I can say one thing though. Whoever invented those brass thumbscrews needs >a medal. Hmm, and whoever created the KVM switch, though I must say those >are a little more expensive than I expected. > > > >Oh, anyone know where I could look for any kind of details on an Intel OEM >motherboard? So far I haven't had luck searching Intel's website. The >original dealers invoice simply identified it as an "Intel Triton OEM >motherboard". It's an AT board, socket 7, there's a rectangular socket >next to the cpu socket (30 pins arrainged 2x15, I think but am not certain >that it's labelled VRM), 5 ISA, 3 PCI (I believe with one shared ISA/PCI >slot). The only ID number I can find, silkscreened on the middle top >"INTEL 824301 VER:B" > >It was working fine last I knew, only reason I thought of switching to the >other board I have is that I have no documentation for this one. > >________________________________________________ >See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. > >Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us >http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > >