Building my childhood dream PC

fabiensanglard.net

208 points by joexbayer 5 days ago


scns - a day ago

Even though it's off-topic, my favourite case in a build by the same guy. Nowadays it would work with just a Ryzen 9700X:

https://fabiensanglard.net/the_beautiful_machine/index.html

[Edit] Maybe not completly off-topic since it would be my dream PC.

vunderba - 2 days ago

I love the attention to detail in this post. I've thought about picking up one of those Vortex86 based ITX boards like the ITX-Llama [1] since you get the joy of running on real hardware but don't have to worry about tracking down a soundblaster card, network cards, etc. Assuming that they ever come back in stock that is.

[1] https://retrodreams.ca/products/itx-llama-mainboard

asukachikaru - a day ago

Past threads

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44021824 May, 2025 (86 comments)

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44023088 May, 2025 (0 comment)

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44026363 May, 2025 (1 comment)

jll29 - a day ago

This post is a meticulous documentation, it's attention to detail is remarkable, and it all looks so clean. How much did your project cost in total, though, out of curiosity (tools and failed attempts included)?

Reading through the post, sadly nothing worked the first time round (bravo to the poster for his perseverance), and while things got slightly better, IT "stuff" is still surprisingly fiddly and fragile.

The quality of the build and the technical detail of the handbooks are areas where things got remarkably worse - how could we let that happen? How can children learn how stuff works without schematics of the devices they own and love?

nsavage - a day ago

This is a pretty common behaviour. My dad has been buying both his dream Amigas and his dream car, a Triumph TR6. I bought my dream childhood console, a Gameboy Advance SP (I only had a regular Gameboy Advance).

intrasight - 2 days ago

Honest question: Will building a high-end PC still be a thing in 10 years? I've built all of mine in the last 20 years. Just finished my first AMD build. But I don't think it'll be possible or allowed after a few more CPU iterations. Sure, you'll be able to do builds with the CPU tech available up to when it stops, but I seriously doubt that the cutting-edge chip tech ten years hence will be available to hobbyists. Tell me why I'm wrong.

sandermvanvliet - a day ago

Looking at those pictures made me realise I could _smell_ it…

Got kicked right in the nostalgia I guess

layer8 - a day ago

This is nice, but without a CRT monitor (he's using an IPS) it's not quite the real thing regarding the actual on-screen experience.

intrasight - 2 days ago

Typing this on a very old Model M keyboard :)

voidUpdate - a day ago

I always really liked the handle on my old upgraded lenovo E73. It made it much easier to transport when going to university and back for the holidays, and I'm sad that most cases don't have one. Even a hinged one that sits flat to the top of the case when folded down would be awesome

lepicz - a day ago

my childhood dreams include gravis ultrasound

incomplete - 2 days ago

oh man, what a trip down memory lane. i started building PCs in college with 386/486s and last year rebuilt my silly custom loop watercooled workstation. :)

and yes: the supplied pc docs back then >>>>>>>> supplied pc docs today

sergsoares - 15 hours ago

The attention and care to the details of that post are incredible.

thw_9a83c - a day ago

Honestly, that IBM PS/1 model 2168 computer case looks retro, but also classy and nerdy. I miss the days when computers had enough free slots for external media drives. I really like physical media like CD-ROMs, Blu-ray disks, and floppy disks (I don't use those anymore). It's getting harder and harder to find a computer case that has a slot for a Blu-ray/CD drive.

urda - 2 days ago

The rise of retro computing and gaming is wonderful thing.

markus_zhang - 2 days ago

Ah, this is the perfect machine to replicate John Carmack’s work. It’s not a NEXT but is pretty strong to do development on.

jcims - a day ago

The prior owner took great care of that machine. It looks new.

gigatexal - a day ago

I have been wanting to do this with 2000s era Athlon system

chewbaxxa - 2 days ago

wow, this whole blog is a treasure!

gsibble - 2 days ago

I just finished building a water cooled Threadripper 9980X machine today (you can go see it on reddit in r/watercooling or r/threadripper.

My first ever build was a 386 though.

What fond memories.

fuzzfactor - a day ago

>Joystic port or MIDI port? Back in the days I only ever thought of the DA-15 as the Game port[1]. To me it was only meant to welcome a joystick and play flight simulators. Little did I know that it could also be used as an output to send MIDI commands to a MPU 401-UART!

With no latency of course because USB hadn't been invented yet.

>My SC-55ST came without a power supply. That was the opportunity to understand better the power requirement marking on the back. Voltage and Amperage are obvious but one must also pay attention to the polarity sign. The SC-55ST uses a negative center[7].

This is the "standard" for guitar effects pedals due to the ordinary switching power socket component on their PCB. The outer connector of the barrel jack does the switching by pushing the conductor away from the internal battery pole and over to the external supply when it is plugged in. This would switch the same way physically whether it was positive or negative, except these are often very sensitive or high-gain audio circuits and every bit of earth ground integrity can be essential for the metal enclosures and coaxial cables to shield the inner audio signal properly.

This SC-55ST may not have an internal 9V battery like a guitar pedal would have, but it was designed to run on a Roland "Boss" A/C adapter anyway which is the top shelf wall wart having highly regulated clean power for studio use. Roland set the standard for center ground with their Boss pedals and adapters which basically steamrolled everyone else. Since for this application it's not the power supply that's using any shielding at all, but the audio needs as much shielding as it can get.