DIY_EFI Digest Monday, November 15 1999 Volume 04 : Number 644 In this issue: INjector Boss Dimensions. Re: INjector Boss Dimensions. Re: DIY_EFI Digest V4 #640 See the end of the digest for information on subscribing to the DIY_EFI or DIY_EFI-Digest mailing lists. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 16:06:54 -0500 From: Frederic Breitwieser Subject: INjector Boss Dimensions. also some posts detailing the steps he went through. > http://efi332.eng.ohio-state.edu/gmecm/asearch.html Save ya the trouble of searching - pictures here: http://xephic.dynip.com/dodge/383intake.htm > So the twin turbos are mounted and functional now? Not in the truck. I have a clean running 400cid to put into the truck now, but haven't moved over the turbos, exhaust, etc as of yet. The 383 stroker never made it into the truck, dyno only. - -- Frederic Breitwieser Xephic Technology 769 Sylvan Ave #9 Bridgeport CT 06606 Tele: (203) 372-2707 Fax: (603) 372-1147 Web: http://xephic.dynip.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 14 Nov 1999 18:54:51 -0500 From: "Bruce Plecan" Subject: Re: INjector Boss Dimensions. Subject: INjector Boss Dimensions. For those of you going with the twin turbo SBC, might want to see the Jan 2000 Chev Hi Performance. Just use a gm ecm with that set up and vrooom. Grumpy| ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 15 Nov 1999 02:49:07 -0500 (EST) From: "Clive Apps Techno-Logicals 416 510 0020" Subject: Re: DIY_EFI Digest V4 #640 > For a mail server I would tend to spec something other than a Celeron - > nothing against the Celeron, I sell a lot of them - but it is not targetted BZZZT thanks for playing the C500 outperforms the PIII 500 in intel's own tests at 1/3 the price > of 128MB of RAM. 256 is better. Use Linux if you like, but the robustness yes more ram is better but a linux server does not need the kind of ram to do the same job as an NT box would 128 would be lots (don't forget to use the install parameter for large ram) > and ease of administration of an NT small business server can't be beat. NT SBS is a "crock of poo" nowhere near the stabilty of a properly setup linux system and not as easy to administer remotely I wouldn't want to depend on it for a critical application, especially on a remote site > Full remote admin over the web in your browser. By robustness I mean throw assuming the machine is functional enough to run http etc. > in 2 18GB UDMA ATAPI (ide) drives, mirrored, and even hear in Canada with total crap never run a server that requires more than 3 concurrent accesses on IDE it can't keep up I would never run a server on IDE 9 GB LVD SCSI IBM drives cost ~$300 US here 6ms access times and ultra reliable > our CanukPesos the storage component is only about 500 clams. That is with > top line Fujitsu drives - if you want to use WD or seagate the price may be Fujitsu is one of the cheapest drives / size around Most reliable: IBM hands down I have NEVER had an IBM drive fail during it's service life > lower, but you only get what you pay for. Buy a good brand name > motherboard - I use DFI and won't touch Acer, Asus, or Gigabyte. Don't more crap I tried DFI stuff once I bought 6 of their highest end dual pentiums at one time during the 1 year warrantee period 9 out of 6 went back for replacement yes 9 out of 6 -- some required multiple replacements I only use Asus or intel boards in critical systems they work > nickel and dime the small stuff - the difference between "real good" and > "dung-pile" is only a few percent overall. Excellent may cost significantly most of the time the best:total total crap is usually about 2:1 price but still not worth saving the money for the amount of pain it causes > more. Get a good fast ATAPI CD - I'd go for a CDRW and use it for archiving > as well. More durable than tape. You don't need fancy graphics or sound. SCSI 40x cds good name brand ( I use Pioneer or Toshiba) tape backups Sony or Exabyte scsi Clive ------------------------------ End of DIY_EFI Digest V4 #644 ***************************** To subscribe to DIY_EFI-Digest, send the command: subscribe diy_efi-digest in the body of a message to "Majordomo@xxx. A non-digest (direct mail) version of this list is also available; to subscribe to that instead, replace "diy_efi-digest" in the command above with "diy_efi".