Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

AGP Aperture?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • AGP Aperture?

    Hi all...just wondering what increasing ur
    AGP Aperture in the BIOS does?...I increased
    mine so I could run 3DMark 2000 64MB texture
    rendering test...its currently at 128.....
    should I increase it?...if so why and what
    difference would it make?...thanx in advance!
    Caprice
    P3-450 o/c 558
    Abit BH6
    128 PC100
    G400 SH 32M o/c MAX spex
    SB Live X-Gamer
    Pioneer 6X DVD
    Maxtor 10 Gig H.D.
    Fujitsu 13 Gig H.D.
    Win98 SE
    Samsung Synchmaster 17"
    Logitech C/L Mouse/Kybrd
    Altec Lansing ACS56
    oh yea! and a 3M Precise
    Mouse pad!!

  • #2
    I think it specifies the amount of system memory that you will allow your AGP card to use..

    Comment


    • #3
      Bonjour

      I asked this question one time and this the response of Jamrock

      Jammrock
      MURCer <<...>> posted 28 December 1999
      The AGP aperture size tells the computer how much system memory can be used
      for graphics swapping. For example, if you have a 16 MB video card and play
      a game that uses 18 MB of texture information, the video card will store the
      extra texture information in system RAM and use it like a really slow video
      RAM.
      The Aperature size has become a rather mute point since it is very rare that
      any game goes to system memory for texture swaps, because most video cards
      have more than enough RAM to handle any current game.
      Set the Aperture size to 1/2 system RAM. If you have video troubles, set it
      to full RAM size. Some people set the Aperture size to 256 MB, even though
      they don't have that much RAM, to fix some bugs that have creeped up. So
      basically, it's not that important.
      Jammrock

      Comment

      Working...
      X