On or about Mon, 02 Apr 2007 01:08:58 GMT did Chris
<christo9.RemoveThis@notalotofunwanted.aol.com> dribble thusly:
>Hi,
>
> I bought a piece of junk pc, but it was only $25 for a celeron
>2.66 ghz with dvd burner, 512mb ram, card reader for every known card
>120gb hard disk (turned out to be 40 though), all in all a great deal.
>Like I said it's a POS computer by emachines with integrated video
>with an intel 82845G pci video with 8mb shared memory. I'm not really
>into 3d games too much but like to play once in a while. I would like
>to replace the POS on board video, but without AGP. Now, I have
>somewhere in my possession a 16mb banshee video card which I'm pretty
>sure is PCI (I don't know where it is at the moment) and I am
>considering a low end replacement. MY choices are:
>The banshee card (if it's pci) FREE
>I can't find any comparisons between the banshee and the onboard
>video. Would the banshee be faster? A LOT?
No. Despite the fact that the Intel chip is garbage, the Banshee is
so much older that it's only about half as fast.
>A geforce 4 mx 400 series pci 64mb $34
>a Raidon 9250 PCI 128mb card $50
A GeForce 4 MX 440 would be the faster of these choices. Roughly four
times as fast as the Intel chip.
>Would these low-end cards be hampered by the PCI bus instead of AGP?
Absolutely.
>I was under the impression that the biggest advantage of an AGP card
>is for storing textures in main system ram and then having a high
>speed data path between the card and system ram.
No, the biggest advantage is speed.
A standard 32-bit 33MHz PCI bus has a maximum throughput of 132MB/sec.
A 1X AGP slot has a maximum throughput of 266MB/sec. A 8X AGP slot
goes up to 2.1GB/sec.
A 1X PCIe slot has throughput of 250MB/sec, and scales linearly (i.e.
a 16X PCIe slot has a throughput of 4GB/sec).
>With today's large
>amounts of memory on board the card, that would seem to be a moot
>point.
That's mostly true. In practice, only onboard AGP chips use shared
system memory for textures. Add-in cards carry their own texture
memory.
>In any event, I'm assuming that in order for the PCI bus to
>become the bottleneck you would need a fast really fast video card and
>that the above mentioned chips would have almost no increase in AGP
>over PCI, while still being SUBSTANTIALLY faster than what is on board
>(the intel ). Any advise would be appreciated.
Well, now you know that assumption is incorrect. Maxing out the PCI
bus is trivial for a 3D graphics card to do.
If your system has an AGP slot, then getting an AGP card will be the
best choice, by far.
--
- Mike
Ignore the Python in me to send e-mail.
>> Stay informed about: PCI Vs AGP