CPU Porn

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
13
81
....or back in my day.

Going though my CPU collection I thought I would snap some photos and upload for nostalgia or so the young-ins can learn something. Enjoy!

Few boxes of CPUs I've collected over the years:
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I started trying to collect one of every x86 CPU made but with all these modern CPUs and how many different ones are released, that went out the window.

A Pentium Pro I took the blow torch to to remove the lid:
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Same with the Pentium:
IMG_0447.JPG


And the 486:
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And the 386:
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Back in my day, when we switched RAM types we just bought a fancy expander to reuse our old RAM:
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gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
13
81
Coolest CPU I think I have, I 286 -> 386 upgrade kit with spare socket for math co-processor. I also have the utility on floppy to enable the 8k! of cache:
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Anyone remember High and Low or Odd and Even BIOS chips?
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Vacuum tubes:
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OverDrive processors, for 486 and Pentium systems:
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The first Pentium ever: The 60MHz
IMG_0465.JPG


486DX4-75 and 100 Overdrive chips:
IMG_0466.JPG


Pentium 60 and 66MHz:
IMG_0467.JPG


A terminator for an unused 287/387 socket, there are resistors in there, hard to tell from the photo:
IMG_0468.JPG
 

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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81
8088s!
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8086
IMG_0470.JPG


286/7s
IMG_0471.JPG


Also one by AMD:
IMG_0472.JPG


And a cool one without pins held down by the heat spreader on top of it:
IMG_0473.JPG



386/7s:
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More 286s:
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More 386/387s:
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Pentium over drive to upgrade your Pentium 66 to 133MHz!:
IMG_0477.JPG
 

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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Overclocking once involved swapping out clock crystals:
IMG_0478.JPG


486DX-33:
IMG_0479.JPG


And the super popular 486DX2-66, began this crazy multiplier craze:
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One manufactured by IBM:
IMG_0481.JPG


The bastard SX which had the math co-processor in it, just fused off:
IMG_0482.JPG


Various flavors by AMD:
IMG_0483.JPG


Also very popular Pentium 133MHz
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K6 and K6-2s!
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IBM 6x86
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gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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AMD 5x86, these actually went in 486 sockets:
IMG_0487.JPG



Cyrix MII, we used to have CPU choices!
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Cryix 6x86:
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Made in Canada:
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6x86 and MII:
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And the reverse side:
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Pentiums:
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Anyone remember the iComp index?
IMG_0494.JPG


K6-200 and 233:
IMG_0495.JPG
 

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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K6-2 350MHz:
IMG_0496.JPG


Pentium with MMX tech, you cannot remove the heat-spreader with a blowtorch on these:
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One of each speed:
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De-lidded K6-2 to see the die size, tiny!
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AMD K5s:
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More K5s, designed for Windows 95!
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When you take a blowtorch to the Pentium MMX chips, this is all you end up with:
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Pentium Pro:
IMG_0503.JPG


COAST (Cache on a stick):
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gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
13
81
K6-2 and K6-2+:
IMG_0506.JPG


And de-lidded:
IMG_0507.JPG


Mobile Pentium II:
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Regular Pentium IIs
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Front side:
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Bottom:
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What they look like with the case off:
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Pentium II and III in the newer style case:
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And their differences inside:
IMG_0516.JPG
 

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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Terminator for an unused slot in a dual CPU board:
IMG_0518.JPG


And a whole box of Pentium II and IIIs
IMG_0519.JPG


180MHz Pentium Pro
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486 Cache
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Pentium L2 Cache stick, for VX chipset:
IMG_0523.JPG


These were used to extract socketed CPUs before the invention of ZIF sockets:
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And an example:
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Slot 1 Celerons, sadly I have never come across a cacheless 266MHz, hopefully one day:
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And what Celeron's look like:
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Slotkets!, Back in my day when CPU sockets changed, we just bought adapters:
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gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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SlotKet III
IMG_0530.JPG


Original AMD Athlons:
IMG_0531.JPG


From first speed of 550MHz all the way to 1GHz:
IMG_0532.JPG


Socket 423 Pentium 4s
IMG_0533.JPG


A 1.7GHz:
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A poor cracked K6-2 :(
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Another RAM expander:
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RAMBUS and it's heat-spreader removed:
IMG_0537.JPG


30-pin SIMMS
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gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
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And a whole bunch more:
IMG_0539.JPG


64K of 120NS RAM!
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4MB 72-Pin SIMMS
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Various different 72-pin SIMMS
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Some more 72-pin:
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And a massive! 8MB chip:
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Comparison of different size RAM:
IMG_0545.JPG


Pentium-era/486 CACHE chips, before the COAST modules:
IMG_0546.JPG


Speed star BIOSs:
IMG_0547.JPG


ODD and EVEN video BIOS chips:
IMG_0548.JPG




And that's all I have for tonight, I have Pentium 3 and up, but that is for another time and not nearly as neat I don't think.

Enjoy!!
 

Virgorising

Diamond Member
Apr 9, 2013
4,470
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0
:eek::eek:

It's always nice to have a hobby.

Aftermarket thought: bet you could sell some of the sticks for serious money. Old ram phenomenon.

Too bad the chips are too heavy to make French wire earrings. But you could maybe make statement necklasses out of them.():)

Bet some creative jewelry maker might even buy the whole lot!
 
Last edited:

NTMBK

Lifer
Nov 14, 2011
10,433
5,772
136
Wow, that's an impressive collection! How long have you been collecting for?
 

SammichPG

Member
Aug 16, 2012
171
13
81
:eek::eek:

It's always nice to have a hobby.

Aftermarket thought: bet you could sell some of the sticks for serious money. Old ram phenomenon.

Too bad the chips are too heavy to make French wire earrings. But you could maybe make statement necklasses out of them.():)

Bet some creative jewelry maker might even buy the whole lot!

The gold alone in those packages (ceramic cpus had up to 1-2g of gold!) is worth some hundred dollars, how did you manage to collect so many cpus? Worked in some computer shop or scrapyard?
 

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
13
81
I started collecting maybe 15-20 years ago. It was more just keeping the old CPUs I had since no one really wanted them anymore. Then I really began to notice that technology was way more disposable than most things so I thought it would be neat to keep them as a reminder of where we have come from.

I have been working as a repair technician as a career for the past 14 years so I easily have access to old CPUs as people recycle machines.
 

Megatomic

Lifer
Nov 9, 2000
20,127
6
81
So much nostalgia stirred up by your pics. Thanks for the trip down memory lane, gbeirn.
 

Dahak

Diamond Member
Mar 2, 2000
3,752
25
91
Ahh the good old days. I had started to work with computer around the time of the late pentiums / pentiums with mmx I remember 486's as well. had fun with the slocket cards

Now the real question is build a machine one :)
 

KingFatty

Diamond Member
Dec 29, 2010
3,034
1
81
Wow, seeing the groovy logos for the 386 and 486 chips, where it's like horizontal lines, with the stylish SX or DX text, definitely triggered a nostalgic response. I totally forgot all about how it looked until seeing that, and then wham!, nostalgia.
 

Virgorising

Diamond Member
Apr 9, 2013
4,470
0
0
The gold alone in those packages (ceramic cpus had up to 1-2g of gold!) is worth some hundred dollars, how did you manage to collect so many cpus? Worked in some computer shop or scrapyard?

O! Gold? I had NO CLUE!!!!!!!!!:eek:
 

parvadomus

Senior member
Dec 11, 2012
685
14
81
Loved the 386/486 era. So many upgrades, caches, different processors on same socket, overdrives..
 

SlowSpyder

Lifer
Jan 12, 2005
17,305
1,002
126
You just brought back a lot of memories! I know that technology is so much further now, but somehow for me it was more fun in the 90's. I guess it was because it was new to me and I was young... haha. Very cool collection!!
 

gbeirn

Senior member
Sep 27, 2005
451
13
81
You just brought back a lot of memories! I know that technology is so much further now, but somehow for me it was more fun in the 90's. I guess it was because it was new to me and I was young... haha. Very cool collection!!

I agree it did seem more fun back then. Not sure why
 

ViRGE

Elite Member, Moderator Emeritus
Oct 9, 1999
31,516
167
106
Humina humina humina!:eek:

That's one heck of a collection. Nicely done.