There is so much technology out there , so many variants of each brand and model its not practical to list every machine and model we support, however there is a good chance we can help, reach out to us, we will setup a 30 min consultation which is free and work out how we can help and typically provide 3 solutions to the problem.
"Get-you-going"
"Mid-range"
"Full-restore"
Each solution comes with quote for works to be completed and time scale for doing each.
Whether you are not sure what you need or know exactly what you need - we have 25 years of experience behind us with old hardware, we are confident we can help.
Introduced in October 1985, - they were the industry standard - the go to guys for CPU's- 12 MHz to 40 MHz were the clock speeds, these are now super rare and highly collectable - they run DOS games with a degree of success.
The 486 was introduced in 1989, They were available with a clock speed from 16-100mhz it was the first chip to use over 1 million transistors, this was due to a large on-chip cache and an integrated floating-point unit. It represents a fourth generation. This chip is capable of all DOS games and Windows 95.
The first Pentium chip was introduced in 1993 as the successor to the 486; thus the Pentium began as the fifth generation of the Intel x86 architecture it was capable enough to work DOS windows 985, 98se, ME operating systems, you did have to have 32Meg of RAM to make the latter work though.
The Pentium 2 range added MMX multimedia instructions to Pentium Pro and introduced the Single Edge Connector Cartridge (SECC) for Slot 1. The Pentium II used a 66 or 100 MHz system bus. Desktop models had 7.5 million transistors,