Well, I finally got rid of my G400, its done me well, but wasnt up to it nowdays.
After waiting about 2 years for the G800, then waiting another year or so for the Parhelia, I decided to go for the ATI.
When Matrox released the G550, I was in the market for a gaming card, so bought the ATI RadeonLe (the origional one with HyperZ disabled). That was quite a good card, but I had the standard ATI driver problems. Stable in 2D, but funny things happened in games.
Anyway, after finishing Max Payne, which was the only game that needed the extra power over my G400, the Radeon went into the wifes computer, and I took myy Matrox card back
A while ago I bought one of those Dell 20inch flat panels, and have been running it through the analogue output of the G400, with my old 20 inch CRT running on the secondary head.
I was going to get the G550 to run the dfp, but they only support resolutions up to 1280X1024, and my dfp runs 1600X1200. Nothing on the market at the time would run the dfp through a DVI interface.
The Parhelia was released with the 165Mhz DVI controller, so I figured I would get that.
I dual boot WinXP and WinMe, so I needed ME drivers, and it looks like Matrox will never release any, so the Parhelia was out.
Last week I ordered a Gigabyte 9700Pro, and it arrived today. I must say that so far it seems ok.
The 2D is identical to the G400, but that might be because im using a dfp. The secondary output is better than the secondary output of the G400.
One problem is that if I have both screens plugged in at the time, the secondary one is locked at 60Hz refresh. That wouldnt be so bad if I was using my dfp as secondary, but I like using the CRT for that.
The drivers are a pain. Why have them cut up into 3 parts? There is the driver itself, the control panel, and the Hydro vision.
About speed. Its fast. I did some relative benches just so I could judge it.
With a format and clean install of WinME (because it boots faster) I get these figures:
G400/9700
Quake2
1024*768
60.4/317.4
1280*960
28.8/318.2
1600*1200
crash/317.2
From that you can see a Athlon 1.4GHz can feed enough info for around 317fps no matter what.
UT2003
640*480
27.95 & 18.4 / 115.71 & 39.11
800*600
17.97 & 11.57 / 115.91 & 39.37
1600*1200
3.36 & 2.65 / 102.69 & 38.68
Here you can see that the 9700 stays constant untill 1600*1200 where it drops a little. Interestingly, if I up the quality to 16Xanso and 6X FSAA at 1600*1200 I get: 48.86 & 30.97
Thats quite a bit faster than what the G400 gets at 640*480
On to stability.
All games seem stable, and fast. The only problem (apart form the 60Hz thing) is that 3dMark2001 ALWAYS crashes at the Nature scene.
Ive tried 3 different drivers, with a clean Ghost in between.
Ive tried many different BIOS settings.
Ive removed all other cards except the 9700
I underclocked the 9700
I installed Motherboard monitor to check my voltages (12.78 - 12.84v)
CPU is at 37C max
Ive just finished downloading CodeCreatures, so Ill run that to see if the Pixel shaders are fraged.
Anyway, so far quite happy. Stable in games, unstable in benchmarks. Thats a turn for the books.
Ali
After waiting about 2 years for the G800, then waiting another year or so for the Parhelia, I decided to go for the ATI.
When Matrox released the G550, I was in the market for a gaming card, so bought the ATI RadeonLe (the origional one with HyperZ disabled). That was quite a good card, but I had the standard ATI driver problems. Stable in 2D, but funny things happened in games.
Anyway, after finishing Max Payne, which was the only game that needed the extra power over my G400, the Radeon went into the wifes computer, and I took myy Matrox card back
A while ago I bought one of those Dell 20inch flat panels, and have been running it through the analogue output of the G400, with my old 20 inch CRT running on the secondary head.
I was going to get the G550 to run the dfp, but they only support resolutions up to 1280X1024, and my dfp runs 1600X1200. Nothing on the market at the time would run the dfp through a DVI interface.
The Parhelia was released with the 165Mhz DVI controller, so I figured I would get that.
I dual boot WinXP and WinMe, so I needed ME drivers, and it looks like Matrox will never release any, so the Parhelia was out.
Last week I ordered a Gigabyte 9700Pro, and it arrived today. I must say that so far it seems ok.
The 2D is identical to the G400, but that might be because im using a dfp. The secondary output is better than the secondary output of the G400.
One problem is that if I have both screens plugged in at the time, the secondary one is locked at 60Hz refresh. That wouldnt be so bad if I was using my dfp as secondary, but I like using the CRT for that.
The drivers are a pain. Why have them cut up into 3 parts? There is the driver itself, the control panel, and the Hydro vision.
About speed. Its fast. I did some relative benches just so I could judge it.
With a format and clean install of WinME (because it boots faster) I get these figures:
G400/9700
Quake2
1024*768
60.4/317.4
1280*960
28.8/318.2
1600*1200
crash/317.2
From that you can see a Athlon 1.4GHz can feed enough info for around 317fps no matter what.
UT2003
640*480
27.95 & 18.4 / 115.71 & 39.11
800*600
17.97 & 11.57 / 115.91 & 39.37
1600*1200
3.36 & 2.65 / 102.69 & 38.68
Here you can see that the 9700 stays constant untill 1600*1200 where it drops a little. Interestingly, if I up the quality to 16Xanso and 6X FSAA at 1600*1200 I get: 48.86 & 30.97
Thats quite a bit faster than what the G400 gets at 640*480
On to stability.
All games seem stable, and fast. The only problem (apart form the 60Hz thing) is that 3dMark2001 ALWAYS crashes at the Nature scene.
Ive tried 3 different drivers, with a clean Ghost in between.
Ive tried many different BIOS settings.
Ive removed all other cards except the 9700
I underclocked the 9700
I installed Motherboard monitor to check my voltages (12.78 - 12.84v)
CPU is at 37C max
Ive just finished downloading CodeCreatures, so Ill run that to see if the Pixel shaders are fraged.
Anyway, so far quite happy. Stable in games, unstable in benchmarks. Thats a turn for the books.
Ali
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