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View Full Version : Second-hand part prices - EDO RAM & <4 GB HDD's?



fifth_horseman
07-13-2006, 10:40 AM
I'm thinking to go hunting for some extra parts for an old PC I've recently rebuilt, and I'd like to know what are reasonable prices for the particular components I have in mind - you know, so I don't get ripped off.

What I'm thinking about is...
-EDO RAM for 72-pin SIMM slot (4-meg and above)
-IDE HDD between 800 MB and 4 GB (since that size seems to be the max on what this motherboard will handle)

How much would be reasonable for this kind of parts (speaking about secon-hand ones, mind you) and how much would be too much?

Thanks for any help on the subject.:)

peat moss
07-13-2006, 01:23 PM
Your wasting your time on that dinosaur , why not look for an PIII 500 -850 MHz
at swap meets or computer store and play on that .

I can pick up one for $ 60.00 Can. with a least 128mb SDRAM and a 9gb hdd. everything but the monitor . To give you an idea I thru all my old parts out including edo memory I had in a drawer .8, 16, 32, mb strips .

zaphodiv
07-13-2006, 02:15 PM
-EDO RAM for 72-pin SIMM slot (4-meg and above)
-IDE HDD between 800 MB and 4 GB (since that size seems to be the max on what this motherboard will handle)

How much would be reasonable for this kind of parts

$2 each.

fifth_horseman
07-14-2006, 01:50 PM
Your wasting your time on that dinosaur , why not look for an PIII 500 -850 MHz
For newer stuff I already have a 1,75 Ghz Sempron 2500+ with 1 GB of RAM and Radeon 9600. Not top-of-the-line, maybe, but it's allright.

The "dinosaur", as you have called it, is a completely different deal.
Simply put, I am tired sick of having to use emulators to run DOS games on my modern machine.
While the 16 MB of RAM I've installed is enough for DOS and some basic Win98 functionality, 24 or 32 would be preferable.
Also, I had initially two hard drives installed into this computer, but unfortunately the 800-meg one that came way back in my first PC in 1995 had suffered a complete and utter failure of its electronics.
While I know it would be technically possible to setup a dual boot on the remaining hard drive, getting a replacement HDD so that DOS and Win98 are both on completely separate physical drives is far preferable.

Virtualbody1234
07-14-2006, 02:21 PM
Does Windows 98 or DOS run on the newer 1.75 GHz machine?

fifth_horseman
07-14-2006, 03:00 PM
Windows 98 runs on it pretty well (installed it on a spare 40 GB drive), but DOS-based games would have severe problems (CPU speed and the sound hardware).
Either way, the older PC is also needed for word processing uses - that way my mother won't take over the faster machine and I don't run the risk of losing important files if she screws something up.

Smith
07-15-2006, 02:12 AM
Why are you playing DOS based games seems like a pretty relevant question..right about now.

Seedler
07-15-2006, 03:06 AM
DOS>Windows XP. Fact. :)

fifth_horseman
07-17-2006, 02:39 PM
Why are you playing DOS based games seems like a pretty relevant question..right about now.
No modern game can beat the old classics, simply put.
I'll take Duke Nukem 3D over Doom III any day, thank you. :P

T0TAL-RECALL
07-17-2006, 02:46 PM
DOS games are great... Most the ones I play are the point n click but there all emulated real well using ScummVM so no need to run old PCs.

Smith
07-17-2006, 07:45 PM
I'm pretty sure most games that you can get on DOS can be found on windows too.

Do a google...

fifth_horseman
07-18-2006, 03:01 PM
Not quite so when we're talking about games published before 1996. :)

clocker
07-18-2006, 04:23 PM
Not quite so when we're talking about games published before 1996. :)
I see the problem.
Most newer PCs have trouble installing from stone tablets.