Used to service these under warranty for HP. I replaced maybe 150 power supplies and nearly the same number of system boards for this model. Such quality.
Thanks! Never would have guessed you needed to remove that back panel. Also, for anyone with the PC speaker in the way, FULLY dismount the motherboard tray and lift it up and set it over a little bit (you don't need to fully remove the motherboard). It will let you get the PSU past the speaker assembly.
My D530 SFF power-supply died after a power-fail somewhere in 2011/12. In mid 2019 I reused 2003 D530 motherboard, memory (1280 MB, 400MHz) and CPU (P-IV, 3.0 GHz) in a Compaq Evo tower case with a Win 98SE activation code. It has 1.21 TB of storage; 2 x 3.5" IDE HDDs (250 + 320 MB) and 2 x 2.5" SATA-1 HDDs (2 x 320 MB). It runs now FreeBSD 12.2 on ZFS and it backs up my desktop. It is powered on for ~1 hour/week to receive the incremental backup (zfs send | ssh receive). It runs at ~200 Mbps due to a ~95% CPU load on one of the 2 CPU threads. Three times I installed a Peppermint Linux OS on these Pentium 4's. Last week for my brother in law. He bought the PC for 500 Dominican Pesos ($9) with 512 MB of memory (400 MHz) and a 64 MB NV11 video card. I have added two striped 40 GB IDE HDDs (brtfs), a PCI WiFi card from my left-overs and the system is still somewhat usable. It boots in ~1 minute and displays TH-cam at 360p :) We are looking for some more cheap Chinese memory (true dual bandwdith usage) for both computers, expected CPU speed improvement ~20%. I also expect a performance improvement with the introduction of the Dec 2020 openZFS rel 2.0, that has major CPU performance improvements (80%) in the receive function. The new FreeBSD and Ubuntu releases with openZFS 2.0 are expected before and in Apr 2021 :) I expect 45 secs boot times and 480p for my brother-in-law and I hope ~400 Mbps for my backups. Not bad for a 18 years old CPU :)
also, the power supply can be fixed, all you have to do is take it apart, remove the board and scrape out all the white putty, it becomes conductive over time. once you got at least 99% of it gone, you will have to make sure the fuse is not blown(probably is) and if so replace it. then it should be okay,.
Do you know if these come at 300W? I found a listing near me to get one but i can't find any info on the internet about 300W models, I want to re use the case to make a small modern PC.
@@GenesHand these units were sold to be business end machines, the power supply was only used in this style machine, they are not a standard. there is not aa 300 watt that i know of unless a company made one spacifically for that machine which i doubt. if the original PSU is okay get the glue out of it and use it, they are under rated and will be okay supplying 300 watt.
@@WalterKnox Thanks for the reply! Looks like the seller messed up the listing then, the original power suply works fine, the new PC that i will buy on the case is arround 220W / 250W, so i guess that it will be okay then, i will try to remove the glue off.
@@GenesHand yes, just get most of it out but dont dig with anything and damage it, if it works and you continue to use it will be okay, it is when they sit they collect moisture and pop... when in use the head evaporates the moisture.
these things are crazy, alot of times the power supply will explode, literally. and then when they dont, almost every capacitor on the board will bloat and leak, i have had at least 15 of these in the past and every one had bad caps and no issues.
Not to mention the fact that mine stayed only one day not plugged in. Ridiculous, utterly ridiculous! Btw when the PSU was working in mine, oddly enough there were no bad caps.
Used to service these under warranty for HP. I replaced maybe 150 power supplies and nearly the same number of system boards for this model. Such quality.
Thanks! Never would have guessed you needed to remove that back panel. Also, for anyone with the PC speaker in the way, FULLY dismount the motherboard tray and lift it up and set it over a little bit (you don't need to fully remove the motherboard). It will let you get the PSU past the speaker assembly.
My D530 SFF power-supply died after a power-fail somewhere in 2011/12. In mid 2019 I reused 2003 D530 motherboard, memory (1280 MB, 400MHz) and CPU (P-IV, 3.0 GHz) in a Compaq Evo tower case with a Win 98SE activation code.
It has 1.21 TB of storage; 2 x 3.5" IDE HDDs (250 + 320 MB) and 2 x 2.5" SATA-1 HDDs (2 x 320 MB). It runs now FreeBSD 12.2 on ZFS and it backs up my desktop. It is powered on for ~1 hour/week to receive the incremental backup (zfs send | ssh receive). It runs at ~200 Mbps due to a ~95% CPU load on one of the 2 CPU threads.
Three times I installed a Peppermint Linux OS on these Pentium 4's. Last week for my brother in law. He bought the PC for 500 Dominican Pesos ($9) with 512 MB of memory (400 MHz) and a 64 MB NV11 video card. I have added two striped 40 GB IDE HDDs (brtfs), a PCI WiFi card from my left-overs and the system is still somewhat usable. It boots in ~1 minute and displays TH-cam at 360p :)
We are looking for some more cheap Chinese memory (true dual bandwdith usage) for both computers, expected CPU speed improvement ~20%. I also expect a performance improvement with the introduction of the Dec 2020 openZFS rel 2.0, that has major CPU performance improvements (80%) in the receive function. The new FreeBSD and Ubuntu releases with openZFS 2.0 are expected before and in Apr 2021 :) I expect 45 secs boot times and 480p for my brother-in-law and I hope ~400 Mbps for my backups. Not bad for a 18 years old CPU :)
Is that a 1 core 32 bit CPU on yours?
How is power on this power supply??
Witch wire use in jump please model PDP117P compaq
Can I temporarily hook up another power supply
Turns out this also count for the RP5000 which uses the same chassis.
also, the power supply can be fixed, all you have to do is take it apart, remove the board and scrape out all the white putty, it becomes conductive over time. once you got at least 99% of it gone, you will have to make sure the fuse is not blown(probably is) and if so replace it. then it should be okay,.
Do you know if these come at 300W? I found a listing near me to get one but i can't find any info on the internet about 300W models, I want to re use the case to make a small modern PC.
@@GenesHand these units were sold to be business end machines, the power supply was only used in this style machine, they are not a standard. there is not aa 300 watt that i know of unless a company made one spacifically for that machine which i doubt. if the original PSU is okay get the glue out of it and use it, they are under rated and will be okay supplying 300 watt.
@@WalterKnox Thanks for the reply! Looks like the seller messed up the listing then, the original power suply works fine, the new PC that i will buy on the case is arround 220W / 250W, so i guess that it will be okay then, i will try to remove the glue off.
@@GenesHand yes, just get most of it out but dont dig with anything and damage it, if it works and you continue to use it will be okay, it is when they sit they collect moisture and pop... when in use the head evaporates the moisture.
does damage supply car repair
I have a one do you want
these things are crazy, alot of times the power supply will explode, literally. and then when they dont, almost every capacitor on the board will bloat and leak, i have had at least 15 of these in the past and every one had bad caps and no issues.
Mine already exploded!
@@whirlpool_addict_ yeah, once it does that there is a chance that it has messed up the motherboard,
May be in 2021, but still.
Not to mention the fact that mine stayed only one day not plugged in. Ridiculous, utterly ridiculous! Btw when the PSU was working in mine, oddly enough there were no bad caps.
@@whirlpool_addict_ thets weird
Show me all the connections of it
I am new subs
9:29 you had to pull up the pull up thing so it can close 💀
I have this types pc.
D530 sff 3d card insert video make please