Help me trick out my 486

Do you have a technical question that doesn't really fit a specific console? Want some general info on electronics, hacking, making cookies, etc? Here's the place to ask! Go nuts.

Moderator: Moderators

Post Reply
Rekarp
Portablizer Extraordinaire
Posts: 2163
Joined: Thu Dec 28, 2006 1:52 am
PSN Username: Lnghrn_
Steam ID: rekarp
Location: Austin, Tx
Contact:

Help me trick out my 486

Post by Rekarp »

Well I picked up a 486 for free today. Runs great but it needs to be supped up. So far I have taken the CPU and video card out.

Current Specs:
CPU: Am486 DX2-66
Video: Cirrus CLVGA542XVL
Ram: 8mb
Motherboard: Soyo SY-25P http://th99.dyndns.org/m/S-T/34602.htm
Harddrive: 420 mb
Sound: None

No Ethernet
Floppy
Zip Drive

---------------------------

Future Specs:
CPU: Am486 DX4-100 or P24T
Video: Top end ISA VLB card 2mb?
Ram: 128mb
Motherboard: Soyo SY-25P http://th99.dyndns.org/m/S-T/34602.htm
Harddrive: 420 mb
Sound: Gravis UltraSound,

3com Nic card
Floppy
Zip Drive
Last edited by Rekarp on Sun Aug 03, 2008 8:59 pm, edited 2 times in total.
The wood master

Image

"I was under the impression Mac owners don't actually USE their machines, they just parade them around trying to evangelize the masses."
ArugulaZ
Posts: 71
Joined: Thu Dec 13, 2007 10:22 pm

Post by ArugulaZ »

(scratches head)

Wow, this is really one of those "because I can" projects, isn't it? Well, I dunno. I'm an intermediate hacker at best; well below the skills of most of the other forum members. All I could really recommend is add more memory and try to overclock the CPU.

Unless you're trying to keep costs as low as possible, I don't see why you wouldn't just use a Pentium chip. I can't imagine the difference in power consumption being all that significant. What are you trying to do with this system, anyway? You've got me curious.
Rekarp
Portablizer Extraordinaire
Posts: 2163
Joined: Thu Dec 28, 2006 1:52 am
PSN Username: Lnghrn_
Steam ID: rekarp
Location: Austin, Tx
Contact:

Post by Rekarp »

ArugulaZ wrote:(scratches head)

Wow, this is really one of those "because I can" projects, isn't it? Well, I dunno. I'm an intermediate hacker at best; well below the skills of most of the other forum members. All I could really recommend is add more memory and try to overclock the CPU.

Unless you're trying to keep costs as low as possible, I don't see why you wouldn't just use a Pentium chip. I can't imagine the difference in power consumption being all that significant. What are you trying to do with this system, anyway? You've got me curious.
I have a box of DOS games that I would like to play. Plus tweaking old hardware is fun
The wood master

Image

"I was under the impression Mac owners don't actually USE their machines, they just parade them around trying to evangelize the masses."
Dark-Aries
Posts: 291
Joined: Fri Nov 09, 2007 7:12 pm

Post by Dark-Aries »

Take of the CPu and put some real pro thermal gloop on there...it's probably all crusty by now if there is any to begin with, update the BIOS if possible and then get some good memory for it, then begin overclocking it...with luck you should beable to get a real fast win98/95 machine there...You get windows programs plus the ability to play dos games!
Aguiluz
Posts: 1141
Joined: Tue Nov 20, 2007 7:58 pm
Location: Ontario, Canada
Contact:

Post by Aguiluz »

I use a Pentium 100 MHz to host an IRC server.
Image
bicostp
Moderator
Posts: 10491
Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2005 5:47 pm
Steam ID: bicostp
Location: Spamalot
Contact:

Post by bicostp »

Dark-Aries wrote:Take of the CPu and put some real pro thermal gloop on there...it's probably all crusty by now if there is any to begin with
For the most part, don't 486s run cool enough to not need a heatsink?
you should beable to get a real fast win98/95 machine there...You get windows programs plus the ability to play dos games!
:lol: 95, maybe. I've seen 98 run on a 486, and it's slow as all hell. (Probably about the same as running Vista on a 2.6 gig Prescott Celeron with integrated graphics.)

I recommend running MS-DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1. Make sure you get Windows drivers for your video card. For a good laugh, check out MS Office 4, IE 2.0, and of course Netscape 4. (There is a Windows 3.1 version of IE 5, probably the most modern browser for the system.)

For file transfer, if you don't have an ISA Ethernet card, try a null modem cable. (or maybe even a removable hard drive chassis). Juggling floppies around isn't fun.
Last edited by bicostp on Sun Aug 03, 2008 10:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
xtrmgam3r360
Posts: 362
Joined: Fri Nov 23, 2007 11:24 am
Location: Wisconsin
Contact:

Post by xtrmgam3r360 »

bicostp wrote: I recommend running MS-DOS 6.22 and Windows 3.1.
I second that, lol. I have Windows 3.11 for Workgroups running on my old IBM PS/1 and it is speedy.
GonzoMPM-1
Posts: 54
Joined: Sat Jun 14, 2008 10:56 pm

Post by GonzoMPM-1 »

Well,

Consider finding one of the old 486==> Pentium chips.

Here's what they look like, but if you're careful you should be able to find one for less than $10:
eBay

Its only an upgrade from 66mhz to 83mhz, but the Pentium architecture is hugely important.

Then, go download the Scitech Display Doctor (free now in its ftp page), get version 5.3 which will cover that Cirrus Logic chip and provide about 500 additional graphics modes.

Get an old ISA Sound Blaster 16.

Good games for the 486 with the Intel 84mhz upgrade:

Nesticle and Genesyst -- emulators for NES and Genesis, respectively.

Warcraft II.

Doom and Doom II.

Duke Nukem 3d.

Betrayal at Krondor
Last edited by GonzoMPM-1 on Sun Aug 03, 2008 3:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
timmeh87
Senior Member
Posts: 3047
Joined: Mon Nov 14, 2005 10:19 pm
Location: Ontario, Canada

Post by timmeh87 »

Look for some bus speed/multiplier jumpers.

Multiplier is not locked.
Might be able to bump it up to 80-something with a good heatsink on it.
Image

"Linux is only free if your time is worthless"
nitro2k01
Posts: 651
Joined: Tue Dec 19, 2006 12:41 pm

Post by nitro2k01 »

Get an ISA sound card with an OPL sound chip for maximum old-school awesomeness. (Like SB16) OR if you feel inclined, get a Gravis UltraSound, the Rolls-Royce of soundcards at the time. (Or get both, they work nicely side by side)
I recommend installing 98lite if you're planning to use anything Windows-related on it. Adds a bit of stability, and also lets you have a HD bigger than 4 GB without too much hassle. 98lite is a piece of software that lets you instal Windows 98 without IE and the new explorer - that lifts some weight off of it.
Windows 98 (And thus 98lite) has its own version of DOS, which you can run Windows 3.1 in. Another route to go is one partition for 9x, and one for DOS6.22+Win3.1. Yet another route is to install OS/2 on one partition. OS/2 used to be my favourite OS for a couple of years.
Get an ISA network card. 3com Etherlink usually works well on old computers. That way you can copy files to and from it much easier. You'll only get 10 MBit/s, but that should be enough for the purposes. Just make sure you never connect it in a way that it is exposed to the net - a win9x box is an easy target for malware.
My blog
ASM Retro <- Gameboy Classic Backlight

Being the sadistic bastard I am, I have covered Frog's left eye with a Santa hat.

Last edited by nitro2k01 tomorrow, 1:48 pm; edited 1 time in total
grossaffe
Posts: 1450
Joined: Thu May 29, 2008 11:54 pm
Location: USA

Post by grossaffe »

If you used an oscillating crystal, would you be able to overclock that way?
Ben Cebhrem
Posts: 302
Joined: Thu Jul 05, 2007 12:00 am

Post by Ben Cebhrem »

I haven't seen anybody mention RAM. 60ns or faster, and you'd probably be full at either 32 or 64 MB of RAM, depending on make and model of the computer.
Rekarp
Portablizer Extraordinaire
Posts: 2163
Joined: Thu Dec 28, 2006 1:52 am
PSN Username: Lnghrn_
Steam ID: rekarp
Location: Austin, Tx
Contact:

Post by Rekarp »

Updated the specs of the 486

Seems I can pop in a Am486 DX4-100 or P24T as a CPU. Both of those are top end for my motherboard. Need to get a AT keyboard first tho.
The wood master

Image

"I was under the impression Mac owners don't actually USE their machines, they just parade them around trying to evangelize the masses."
Post Reply