I have a couple AT boards for P2 systems sold by PCChips to people who wanted to upgrade older AT systems. They had built in sound and video as well which was not that common at the time. Pretty sure the chipset was an oddball one.I had a 440LX AT (not ATX!) system somewhere in the mid 2000s and I found it such an oddity. It had both AT and ATX power connectors, 2 DIMM slots for SDRAM or EDO, 4 SIMM slots for EDO, USB, onboard audio. Since it was AT, it only had an AT keyboard connector at the back edge. Everything else used headers. My guess is that boards like that were marketed to shops upgrading existing late 486 and Pentium PCs since they could use the existing case, power supply, and even RAM.
I had a 440LX AT (not ATX!) system somewhere in the mid 2000s and I found it such an oddity...
lol PC Chips. I see some of their boards in junk stores occasionally. Out of their extensive array of products, they had maybe two or three good boards (and even those were subject to bad batches); the M571 Super 7 board is the only one that comes to mind as being worth the trouble. I have at least one of the fake cache M919 models; I think it has an AMD 5x86 in it.I have a couple AT boards for P2 systems sold by PCChips to people who wanted to upgrade older AT systems. They had built in sound and video as well which was not that common at the time. Pretty sure the chipset was an oddball one.