Well, I've been getting major video corruption for a few weeks now so I decided to send it in for a new one (warrenties are great, aren't they?). I was pleased to hear that I may receive a 9800 in return since the 9700s are no longer produced
How lucky!
I know, I know, there is a minimal performace difference but I'm happy nonetheless. I'll take some benchmarks when I get the card back.
As BP6 agp slot is 3.3v and your radeon is 0.8v - it means that you are going to heavily overclock your graphic card. Is it so? Maybe this is why the unproper cards can run on BP6? They are simply overclocked?
the agp slot is supposed to be able to supply 3.3v, and the card takes what it needs, i think.
or, in 8x mode it runs in an 8x agp slot getting 0.8v
but as the card is a fits anything card, it will work. it's amrt, though i can't seem to spell smart at that moment
lukk wrote:As BP6 agp slot is 3.3v and your radeon is 0.8v - it means that you are going to heavily overclock your graphic card. Is it so? Maybe this is why the unproper cards can run on BP6? They are simply overclocked?
FWIW I don't think Derek is running the 9800 on his BP6.
In any case, I posted a link to an excellent article about AGP standards over here that nobody commented on. The article will explain the differences of the standards, voltages and what is compatable with what.
2x533MHz@544MHz, 2.0V
640MB PC100 memory
Realtek RTL-8139 NIC
Maxtor 6Y080L0 80GB hdd
Debian Linux stable with 2.4.8 kernel
yes I' ve read recently the article you mentioned. thank you for it the article is convincing and the rule 'what fits in the motherboard that would run on it' seems logical for me. I'll buy some card with 3,3v key.