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(This video became unlisted around a year ago, I decided to make it public again on January 14, 2024 with a better title and description) Two years ago in December 2021, I decided to remove the Philips 107S61 CRT from our loft and use it as a second monitor on my (back then) main computer through the VGA port on the motherboard (which was the Casper Bilgisayar OEM version of the ECS H81H3-M4, with the latest ECS retail BIOS from 2015 flashed to be able to use the integrated graphics on my processor with a discrete GPU installed as the Casper OEM BIOS had the IGD option hidden for whatever reason). I had to use the integrated graphics to be able to use it with my main monitor as my discrete GPU (NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050Ti) does not have a VGA port and my HDMI-to-VGA adapter was in use for my other monitor. After I plugged it in, Windows 10 automatically set the resolution to 640x350 at first, but I then noticed it let me change it to as low as 320x200! Out of curiosity, I did it, and set the CRT as my main monitor temporarily on Windows. This is Windows 10 Pro 21H1 Turkish running with a ridiculously small resolution of 320x200. For the fellow weebs, the anime girl in the wallpaper is Kurisu Makise from the anime/visual novel series Steins;Gate, this was back when I was obsessed with the series for some reason. The original description contained a detailed specs list of my computer back then, with opinions on each part, for some reason. For the sake of it, I'm going to keep that section but with the opinions for each part re-written to better reflect them: ECS H81H3-M4 motherboard with an Intel LGA1150 CPU socket. Honestly, despite what I have typed back then (when I described this motherboard as "dogshit"), I think this board was actually not that bad and most of the issues I had were rather related to my faulty PSU. It is not a great board by any means, but I think it's fine as a cheap basic LGA1150 board. The BIOS had a few minor quirks, especially the original Casper OEM BIOS, but updating to the latest retail BIOS from ECS fixed most of those problems. And yes, you can run the retail ECS BIOS on this board without issues, this is useful as Casper (along with most other Turkish OEMs) does not provide public BIOS updates for their products for some reason. Later on I had an unfortunate accident with this board when I (very stupidly) fried one of the RAM slots and therefore replaced it with a GIGABYTE Z97-HD3 rev 1.0, which I still use. Intel i5-4570 processor (quad-core 3.2GHz, up to 3.6 with turbo) I still daily drive this processor with my new board, and honestly it's okay-ish. It's not a great processor by any means in 2024, but it gets the job done for me. I do not have the chance to upgrade to a newer processor at the time so it has to do. Nanya Technologies 1x4 GB 1600 MHz DDR3 RAM This was a huge bottleneck. Not the stick itself, the amount of total RAM I had. I still use this stick (along with a different no name 8 GB stick) and despite being a no name stick it overclocks perfectly to 2133 MHz on my Z97 board. Xigmatek X-Calibre XCP-A500 PSU This was the only part in the system that I'll always and regardless tell everyone to stay away. It is a faulty, badly designed, horrible PSU that despite being advertised as a 500W PSU could barely power my i5-4570 and the fairly low power GTX1050 Ti, both combined use less than 200 watts. I'm not the only person that had issues with this specific model either, both reviews and Turkish forum posts tell people to stay away from this model. I now have another Xigmatek PSU, but this time it's a different 600W model, and it actually works well. However, I'd still advise you to NOT buy a PSU from Xigmatek or any other no name or not much known PSU brand. MSI GeForce GTX 1050Ti OC Edition 4 GB This is probably the best part in the system overall. I still use it, and while it's a fairly old card nowadays it can run most games without issues. I don't do gaming much so it works okay for me. Kingston FuryX 128 GB SSD (Model number: SHFS37A120G) Another very good part in the system, still in use today as my boot drive. However I have heard some newer Kingston SSDs have very cheap controllers that tend to die or slow down. I have also used two different Fury3D (not FuryX, Fury3D is newer) models in two different computers and while they worked both felt slower than my older drive. Seagate Barracuda 1TB 7200 RPM HDD (ST1000DM010-2EP102) This hard drive unfortunately died on me in a very short while, and while it was under warranty Seagate's service could not diagnose the problem. However, it might have been killed by the Xigmatek PSU. The main monitor was a Casper OEM 1600x900 monitor with a (frankly) terrible TN panel. It is now replaced with an older Philips monitor with a smaller resolution (although it works well). The CRT, as I have said, was the Philips 107S61. I am no CRT expert, but it was nice and fun to use in my experience.