|
|
Advertisement |
 |
PPC
> Computing
Guides > How
do I?
Never say Die
Your
PC may be getting long in the tooth but that doesn’t mean you need
to pay lots of cash for a new one. A mid-life kick may be all your
current one needs.
The Patient
A rather elderly Pentium 120 with 48Mb RAM, a 2Gb
hard disk and a basic ISA based ATI graphics card. The case says
Escom, which shows its vintage – around 1996.
Maybe I should remove that Intel Inside sticker now?
Having been quite the mean machine in its day,
this PC is now looking a bit of a duffer. It has only been used for
word processing and light home-finance duties of late so the lack of
grunt hasn’t been a problem. However, the owner (my wife) is
starting to hanker after playing Theme Park World which requires an
altogether beefier PC. What can be done?
The plan
The motherboard on this machine can only handle CPUs
up to 133Mhz so a new one plus a faster CPU is needed. The existing
CDROM drive is a quad-speed which is good enough and the 2Gb hard
disk will do as a starting point so that can be re-used too. The
motherboard has onboard sound so when the new one is purchased, a
sound card will also be needed.
Back it Up
Before I got any further, I took a full backup of
all the important data and files from the machine. This is vitally
important as if anything goes wrong you may never get to see your
precious files again.
Shopping - Real and Virtual
A quick look at various vendors showed that my
choices were somewhat limited by the AT standard case size. I ended
up opting for a Gigabyte GA-5XX and AMD K6/2 500Mhz CPU from Dabs
(www.dabs.co.uk). The AMD isn’t as good as the Intel equivalents
at floating point maths operations but in terms of bang for the buck
it’s pretty much unbeatable. These two cost about £100 which
wasn’t a bad start.
I am lucky in having an excellent local PC shop
owner who happily buys, sells and swaps second hand kit. A quick
trip and some serious haggling turned some old games, sundry bits of
software and the ATI graphics card into a 64Mb DIMM, a 4Mb AGP
no-name graphics card plus a Yamaha based sound card for £40.
Pull it Apart, Stuff it All Back Again
Now the serious PC rebuild could begin. Whenever you
work on a PC, it is a good idea to ensure you are well earthed. If
you start fiddling with delicate electronics, the static charges you
build up just walking around can easily damage chips. Maplins and
other such shops sell wrist straps with wires attached that you can
clip on to an earthed piece of metal, something like a
radiator.
Suitably wired, I opened the case and started to
remove the various items. Changing a motherboard is quite a task and
it required a bit of case dismantling to get the old one out. At
this point I discovered the existing CPU fan had long since died in
a mass of fluff and gunk. A new one would be needed before the new
CPU was started. Back in the 120Mhz days you could get away with no
fan if you were lucky. Modern fast CPUs absolutely need a fan to
keep cool. Maplins had a suitable chunky fan at £10. A bit steep
for a fan but time was of the essence.
The new motherboard went in fine. I added the CPU,
fan, memory and AGP graphics card. Next up was to set the various
jumpers on the motherboard to suit an AMD K6/2 500. Now it was time
to switch on to test that all was well. Alas, it was most definitely
not well. Not even a beep. Dead as a dodo. I checked the jumper
settings on the motherboard to ensure they were correctly set for
the CPU, looked for loose connections and generally scratched my
head. Eventually I discovered that despite both motherboards being
AT standard layouts, the old one had a screw mounting where the new
one had the memory mounted and the connection was shorting out the
motherboard. Had I killed it? Happily not. Some insulation was added
under the motherboard to protect it from the metal mounting point
before powering on again. The machine fired up. Time for tea.
The sound card, hard drive and CDROM were all added.
I had a spare 1.5Gb hard disk so this was also put in to boost the
storage a little.
As the data had been backed up, the decision was
made to wipe the machine. It is possible to change the motherboard
then rely on Windows to sort out any new drivers but its best to
start anew if you can. I used a bootable version of Windows 98 on
CDROM to wipe the machine and install a fresh copy of Windows. To
ensure everything was up to date I connected to the Internet and
downloaded all the Windows 98 patches and updated drivers.
The machine was now fully operational so it was time
to start re-installing the software and restoring the backed up
data. This went without any hitches and once done, the machine was
ready to use.
Faster, Faster!
As well as a fast processor. Theme Park World also
needs a decent graphics card so I started to wonder if the 4Mb AGP
card was good enough. A friend mentioned he had a spare Voodoo II I
could have so that went in too (thanks Richard!).
So far, through some careful recycling, use of local
shops and a generous friend I had managed to do the whole upgrade
for £150. That had taken the machine from a P120 with 48Mb RAM and
a 2Gb hard disk to a K6-2/500 with 64Mb RAM, a Voodoo II, 3.5Gb of
HD and a reasonable sound card.
All that was left was to take the old bits back to
the shop to see what I could get. More haggling and the old CPU,
motherboard and RAM turned into a copy of Theme Park World. Not a
bad deal.
Aftermath
I can happily report that the upgraded PC plays
Theme Park World. It isn’t the fastest thing on Earth but for £150,
who’s complaining? I have also installed The Sims and that plays
fine too. For day to day use, the machine whizzes through its old
tasks at such a rate as to make my wife wonder why she didn’t
upgrade before. A bonus has been the inclusion of USB on the new
board which will help when adding further peripherals. Overall,
despite a few issues during the build, the project has been a
success!
|