Archived from groups: uk.comp.vendors,uk.comp.homebuilt,alt.comp.periphs.mainboard.asus,alt.comp.periphs.mainboard.gigabyte (
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In article <crk611$iur$1@lust.ihug.co.nz>, me@spam.com says...
> The fact that many asus supplied dell mobos that had the psu cludge proves
> the point... how many of these mobo's got blown up by plugging in standard
> psu's when the dell psu failed? where was the warning sticker? who owns the
> product when it is paid for? I hear it is happening again...
I have a number of Dell's that have the non-standard ATX power
connector. I tried several times to replace the PSU with a standard ATX
unit and noticed that it didn't work. No damage to the motherboard or
the PSU. I called Dell about it and was told it's a non-standard PSU. I
ordered a Dell replacement for $65 and was done with it.
A quick search on google shows at least 20 companies that many a large
number of ATX to non-standard ATX (for more than just Dell) PSU cable
adapters.
There is still a large value to customers, home users, purchasing
computers from Volume Retail outlets, even if you don't accept it
yourself.
Would I purchase a Retail system for my own use - yes and no. About 2
years ago I needed a P4 for some .Net development work and my other
systems were tied up (this was for my home), so I bought a Sony VAIO at
Best Buy (retail outlet), it was cheaper and quicker than getting time
to spec/order/deliver/assy a system by my normal self-build means. I use
the same system to this day - they have a non-standard PSU size, but 5
minutes with a dremal tool and I installed a 480W standard ATX PSU in
it. I also replaced the video card with a dual-port video card, replaced
the DVD-RW drive (which has a custom bezel) with a standard DVD+/-RW
drive (the case had removable parts that made a standard drive work
fine. I even installed an IDE RAID controller card in the system and
dual 250GB SATA drives.
So, while it's still a 1.8g P4 without Hyper-Threading, it still works
quite well and has been expanded to meet all my home needs.
The same is true with several of those Dell units. With the exception of
the PSU connector, they all take normal drives (Hard, CD, etc...), new
video cards, new sound cards, more memory (unless you maxed it out when
you bought it) and even faster CPU's.
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