I can't remember the details of the original post. Did you ask about a PSU with a 4 conductor plug? It's just a guess, but I've heard reference to Pentium 4 PSU's in many newer boxes.
---------------------------------------------------------------- John Karns [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Mon, 13 Jan 2003, Shane said: > Sure (about +5, & +12, but most PC's also use -12, and now, 3.3V, soft > power on/off . There may be -5 as well, though I'm not sure. > > If you can give my dim's, and/or, if dim's are critical, I can probably > locate something. > Is it a box, or open ?. If open, you may be able to identify o/p > regulators. > Is it completely dead ?. It may be repairable....input fuse ?. Do you > have a multimeter ?. The possibilities are endless. > > Can anyone else confirm if they are just +5, +12 ?. It is a bit > difficult on a dead one. > > > Drop me a note directly...I MAY be able to help further. > > > Shane > > Pete Billson wrote: > > >Shane, > > The PSU says that it is a ESI model PS80, 2A/50w 100-240V supply. I > >agree that it is probably outputting 12V/5V but so does pretty much > >every PC PSU on the planet! :-( > > > > A Google search on the above turns up nothing. If I knew what they > >called this style (i.e. ATX, etc.) I probably could find a replacement. ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.NET email is sponsored by: FREE SSL Guide from Thawte are you planning your Web Server Security? Click here to get a FREE Thawte SSL guide and find the answers to all your SSL security issues. http://ads.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/redirect.pl?thaw0026en _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.openprojects.net
