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- mishow2016 (6265)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- bestbear-sales (6741)- Feedback left by buyer.Past monthVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- electric.labyrinth (3689)- Feedback left by buyer.Past monthVerified purchaseSwell times on eBay with twelve-star eBuddies.
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.Past monthVerified purchaseQuick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseQuick response and fast payment. Perfect! THANKS!!
Reviews (12)

Jan 13, 2024
Decent quality at a reasonable price
This is a 12+ years old PSU, based on the KM2 platform. It is fully modular, the cables are sleeved and the wires are individually coloured. It uses a dual ball bearing ADA fan and it's long.
Mine has some cables missing, so I got it cheap. I don't have the tools to test it under full load and compare it to the reviews from when it was new. It just works.

Sep 30, 2023
Cheap, run of the mill microSD card
Pros: Cheap. Real 64GB-ish. Comes with a SD to microSD adapter.
Cons: 80MB/s reading? Guys, what are you smoking? The most I could squeeze was 25MB/s (Read) and 12.5 MB/s (Write).
I bought a pair about two weeks ago so I can't comment on its endurance.

Sep 23, 2017
This little gadget saved my bacon...
I was gifted a Supermicro C7B250 motherboard (KabyLake chipset) and a Celeron G3900T (SkyLake). All modern Linux and xBSD distributions work perfectly fine with it. Windows 7 not so much (I couldn't even install it on account of lack of USB support for keyboard and mouse). The BIOS/UEFI option of "Install Windows 7 USB support" doesn't work at all. To add insult to injury, the board has only a PS/2 connector, so you can only use a PS/2 keyboard or a PS/2 mouse, but not both at the same time.
So I bought this little gadget and the Win7 installation media stopped complaining. Once Win7 get going, I was able to install the right drivers for the chipset and I was home free.
Remarks:
1. The Win7 installation would have been possible if I had slipstreamed the necessary drivers to the installation media.
2. Win10 doesn't suffer from the lack of drivers for modern chipsets so this kind of gadget is not nesessary.