Lets look at some bubble systems from Compaq and HP!

If you'd like to support the channel and help me to produce more videos like this, you can find me on Patreon: / miketech
You have my eternal gratitude!
Having a look at some systems from that weird, short-lived era of translucent plastic: Bubble systems! A Compaq Presario 5000, an HP Pavilion 360n, and an HP Pavilion a200n. Translucent plastic was the epitome of cool in the early 2000s and teenaged me certainly agreed!
0:00 Intro
0:20 System 1 Tour
3:13 S1 Disassembly
5:50 S1 Refresh and PSU test
10:28 S1 Case refresh
12:06 S1 Testing
15:50 S1 Re-face and verdict
16:13 System 2 Tour
17:09 S2 Disassembly and refresh
20:30 S2 Cleanup
22:34 S2 Testing
26:05 S2 Re-face and verdict
26:31 System 3 Tour
27:14 S3 Disassembly and refresh
29:24 S3 Testing and verdict
31:39 Other systems and outro

Пікірлер: 349

  • @AGXtube
    @AGXtube Жыл бұрын

    That blueish HP was an animal at the time. I got it with an adjustable 4:3 lcd. It smashed Zoo Tycoon 2 no problem! The bundle was around $1200 CAD at Costco early 2000s...

  • @davefarquhar8230
    @davefarquhar8230 Жыл бұрын

    Circa 2000, a number of tech influencers believed CD burners would wear out if we used them as readers, their logic being that the head was heavier in burners than in readers. Eventually we figured out it made little if any difference, but when your Compaq was new, there were people who would argue installing both was a best practice.

  • @isntyournamebacon

    @isntyournamebacon

    Жыл бұрын

    What i remember was you didnt want a 52x speed burner as it would give you more errors and was expencive AF. Had to wright the whole disc in one go and if anything stopped the data, the disc failed. So you had a high speed reader that was cheap and a slower drive speed for the writer. And yeah people talking about the burner drives wearing out. Given they cost more, it would be better to slap a cheapo reader and use it mostly then risk it.

  • @anthonygrimaldi9483

    @anthonygrimaldi9483

    Жыл бұрын

    Back then, you wanted two disk drives to easily copy from one drive to another.

  • @harveymiller621

    @harveymiller621

    Жыл бұрын

    I was literally working on an old Dell optiplex metal shell xp home version and was extremely confused why it had two different disk trays. The more you know. I just disconnected the second one and used the wires for the original hdd since I put an ssd on sata 0

  • @mjaerkens

    @mjaerkens

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anthonygrimaldi9483 I copied so many Playstation 1 games back in the day.

  • @jjb8171

    @jjb8171

    Жыл бұрын

    You needed a reader and a writer if you wanted to copy a cd without the need to make an image on your pc.

  • @Dan-TechAndMusic
    @Dan-TechAndMusic Жыл бұрын

    Ahhh, the Presario 5000, the first computer I used as the shared family PC, then as a hand me down. Still regret throwing it out when I got the next hand me down Presario. Having XP on my own PC in 2005 was still a big deal, the boys in my (three year older) sister's class were mad jealous, them still having OSes like 98 if they even had their own PC. Still remember the evening my dad was setting it up for me, installing XP. I was supposed to go to bed, but you know I kept going over to the studyroom to take a peek. Many hours of Rollercoaster Tycoon 1&2, SimCity 3000 and LEGO Creator were spent on it.

  • @bob2600
    @bob2600 Жыл бұрын

    On the Compaq 5000 series (purple bubble) PC, the top piece that is missing would have held a quick start guide on a little card that was punched into the plastic piece for reference.

  • @koobydotnet

    @koobydotnet

    Жыл бұрын

    When he nearly pulled it out on the second system but didn't quite get there, I was screaming at the television!

  • @bob2600

    @bob2600

    Жыл бұрын

    @@koobydotnet Not all systems had the card if I remember correctly. The second system looked like it did not have one and had a permanently attached piece of plastic as a placeholder.

  • @koobydotnet

    @koobydotnet

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bob2600 Fair enough! Oh man, what a time to be alive though. These towers were so cool.

  • @hio54
    @hio54 Жыл бұрын

    Love your enthusiasm for old systems. I love getting my hands on older systems and getting them working again. Wish the sentiment was shared by my girlfriend.

  • @RetroPC

    @RetroPC

    Жыл бұрын

    My wife does not share this sentiment with me either. 😆

  • @Ptero4

    @Ptero4

    Жыл бұрын

    @@RetroPC Women tend to be incompatible with retro omputing (or any non-mainstream hobby for that matter). It's just how they were designed.

  • @jameshaley8162

    @jameshaley8162

    Жыл бұрын

    YES! I like to do this as well AND...my wife is not happy about it at all. But...I tell her the Truth..its a low cost hobby that keeps me out of trouble with everyone but Her...but...she endures. Stay strong, stay inquisitive and have fun, sir.

  • @HarakiriRock

    @HarakiriRock

    Жыл бұрын

    @32discodave There are plenty of other uses besides those for these old systems. I just built an XP machine specifically for analog video capture. I would strongly advise anyone to not use these for a server unless you get a new case, these old OEM cases had 0 airflow and often no option to mount any intake fans.

  • @dlinkster
    @dlinkster Жыл бұрын

    My mom had a Compaq Presario 5000 and it honestly lasted far longer than it should have. I upgraded it from Windows 98 to Windows Me and finally to Windows XP. If memory serves me correctly, we got hers in early 2001 and she had it until mid-2005.

  • @jameshaley8162

    @jameshaley8162

    Жыл бұрын

    ...I acquired an 2005 Noblis business computer in 2016. It came from a small business and was used mostly for their on-line applications like check cashing, sales promotions, things like that. It had 1 gig of Ram, a 40 GB h.d.d.s and was using XP. ...and it often got Very Dusty inside...My wife brought it home twice for me to 'fix it' when...luckily...it just needed a good dusting...and 'Poof!' it worked again and she'd take it back to the store. One day, she brought it home and said that I could keep it. ...I upped the ram to 4 GB and a 3.4 Processor and installed Windows 7....I still use the Noblis...that I dubbed The Phantom Cruiser...not everyday like I used to but that bad boy works well....And I think for being made in 2005, it was/is Quite a computer. I was impressed by its speed and possible Up Grades it 'Could Have Had Done'.

  • @lastinline1958
    @lastinline1958 Жыл бұрын

    This is one of the few mainly hardware related channels. I love it. Thanks for doing this.

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! I've always been slightly more hardware-oriented. Kind of strange that I work 100% in the cloud now... This is my way of getting a hardware fix!

  • @Kboyer36
    @Kboyer36 Жыл бұрын

    That last HP brings back good memories. My family had that exact computer although I remember ours had a 2.7Ghz Celeron so it might have been a slightly newer model. Loved the look of that case.

  • @rmcdudmk212

    @rmcdudmk212

    Жыл бұрын

    HP made some very nice looking machines during this time period.

  • @J.Wick.
    @J.Wick.10 ай бұрын

    Sees De-Oxit on the shelf, and also used in the video....Ahh...I see, a man of culture. LMAO...That's great stuff. Love seeing these now retro machines come back to life. I'd have been around 15-20 when these were new. I remember them well. Cheers!

  • @ALXMARTIN
    @ALXMARTIN Жыл бұрын

    Gotta love a hot tech guy who hits the nostalgia itch

  • @GageBrown
    @GageBrown Жыл бұрын

    Hey MikeTech, If you Don't Know about GameHouse Solitaire, This is Super GameHouse Solitaire Volume 1, It was a Card Game Developed by GameHouse and Released on October 31st, 2002, The Difference on Windows Solitaire and GameHouse Solitaire is That Windows has Solitaire, Hearts, and Freecell While GameHouse Solitaire has 10 Games on 1 Ranging From Klondike Solitaire, Pyramid Solitaire, Tri-Peak Solitaire, Golf Solitaire and others.

  • @parandersson6541
    @parandersson6541 Жыл бұрын

    This is one of my favourite channels regarding retro computers, i almost cant wait for new videos :)

  • @wilfordbrimley3319
    @wilfordbrimley3319 Жыл бұрын

    I remember my parents having a Compaq Presario 5000. I think it was their second computer. Pretty nostalgic.

  • @krantz55
    @krantz55 Жыл бұрын

    The HP 350n is very similar to an HP my Granny bought in 2001 with an Intel Celeron here in Canada. The extra speaker port was for the included Polk Audio speakers. The speakers had a single cable and no external power. You are correct, that is an amplifier in the case. An interesting system for sure. Brings back many wonderful memories! Not long after Granny bought her HP, our small town got high speed ADSL service. I hardly recall using dial-up. I was quite small when she got that machine.

  • @HarakiriRock

    @HarakiriRock

    Жыл бұрын

    Woah, thanks for this comment. I've had a similar HP and the Polk speakers since childhood, but had forgotten they were meant to be paired together. Every time I see those speakers I wonder where they came from and why they're unpowered, but now it makes sense and the memories of using them together are starting to come back to me.

  • @KirstenleeCinquetti
    @KirstenleeCinquetti11 ай бұрын

    The first compaq system is a masterclass in how to produce a prebuilt if only modern systems were so thoughtfully put together

  • @ffwast
    @ffwast7 ай бұрын

    I ended up with all these cases,3 was what our family computer came in,2 was what my mom's office computer came in,and I found number 1 on the curb with the original peripherals

  • @jessestrobel2
    @jessestrobel2 Жыл бұрын

    Great channel! These systems are in some of my earliest memories (born 02/2003).

  • @MrSardoc1
    @MrSardoc1 Жыл бұрын

    0:28 gotta admire how much detail went into printing this manual and making sure the panel stands out. 1:03 love this CD storage. Very convenient. 1:57 ... I have questions :D 3:25 oh boy dust galore extravaganza. 9:29 ba dum TSSSSSSSS! 22:43 ouch. That fan looks like it's in pain. 26:08 ah yes, the wanna-be vinyl disc.

  • @dlinkster
    @dlinkster Жыл бұрын

    I always get a kick out of watching your videos. I’m always impressed as how meticulous and gentle you are with these old systems. I also have your power supply tester. Can’t live without it.

  • @maxtornogood
    @maxtornogood Жыл бұрын

    Early 2000's vibes going on here! I can remember seeing S1 at college starting around then though it was separate from the standard beige cases we had at the time. At home we also had a HP desktop in the style of S3 which had a slightly faster P4, 2.8Ghz. You barely get enough time to enjoy this side hobby, you do well to get videos out!

  • @geoffreyreuther5260
    @geoffreyreuther5260 Жыл бұрын

    Yass! I've been waiting for that Compaq 5000 series. Let's do this! 2:21 those plastic Q's were cosmetic, not functional. But similar to the face plate, they could be swapped with different designs. 8:03 - Also, the model number starts with LTN, another clue it's a Lite-On. You made that thing shine! Nice!

  • @userperson5259
    @userperson5259 Жыл бұрын

    I have an HP a500n. I paid to have it recapped because I like it. It is still a snappy computer with a 32-bit operating system on it. It was a workhorse in the home office for many years and is still very useful for many things. These old machines are like horses. They just need a job if we can find one for them.

  • @RetroPC
    @RetroPC Жыл бұрын

    That HP Pavilion A200N is the system my Dad bought me for my freshman year of college. I had the matching printer, monitor, keyboard, mouse, and speakers. It's sat in their house for about 10 years unused, and I think I sold it for about $65 in 2015. Should have held onto it. You don't see complete systems like that much anymore. Thanks for the awesome video, as always!

  • @ChrisLarsen760
    @ChrisLarsen760 Жыл бұрын

    You are a beautiful man! That HP was my workhorse for the longest time in the late 90's.

  • @furious_gaming14furious_ga91
    @furious_gaming14furious_ga91 Жыл бұрын

    You have to be my favourite youtuber in the space of retro pc restoration, your personality and presentation with these are brilliant. I recently fixed up a PC myself that had an Athlon XP 1800 in it too :p

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much! 🙂

  • @allenlind3574
    @allenlind3574 Жыл бұрын

    I touched hundreds and hundreds of these back in the day at both Best Buy store level and service center (repair facility when they sent it out for repair from the stores). Crazy how all the little nuaunces and details came back to me before you even cracked them open. Good video.

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa23611 ай бұрын

    This channel slowly becomes addictive...

  • @doublecontralto818
    @doublecontralto81810 ай бұрын

    I had a Persario 5000! Reused the case for a sleeper build years later.... mega nostalgia

  • @MrAsBBB
    @MrAsBBB Жыл бұрын

    Love these videos. I think the amount of dust in a fan correlates with the amount of pets you have. When I had cats the fans had a serious amount of hair in them. Probably because they spent hours sitting on my keyboard desperate to stop me working. These are a pleasure to watch…..

  • @jameshaley8162

    @jameshaley8162

    Жыл бұрын

    ....Yes...I had four four-legged family members at one time, but only one enjoyed watching me hammer away on the keyboard. Often, she would lay above the keyboard, that was on a slide out shelf...and she'd reach out and lay a paw on the keyboard as I tapped away. ....I think it was her way of 'being a part of it' ...OR....her way of being with me.

  • @sergioislas9446
    @sergioislas9446 Жыл бұрын

    The nostalgia!!! There's a decomissioned a-series HP tower from around 2003 on my parent's house, and can definitely tell you its industrial design has aged quite well compared to the other HP you cleaned up. More so if you paired It with the then-edgy LCD flat panel (VGA only, though), as my father did!More on that later. That tower was our family computer for many years, until my siblings and my dad had each one a laptop. Our hp, however, was a more upscale model. It was clearly meant to be a multimedia PC as it came with an AMD Athlon CPU @2.8 ghz, had an onboard nVidia GeForce 4 graphics card with 32-128 MB shared memory over an AGP 8x bus (as well as a spare AGP socket), 128 MB DDR RAM, a DVD-RW drive on the top and a CD-ROM on the bottom, of course a floppy drive but also a multi-card combo which could take CF, MMC, SD, and Sony's own Memory Stick, as well as a USB 2.0 + FireWire header justo in case you wanted to download your DV-cam's footage. Over time, I upgraded it with a second hard drive, a standard PCI (not PCIe) 802.11abg WiFi card, and topped up the ram to its maximum 2 GB, but could not get Windows 7 on It because the AMD CPU lacked sse2 support. Ten years later, by 2013, It was so obsolete that even Linux mint struggled to run fine on It: this time not because of the CPU but because of the onboard graphics, which proved to be troublesome. I was stuck with XP sp3 for the rest of the computer's life, although I hacked the registry to get POSready updates from Windows update. At that point, I rarely used the HP but to write long papers, as my laptop was way more powerful and convenient. As I mentioned before, my dad bought the tower along a 15" LCD flat panel and matching Harman Kardon speakers, which are still in service to this day! Sure, an HDMI to VGA adapter had to be placed in the middle but, hey! It does help a lot if you want a secondary laptop screen -to check emails or do a quick web browse, on a raher cramped home-office (or, should I say appartment-office) desktop! I wonder why HP got rid of that classy navy/bluish silver color scheme, It does look bold yet classy and timeless. I still get compliments on the looks of the monitor whenever I have visits on my flat. Sadly, the keyboard an mouse are another story: the bundled optical mouse died three years later and, over time, the keyboard's keys jammed so much because of wear and tear. Neither a deep clean by pulling out the keycaps or lubbing the stems made an improvement so, for now, It Is stored away until I can figure out how to make It work properly. Gosh, so many memories... I strongly advice you to get the whole matching set for the tower and please your eyes, you won't regret It. Same for the Compaq: my uncle had one of those and looked so great with the purplish-blue speakers hanging on the sides of the CRT screen. How did PC design came to be so bland these days?

  • @tangerinepuma28
    @tangerinepuma28 Жыл бұрын

    Another amazing video. Every time I visit KZread on a Friday, I am always met with a smile cause of this man.

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! 🙂

  • @MojoWrangler
    @MojoWrangler Жыл бұрын

    Dude!!! Leaf blower on the driveway. My allergies went off from here. These videos bring back memories I didn't know I had.

  • @michaelathens953
    @michaelathens953 Жыл бұрын

    I had one of those HP Pavilion machines from the early 2000s. 800 Mhz P3 Celeron, windows ME and 64 mb of ram. Huge POS, replaced it with the first PC I built myself: a gaming machine I built out of an HP kayak workstation that outperformed the pavilion by a mile.

  • @koobydotnet
    @koobydotnet Жыл бұрын

    I love how the Compaq was "cutting edge" with its front USB but it was too shy to have them exposed to the elements, hence the door! But yes, when I was younger my grandfather had one of these with 64 megs of RAM. Years later upgraded it to 256 and years after that I managed to get Ubuntu headless installed and the TTY would just display hieroglyphics so I blindly installed SSH with Apt!

  • @falsebaroness
    @falsebaroness Жыл бұрын

    New MikeTech AND New Summoning Salt on same day? Yes, please.

  • @marktubeie07
    @marktubeie07 Жыл бұрын

    _Mmm, bubblishous goodness!!_ Great vid Mike as usual - love your dry humor :)

  • @davidplaster4576
    @davidplaster4576 Жыл бұрын

    Everyone of these systems that I worked on over the years, eventually the motherboard failed. These boards also were known for capacitor plague, every single one of them. I was able to swap in an aftermarket board, cpu, and memory to get them back up and running. Everyone of them were loaded in dust, and never cared for. The HP Pavilion was the easiest system to upgrade to a much higher platform, and even added a front all-in-one card reader in the 3.5 empty slot.

  • @MyReetkever
    @MyReetkever Жыл бұрын

    This is a trip down memory lane. I've had the middle one as a child, and my grandfather had the left one. I think the middle one is missing a weird plastic corner inside which directed the flow from the CPU directly to the outside of the chassis. I've had the matching crt screen with the weird ear like speakers and the matching mouse and keyboard. Wish I've kept both, but I was still a child back then.Thank you for this.

  • @FromSagansStardust

    @FromSagansStardust

    4 ай бұрын

    With the exception of it being a Pavilion 760n, same here! Yes, I wish I still had the elephant ear monitor and the keyboard! I was in my early 40s, though.

  • @timmooney7528
    @timmooney7528 Жыл бұрын

    The button on top of those systems with blue smoke facade is a pull tab attached to a piece of carboard with information on it

  • @vwbug1975
    @vwbug1975 Жыл бұрын

    In 1998, i was given a box of 50 of thise NICs when a friend working for an IT company did upgrades to all the company computers. He got around 400 or so in total. I gave NICs away to everyone at a party of local IRC' friends.

  • @HarakiriRock
    @HarakiriRock Жыл бұрын

    Had to watch this video as soon as I saw the thumbnail since I have all 3 of these cases, albeit different systems inside 😆 I was impressed by the quality of that first Compaq case. It's quite heavy duty and the latching side panel is really nice for a prebuilt of that era. I too assumed the gray piece on top slides out but I was too scared to try and force it. You have taught me how to remove the front panel though (why did they make it so complicated?), so thank you for that. Be careful with the power button on that last HP. The switch isn't centered (it's towards either the top or bottom, can't remember which) and the button will eventually snap off if pressed too hard in the center. Weird and annoying design flaw. My cousin had a PC in the same case and it happened to his too. This is a very cool, high quality video. I like the bits of humor you throw in and your knowledge of these old components. Definitely gonna like and subscribe. 👍

  • @danw1955
    @danw1955 Жыл бұрын

    Heh, I still have one of those Presario 5000 series hiding in my back room. It likely needs to go in the recycle bin, but I've got to have SOMETHING to collect dust to keep it off my working machines!🤣 Nice work on the cleanup!

  • @spaceman7915
    @spaceman7915 Жыл бұрын

    I was watching while wife was cooking dinner and she was giggling at your puns and humor.

  • @VladiFx
    @VladiFx Жыл бұрын

    Mike! We are really waiting for your repair videos! :)

  • @slightlyevolved
    @slightlyevolved Жыл бұрын

    I sold a lot of those 5000's. I remember the first few years of that design having a special thing that I think one person took advantage of, where they'd send you one free faceplate in a color you could choose other than the included blue.

  • @eugeniuszgorka8599
    @eugeniuszgorka8599 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Mike for the video. I have to unhook the front panel. I didn't know how to do it. Now I know how. Regards , From Poland .Dzięki , Mike za filmik . Muszę odpiąć panel czołowy . Nie wiedziałem jak to zrobić . Teraz wiem jak . Pozdrawiam . Z polski🤔🤗🤝👍

  • @SilverXTikal
    @SilverXTikal Жыл бұрын

    The 360N one with a CD folder on the top was my favorite dumpster dive find as a kid. First PC I had that ever had XP on it and that was something I wanted more than a PS2

  • @Mattson402
    @Mattson402 Жыл бұрын

    I got a Compaq Presario in 1998 but I distinctly remember mine having a DVD drive.

  • @darklemon1
    @darklemon1 Жыл бұрын

    seeing the Knoppix disk makes memory's fly back into view

  • @pomonabill220
    @pomonabill220 Жыл бұрын

    Rainbow watch! Hunky too!

  • @ManuelJBD
    @ManuelJBD Жыл бұрын

    My first computer was one of those bubble HP systems! I can confirm the extra audio output was amplified audio. The speakers it came with would plug directly to that without an extra power cable. Kinda neat for cable management!

  • @typlswwwwwwf
    @typlswwwwwwf Жыл бұрын

    Oh my god!!!!! the 3rd compaq on the right, that was my first PC!!! thank you so much for these videos mike

  • @blackheart58
    @blackheart58 Жыл бұрын

    As always your sense of humor cracks me up! I like the CD storage on both the compaq and HP. I like the compaq better. The dust in the second system was crazy. I never saw that much dust in a computer. I like that it had a paper cd in the storage compartment. The look of the last HP really appealed to me. I like it. The bubble systems are cool too! The last one is especially cool. Too bad you didn’t have time for the last two systems. Keep the videos coming, they make my day!

  • @sofaltiv
    @sofaltiv Жыл бұрын

    i always find it fascinating with how much care and love you approach such old pc systems. keep up the good work mike! i think your channel is great! i hope you have more of this free time in the future that everyone talks about ... greetings from germany! :)

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @beagsx3
    @beagsx39 ай бұрын

    Ahhhh the memories. Our first family computer was an HP bubble computer of some description. I can remember it was a celeron cpu and came running with Windows ME 😄

  • @arador1968
    @arador1968 Жыл бұрын

    I have worked on almost every system you have made a video on so far... Love the videos.🙂

  • @eunitskates
    @eunitskates Жыл бұрын

    I got a secondhand HP 360n as a kid. I believe they went with an amplified audio jack to help out the piddly Harmon/Kardon desktop speakers.

  • @stephenroberts7554
    @stephenroberts7554 Жыл бұрын

    Wow this is a blast from the past ❤ I had a Compaq that looked almost like the one at the start of this video and one of my best friends had an HP computer that looked exactly like the one on the left loved these style of computers ❤

  • @clarkesuperman
    @clarkesuperman8 ай бұрын

    The Compaq Presario in the beginning had the regular CD-Rom and the CD-RW drive so you could copy CDs direct from disc. That’s why they had the disc holder built into the front. The PC was built around and marketed with Windows Media Center, which debuted with XP.

  • @pierreinthavong181
    @pierreinthavong181 Жыл бұрын

    Mike, Nice relaxing PC preview - I'm proud of you!👏👏👏👏🙂

  • @theshadowman1398
    @theshadowman1398 Жыл бұрын

    That compaq case is pretty epic especially to do a modern build in.

  • @CorgiButtOnWheels
    @CorgiButtOnWheels Жыл бұрын

    Man, what a blast from the past! The last two computers were very close if not the same models my family used back in the day! Loved those HP machines.

  • @cthriftfl
    @cthriftfl Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! I'm still an AMD fanboy and proud of it! 😁

  • @rmcdudmk212

    @rmcdudmk212

    Жыл бұрын

    Nothing wrong with that 😂

  • @keithbrown7685

    @keithbrown7685

    Жыл бұрын

    You are a sick man. Just stay where you are, and some nice people will come and take you to a place where you can rest and not have the bad thoughts.

  • @cthriftfl

    @cthriftfl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@keithbrown7685 🤣

  • @reklamaboy

    @reklamaboy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@keithbrown7685 ungoodthought

  • @NapierNimbus
    @NapierNimbus Жыл бұрын

    Great video, dust buildup in the first one plus the cpu cooler astonishing

  • @danytoob
    @danytoob Жыл бұрын

    That was fun. I upgraded to hardware like that. CD players were marvels of the future coming from my 5 1/4 & 3 1/2 floppies. Quality testament of the day that things still worked so well. Great content, so big thanks for your work!

  • @sjgrall
    @sjgrall Жыл бұрын

    My father's first PC was a Presario 7000Z (looks the same) with the AMD Athlon. It had endless hardware issues - CPU, memory, hard drive -- all replaced under warranty. Got him to switch to a Mac in 2006. I ended up donating it around 2016.

  • @wastelandwanderer3883
    @wastelandwanderer3883 Жыл бұрын

    We had one similar to the first system you shown, from 1998. The storage on top held a kind of a quick-start guide, convenient, but rarely used lollllll.

  • @StudioF
    @StudioF Жыл бұрын

    Great video. brings back memories.

  • @deusprogrammer_thekingofspace
    @deusprogrammer_thekingofspace Жыл бұрын

    These were my favorite computer styles. I used to sell these at Best Buy. I wish that modern PC's had this style again, or that at least it was an option. I guess I could always build a sleeper PC in one of these cases. The little tag you were looking at usually had some information on it. I think it had the serial number and service tag.

  • @TheVintageApplianceEmporium
    @TheVintageApplianceEmporium Жыл бұрын

    Sod the bubbles, I know what I want to blow 😆 Great video as always!

  • @planetrob555
    @planetrob555 Жыл бұрын

    I worked for ASUS as a bench repair tech for systems under warranty. They pronounced it ASOOS, not ACES. Just saying. Not being mean or anything. Nice video. I enjoyed watching this.

  • @Greg1096

    @Greg1096

    3 ай бұрын

    I worked in an Asus warranty and refurbish facility back around 2008, I was in the laptop dept. Was an interesting job if only they had paid reasonably for the work. Ended up leaving to repair industrial CNC and robots.

  • @m_rocka
    @m_rocka Жыл бұрын

    Love the lower cased, darker design of HP machines in the 2000s

  • @fathermurphy218
    @fathermurphy218 Жыл бұрын

    Very happy to see the psu tester added your arsenal. I obtained one recently and it's been so handy to have in the kit.

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    It sure beats jumping the PS_ON signal and rigging up voltmeters!

  • @MikesArcadeMonitorRepair
    @MikesArcadeMonitorRepair Жыл бұрын

    I worked at Radio Shack from '98-'00 and I'm experiencing serious flashbacks seeing that Presario for the first time since then. Only thing missing is the CueCat scanner.

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    I miss RadioShack so much... Loved having a brick-and-mortar source for components. Now I have to wait days for that one resistor value I don't have.

  • @FarnhamJ07

    @FarnhamJ07

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm a little younger, but it gave me the same feelings! I had the 5000 with the green accent plates as my first not-shared-with family PC as a kid. I remember upgrading the RAM from 128MB and the weird rubber bumper on the HDD; wasting my life playing the Sims-and even more downloading user-made objects over dial-up, haha. Annoying my mom to buy me Cakewalk ScoreWriter so I could turn random MIDIs into sheet music...So many memories; I ran that thing into the ground using it so much.

  • @DerekWitt

    @DerekWitt

    Жыл бұрын

    I got lots of components from radio shack all the time. Last thing I put together with RS components was an IR receiver circuit that plugged into the microphone jack and was powered by USB. The IR receiver was a 3-legged component that I bridged 2 legs (data and ground) with a diode. I probably didn’t need the diode. I then used lircd in windows and Linux. Worked a treat!

  • @The.Orchard
    @The.Orchard Жыл бұрын

    On older Pavillion machines, HP often used unpowered speakers and put a small but powerful amp inside the tower. I once had one of those tiny amps fry itself. The smell was awful, the speakers were toast, and there were scorch marks on the little board attached to the speaker connector inside (the tiny amp board I guess). Fortunately, whatever blew out didn't affect the rest of the computer. So with a standard PCI sound card and some cheap powered external speakers, everything worked again. So on the second machine (first Pavillion), I suspect that's what the yellow speaker jack is. And the sticker on the back of the third machine (second HP) says you need powered speakers. Since that's the case for most computers, the fact that they felt it necessary to put that sticker there suggests that they did it the other way for so long with Pavillions, that they expected repeat customers to need this extra disclosure, in case they were using speakers that came with an older computer, which wouldn't have their own power supply.

  • @meskes4059
    @meskes4059 Жыл бұрын

    I had one of these Compaqs with an Athlon TBird in it. Loved that machine

  • @NicolasTheGuy
    @NicolasTheGuy Жыл бұрын

    YES! Another video, more systems more fun!

  • @nelsoncabrera6464
    @nelsoncabrera64648 ай бұрын

    Wow this really hits the nostalgia circuits hard. My first Compaq was a K6-2 450mhz system with 96mb of ram from CompUSA I bought to play the hot new mmorpg everyone was talking about (Everquest). Couldn't afford the Compaq branded monitor so ended up buying a cheaper NEC Multisync 70 that in retrospect was probably a better CRT than the Compaq one. I'm still kicking myself for throwing the system in the trash a few years later. Actually I'm kicking myself for all the amazing tech I've thrown out or given away. I would kill to have my childhood SNES back or my C64. Now I don't throw stuff away, just pack them back up in their boxes and add them to my ever growing pile of "stuff" that is driving my spouse insane. :)

  • @StenCpu
    @StenCpu Жыл бұрын

    Whow, memories :-) I used to sell such a Compaqs back in 2001,2002 and still remember that there is a storage for CDs 🙂

  • @A-Smith
    @A-Smith Жыл бұрын

    New subscriber here and just had a pleasant afternoon watching many of your past videos. They brought back so many happy memories repairing old computers in my previous job. Great channel, great presentation and you're a pleasure to watch in so many ways😉. Keep up the great work.

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! Glad you’re enjoying them. 🙂

  • @worroSfOretsevraH
    @worroSfOretsevraH Жыл бұрын

    A small tip: you can renew and reuse the original semi-dried up thermal paste with a little WD40. Needs a bit of rubbing until it completely dissolves it.

  • @vonhapen1
    @vonhapen1 Жыл бұрын

    No week is complete without your fridays hardware review. I really like your sense for the (smaller and bigger) details. 👍🏼

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @nickj610
    @nickj610 Жыл бұрын

    I had a ompaq Presario 7000, way back when.. it was model 7RPME2. Oh the memories…

  • @tony--james
    @tony--james Жыл бұрын

    Yet another Friday, ! great video, full of so many awesome "One Liners" lol

  • @ForTheBirbs
    @ForTheBirbs Жыл бұрын

    Such a great video in your inimitable style. I love your humour. Its rather ironic expecting to hear your old faithful clickety-clack hard drives on power supply smoke tests. Cheers

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! 🙂

  • @John-uc6gb
    @John-uc6gb Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the video. Good content.

  • @Anarchist86ed
    @Anarchist86ed Жыл бұрын

    Had that same HP 360. I bet there's still Napster on the HD with thousands of MP3 files. Been sitting in my closet for damn near 20 years.

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    I can hear it begging you to boot it up!

  • @Anarchist86ed

    @Anarchist86ed

    Жыл бұрын

    I can hear the spiders living in it begging me not to. 😂

  • @fussbucket3080
    @fussbucket3080 Жыл бұрын

    Had a200n from 2003-2011, I loved that thing it got me into computers when I was younger, I would love to find another one and upgrade it. The lack of AGP really hampers the system though

  • @fintux
    @fintux Жыл бұрын

    Pavilion was originally as Compaq brand, so all HP computers branded as Pavilion are after they acquired Compaq. That is why the systems are so similar (translucent plastic, CD holders etc.) as they have been made by the same company.

  • @zeng58
    @zeng58 Жыл бұрын

    I burst out laughing seeing the free aol dial up internet hours trial lmao 🤣

  • @zanehayes4380
    @zanehayes4380 Жыл бұрын

    I had a Pavilion 7966 growing up. It’s cosmetically the same as the 360n, except it has a Pentium. The audio jack on the back is an amplifier I believe, for desktop speakers.

  • @CH32mix
    @CH32mix Жыл бұрын

    One thing worth pointing out, is that those presario machines doesn't have a standard ATX power suply, they are a little bit smaller... I had a Compaq Presario when growing up, very similar to the one featured here but with a metal badge with the brand and series name... it was an XP machine with pentium 4 at 1.5Ghz, 256MB of SDRAM(133mhz) and instead of a regular cd drive, it had a DVD on top of the CD Burner... and the door for the usb ports wasn't clear and it had an nVidia sticker (can't remember if it was a riva2 or tnt2... but it was a very entry level card with 16MB of video memory) That machine received many upgrades... a dvd burner (with a black faceplace lol, but still didn't look bad), 256MB of extra ram, and even a memory card reader (can't remember if i disconnected the usb or if it had a free usb header on the mobo, and if the memory card had a usb port...) The only thing i didn't upgrade was the usb ports... they were usb 1.1, and were painfully slow when transfering games to my psp... wish i had a pci with usb headers so i could enjoy usb 2.0... but it was a great machine, and the monitor had a microphone attached to the top, maybe the "misterious" jack on the HP are the same, but odly to not just use the pink jack intended for microphone

  • @hotgarbagellc
    @hotgarbagellc Жыл бұрын

    My parents had a 360n. It came in the box with somewhat decent passive speakers, that required amplification. Amazingly I also had an a200n at the same time, so this video really hit me with the good nostalgia. I was not a fan of the gimped Celeron chip, I remember.

  • @hotgarbagellc

    @hotgarbagellc

    Жыл бұрын

    That "Let's face it" at 31:27.. Shit dude I spit my drink out. That was so funny

  • @VikingDudee
    @VikingDudee Жыл бұрын

    makes sense that 2nd hap tower looked similar to the compaq, HP bought Compaq in 2002, and even HP kept the Compaq brand going for a while

  • @moonshapedabsolution
    @moonshapedabsolution11 ай бұрын

    As kid I had a Presario 5000 running on ME with a Nvidia GPU with the matching monitor mounted speakers. Ran really well and was good the gaming at the time (It could run Mafia at full graphics and Sims 2 without frame drops). I actually miss it

  • @JesBuscus94
    @JesBuscus94 Жыл бұрын

    Man. I had one of the presario 5000s when I was in college. It was gifted to me by my hometown museum. I could not figure out how to put an operating system on it so I just gave up trying to fix it and had it taken to recycling. If only I knew.

  • @MagnumForce51
    @MagnumForce51 Жыл бұрын

    Nice set of HP machines you got there. I own or have owned all 3 of those. The A200N is very similar to one my family had in the early to mid 2000s. Probably not that exact model but the chassis design was identical. We even owned an even older HP that preceded that one. As for the 360n I have a 310n so not 100% the same but same case design. Got it recently for only $30 off face book. Seller was sitting on it for almost a month so he had lowered it from 60 dollars to 30. Came with the original printer and monitor too. (must have been bought as a set at some point in it's original release era). Though I had to fashion a modified base for the monitor as the original stand was missing the bottom half that it sits on. But the stand to my now dead Gateway VX700 happened to fit the top half well enough. Swivels quite smoothly on it actually. Anyways it's the HP Mx70 model and doesn't have an anti-glare coating on it which was surprising. Most monitors in the 2000s and up started having that. The end result is it's much brighter then the Dell e771p I was using so made it my main display. Given the broken stand it it was in a bit rough shape with some scratches on the left bezel but other then that it's working great and still plenty bright and sharp. As for that 310n it still has the original restore partition too though not the original restore CDs. Anyone happen to know where to find images of those? Curious if the 360n's restore CDs would work on my 310 or not. The Presario 5000 had been with my sister for quite some time until a few years ago when she returned it. Was surprised. I expected she had upgraded it and just tossed it but nope she kept it. So I have that one too now. I forget how I originally came across it back in the day prior to my sister borrowing it after she moved out. Don't think it was the main family's PC as it was always one I used exclusively. Mine has is red version and was badged for Windows Me so might have been a slightly newer version of the one you have. Though unfortunately the original monitor to that one is long gone. EDIT: Interesting your 360n is a AMD machine while my 310n is a Celeron. Your Presario 5000 is a PIII but I checked and mine is AMD. So mine's uno reversed. :P

  • @robichag
    @robichag Жыл бұрын

    I’m having all kinds of Nerdgasms right now ❤

  • @augustbiernbaum4841
    @augustbiernbaum4841 Жыл бұрын

    I’ve got the HP Pavilion 563 that uses the same case as that one, I’ve recently gutted it and built a gaming rig in it. I love their design

  • @davidsurety2629
    @davidsurety2629 Жыл бұрын

    Dave from London here again. Another great video . Wow your up to 7.7 K subscribers keep em coming . You must have that magic touch 👍🏻

  • @miketech1024

    @miketech1024

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks! I can hardly believe it… 10k is in sight!

  • @davidsurety2629

    @davidsurety2629

    Жыл бұрын

    @@miketech1024 it sure is people obviously love you and the way you present I feel privileged to be along for the ride joined at 2k subscribers Wishing you all the best