06-05-2017
06:06 AM
- last edited on
03-05-2024
07:38 PM
by
ROGBot
09-21-2017 08:43 AM
DragonPurr wrote:
Yep, surgical hemostats have a multitude of uses in electronics repair. Another indispensable tool is a magnetic ratcheting screwdriver. And here in the U.S., the very best magnetic ratcheting screwdriver is made by Snap-On Tools. I have both their shorter and longer ratcheting screwdriver. Their magnets are strong, they can use various other 100-piece or 200-piece bit driver sets, they are not cheap, but they last forever:
https://store.snapon.com/Standard-Handle-8-3-4-Ratcheting-Standard-Screwdriver-P634146.aspx
https://store.snapon.com/Standard-Handle-12-15-16-Ratcheting-Magnetic-Long-Orange-Screwdriver-P63414...
So here is a very bizarre, but very true, story about using surgical hemostats for PC repair. Yes, it's off-topic, but I think it's funny...
During my second year of full-time study at UT-Austin during 1983, IBM starting interviewing on-campus for part-time positions as electronics technicians at their PC manufacturing plant that they were rapidly expanding at their big IBM campus in north Austin. I had purple-dyed hair and dragon tattoos at the time, I knew that IBM had an ultra-conservative culture, but I applied anyway. I was offered an electronics technician job and started working at IBM 20 to 30 hours every week, and the pay was excellent. I did not receive IBM's full employee benefits such as medical insurance, but I was eligible for their very generous 50%-off employee discount to buy IBM PCs.
IBM used high-speed state-of-the-art robotics to assemble the mobos used on the original PC, PC/XT, and (later in 1984) PC/AT. That was followed by two technician stations where some components such as expansion slot sockets were hand-assembled, followed by a QC technician station that looked for mobo defects using high-quality magnifying lamps. The mobos were then passed to me at the final QA station before being sent to the wave-soldering machines. We had very high quality standards, there were never any production quotas, and each assembly and inspection station took as long as needed to ensure maximum mobo quality. At the same time that I was helping IBM build PCs as a UT-Austin student, Michael Dell was building PCs in his UT-Austin dorm room and selling them as his "PC's Limited" small business.
Anyhoo, a UT-Austin co-ed was seated at the QA station next to me. I noticed that she was using a straight hemostat to help with the repairing and adjusting of components, straightening bent IC chip pins, etc. She was actually using the hemostat as a roach clip for her, ummm, recreational herbs, and she brought it into work to help with fixing mobo components. So I asked my IBM manager if they could buy hemostats for every QC and QA technician to help with fixing and building PC mobos.
All the IBM managers dressed very conservatively, wearing heavily starched white shirts, and navy blue tie and slacks. But the UT-Austin students that they hired sometimes had tattoos and dyed hair. It was the heyday of the punk and new-wave '80s, after all. Many of us students were a very close-knit group at the IBM plant, and we would go club-hopping and listen to live music after work on Friday nights. On the following two school years, I was working part-time at IBM's development office at the same Austin campus, doing systems programming in C code and 8088 assembly language.
So that was how IBM supplied all their PC technicians with hemostats to assist with PC repair - all because a UT-Austin co-ed started using her hemostat roach clip at her QA station, and I asked my manager to buy hemostats for all of us to use. LOL!! True story!
09-21-2017 09:17 AM
DashTrash wrote:
I had never thought to use hemostats for pc building. I don't have the extensive pc history that many of you have, but I was going to the junkyard to pull heater cores out of wrecked cars back in the late 90's for watercooling and have been building ever since. I can't count the times those hemostats would have come in handy over the years. Or a nice set of screwdrivers. But wow, those are spendy! I'll have to look if you can get a nice set of bits in a good case. The one I bought at Lowes doesn't have a good case to hold the bits.
I missed what chip most of you plan to use in the board. Isn't the full line of i9's out next week? The 7920x from Silicon Lottery looks great, but the costs just get so high. Would be super cool to have 12 or more cores running above 4.5ghz. But I'll have to wait to see what the coffee lake/z370 boards are like before I decide. But sure enjoy watching this thread!:cool:
09-21-2017 09:24 AM
Brighttail wrote:
Wow.. 12 cores all running at 4.7Ghz 🙂 I got my normal off the shelf 7900x on its way. I'll play with it in my rig and see how high it can go on a normal AIO before I decide to have it delidded or not. 🙂
09-21-2017 11:21 AM
DashTrash wrote:
I had never thought to use hemostats for pc building. I don't have the extensive pc history that many of you have, but I was going to the junkyard to pull heater cores out of wrecked cars back in the late 90's for watercooling and have been building ever since. I can't count the times those hemostats would have come in handy over the years. Or a nice set of screwdrivers. But wow, those are spendy! I'll have to look if you can get a nice set of bits in a good case. The one I bought at Lowes doesn't have a good case to hold the bits.
I missed what chip most of you plan to use in the board. Isn't the full line of i9's out next week? The 7920x from Silicon Lottery looks great, but the costs just get so high. Would be super cool to have 12 or more cores running above 4.5ghz. But I'll have to wait to see what the coffee lake/z370 boards are like before I decide. But sure enjoy watching this thread!:cool:
09-21-2017 01:14 PM
DragonPurr wrote:
...Back in June, I was thinking of doing two 7980XE workstation builds for 36 cores of processing power, but when I looked at the specs and considered my intended video and photo processing use, I will get far better CPU and I/O throughout with a 10+10+14 34-core 3-PC setup than with two 7980XE workstations...
09-21-2017 01:39 PM
AlexPeterson wrote:
Interesting. I plan on getting a single 7980XE for video and raw photo processing. What do you see bottle necking an 18 core processor that would lead to better throughput with fewer cores across multiple machines? Is it disk I/O? Would 18 core saturate dual 960 SSD's in your workflow?
09-20-2017 12:44 PM
DragonPurr wrote:
...a secondary heatsink underneath the I/O cover is ENTIRELY for the benefit of distributing the VRM's heat. The 10G does not need to be heatpiped to another heatsink and it can easily cool with a smaller heatsink compared to that included under the I/O cover right now....
09-20-2017 01:03 PM
AlexPeterson wrote:
That's good to know. How would the heat from the 10G be dissipated from under the I/O cover? Is there airflow under the cover? Or is radiance from the cover and shield enough to cool the area?
09-20-2017 06:29 PM
09-20-2017 06:31 PM
red773 wrote:
I just got my Rampage today, and I noticed that two of the left ram slots where open out of the box. Does this mean that the board was manually tested before being packaged or do all boards come like this?