Here's the link to IBM's site for the nitty gritty details: http://www5.pc.ibm.com/us/products.nsf/$wwwPartNumLookup/_86506MM As configured, this sucker probably cost $20k-25k new. This actually looks like a pretty "generic" configuration inside, meaning it could probably be upgraded with little trouble. Interesting layout. It has a dual-bus architecture main board, whatever that is (maybe for each CPU board?). The main board is larger than your usual PC motherboard. There are 6 PCI slots (three for each "side") and 4 EISA slots. SCSI is built on the main board (2xAdaptec 7880Ps), although they aren't using it. There's a full-length PCI board with three Adaptec 7880P chips on it (and an RS6000 controller). It supports RAID modes 0, 1, 5. The ethernet card looks to be a no-name clone. It's got an Intel 82557 chip on it that's dated 1995, so it's probably just 10-BaseT. Easily upgraded. There's a cage with two CPU cards and a RAM card. The CPU cards each have one HUGE heatsink attached to a socketed Pentium Pro 200 CPU, and one empty slot. The CPUs have a 66MHz FSB. There are 8 x 72-pin 60ns 32MB SIMMs on the memory card, and 8 empty SIMM slots. (All SIMMs must be speed matched.) Come to think of it, just a really nice computer case like this with two 430W hot-swappable power supplies and 12 hot-swappable fast/wide SCSI bays is probably worth quite a bit. It's got 27 total drive bays inside it! Nobody knew what was inside these. There were several of them all lined up, and I had my choice. I picked this one. Later I found out It has 8 x 4.3 GB drives in it. The box next to it had 12 x 9.2 GB drives, and the one next to that had 10 x 9.2 GB drives. However, I suspect that the 12 drive box was just a "side-car" full of drives because all it had was a SCSI connector on the back. The other one probably was a quad-CPU w/512MB RAM. I could kick myself! I'm not sure what I want to do with it quite yet. It would probably make an excellent database server. What do you think? -David Rusty Carruth wrote: > > > > I picked up a used IBM PC Server 704 with two Pentium Pro 200/512k CPUs, > > 256MB RAM, 8 x 4.3GB fast/wide SCSI HDs, dual 430W hot-swap power supplies, > > e-net. Very clean. > > cool. is it 10/100 enet or just wimpy old 10? > > > I haven't powered it up yet, but supposedly it was > > removed from service in fully operational condition. You could set it up > > as a server in your living room disguised as an end table / air filtration > > system :-) It's probably got Win NT loaded on it. I think it's got a RAID > > controller in it, too. > > > > I realize you can get this kind of power in a $800 PC today, but there are > > folks who will only buy things that are built like Sherman Tanks and have > > the letters "I.B.M." on them. Do you know anybody like that? > > Well, unfortunately I.B.M used to mean 3x the price too ;-) > > > Also, does anybody know which Linux build would work best on this system, > > in case I decide to use it as an email server? > > Well, if it were mine (hint ;-), I'd probably put either Mandrake 7.2 > or mandrake 8.0 on it. If I were going to use it as a server, anyway. > I'm considering going back to a more configurable distro if what happened > from 7.2 to 8.0 is permanent - I'm very displeased with how my Mandrake > Freq. install went (course, it WAS an old P100, but still, I had a real > pain of a time getting it to configure the drives the way I wanted). > > (This email is sent both direct and via the list. What's the price you're > hoping to get for this thing? (send answer to either list or private, > your choice)). > > (of course, *I*'ll probably just end up using my nifty keeno dual P90 > server instead, since you'll want real money for yours ;-) > > rc