J
JURB6006
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
Hi all;
Got this IBM here, it's destined to become what I call a kidzPC. This is where
I blow it out the door for between $50 and $100 so that someone who normally
couldn't have a PC can. I encourage them to use up their freebies with any ISPs
for which they can get a disk.
Now I bought this thing, an IBM tower, it's a socket 370 based Celeron
processor at 433Mhz. The dude brought it over and it POSTed fine so I payed up
and that was that. He did tell me that this was a transplant, and you can tell
because the front panel wires are spliced. Nonetheless I saw no reason to
reject it for that, it did post, came with the processor and 64MB, and it would
be a good deal, except. . . . . .
Damthing won't take an OS !
Tried to load 98SE on it and it took all night, then it gets to the reboot
point and it will not boot from the HD, starting with the floppy I see all the
files that are supposed to be there, and yes this HD was FDISKed and formatted
in this PC, but again it took significantly longer than I thought it should.
Since it doesn't work I guess I was right. At this point I suspect maybe the
HD, which was used, so I put in a pulled HD that already had 98SE on it and it
booted fine except for looking for mobo drivers and stuff. Now what ?
This is going to be a cheap PC, less than $100, how much less depends on the HD
it gets and if I can find some RAM for it. Since it'll boot from a HD with an
OS, am I better off just copying the Windows CD to it and then installing ? I
think this would probably work, but if it does, will this make all other things
off the CD slow ? This thing should support a lower speed burner but not if the
CD access if screwed up. It's not the HD nor access to it, proven by it's
behaviour when I plugged in a HD with the OS already installed. I really don't
want to have alot of time into this, and I know of someone who really wants it
and I can't get ahold of the guy that sold it to me.
Does IBM BIOS have some kind of protection against installing an OS or
something ? I suspect this mobo is for a workstation because the BIOS defaults
don't seem right. I can elaborate at a later date, but I don't like IBM BIOS,
and if the guy woulda told me it was an IBM I probably woulda toldim find me
something else. (he's a computer vulture)
Maybe when the Windows protected mode drivers get loaded it will be fine, maybe
not. There is nothing in the asset tag, and I don't know just where to look for
the numbers on this board. All I know is that it's a socket 370, and if it was
upgraded to a 433Mhz Celeron it must be old.
A penny for your thoughts (that's all that's in the budget)
If you want the money for your two cents worth you must fill out form 4366 and
addendum A. Send it registered mail along with the four cent application fee,
the five cent approval fee and twenty nine cents for the money order. Also
include an S.A.S.E. with any special delivery instructions such as, I have a
car in the driveway, or I have a basement or a tree on the property. Note there
is an extra charge for this.
Now you <u>have</u> heard everything.
JURB
Got this IBM here, it's destined to become what I call a kidzPC. This is where
I blow it out the door for between $50 and $100 so that someone who normally
couldn't have a PC can. I encourage them to use up their freebies with any ISPs
for which they can get a disk.
Now I bought this thing, an IBM tower, it's a socket 370 based Celeron
processor at 433Mhz. The dude brought it over and it POSTed fine so I payed up
and that was that. He did tell me that this was a transplant, and you can tell
because the front panel wires are spliced. Nonetheless I saw no reason to
reject it for that, it did post, came with the processor and 64MB, and it would
be a good deal, except. . . . . .
Damthing won't take an OS !
Tried to load 98SE on it and it took all night, then it gets to the reboot
point and it will not boot from the HD, starting with the floppy I see all the
files that are supposed to be there, and yes this HD was FDISKed and formatted
in this PC, but again it took significantly longer than I thought it should.
Since it doesn't work I guess I was right. At this point I suspect maybe the
HD, which was used, so I put in a pulled HD that already had 98SE on it and it
booted fine except for looking for mobo drivers and stuff. Now what ?
This is going to be a cheap PC, less than $100, how much less depends on the HD
it gets and if I can find some RAM for it. Since it'll boot from a HD with an
OS, am I better off just copying the Windows CD to it and then installing ? I
think this would probably work, but if it does, will this make all other things
off the CD slow ? This thing should support a lower speed burner but not if the
CD access if screwed up. It's not the HD nor access to it, proven by it's
behaviour when I plugged in a HD with the OS already installed. I really don't
want to have alot of time into this, and I know of someone who really wants it
and I can't get ahold of the guy that sold it to me.
Does IBM BIOS have some kind of protection against installing an OS or
something ? I suspect this mobo is for a workstation because the BIOS defaults
don't seem right. I can elaborate at a later date, but I don't like IBM BIOS,
and if the guy woulda told me it was an IBM I probably woulda toldim find me
something else. (he's a computer vulture)
Maybe when the Windows protected mode drivers get loaded it will be fine, maybe
not. There is nothing in the asset tag, and I don't know just where to look for
the numbers on this board. All I know is that it's a socket 370, and if it was
upgraded to a 433Mhz Celeron it must be old.
A penny for your thoughts (that's all that's in the budget)
If you want the money for your two cents worth you must fill out form 4366 and
addendum A. Send it registered mail along with the four cent application fee,
the five cent approval fee and twenty nine cents for the money order. Also
include an S.A.S.E. with any special delivery instructions such as, I have a
car in the driveway, or I have a basement or a tree on the property. Note there
is an extra charge for this.
Now you <u>have</u> heard everything.
JURB