What about a 6200 AGP on a Socket7?
Nvidia AGP Voltage
Here is a link to a forum discussion on Nvidia AGP voltages I came across.
http://hardware.mcse.ms/archive55-2006-1-276479.html
It may help you with your research.
http://hardware.mcse.ms/archive55-2006-1-276479.html
It may help you with your research.
Mamba, all the solution is in the 1st link you gave (playtool...). I've just tried that:
MSI 6163 Pro (BX440) + PNY 6600 GT 128M
the result is ..... KO.
I've a photo of the 6600GT : it has the 3.3V connector, that is why I did try.
The boot was OK, install drivers OK, reboot OK, Windows loads and ...black screen.
In www...playtool, it says:
" You can also occasionally get memory resource conflicts by installing a new AGP video card into an old AGP 1.0 motherboard. The video card will work properly until you install the display driver. Once you try to install the driver, a memory conflict shows up. The range of conflicting addresses varies from case to case. This problem is very unusual and when it happens it is rarely possible to fix it. I'm not sure exactly what causes the problem but apparently the motherboard and the video card are incompatible in some way which prevents Windows from properly assigning memory addresses to the video card. In the cases I've seen, there doesn't seem to be any way to predict from the video card chipset and motherboard chipset whether there will be a problem. Sometimes a particular video card chipset and motherboard chipset get along well and other times they don't. I'd guess that it's some kind of incompatibility caused by an outdated motherboard BIOS and possibly the video card BIOS. The one thing you can try is to flash your motherboard with the most recent BIOS. But since it's an old motherboard, the manufacturer will most likely not have anything but old BIOSes available. If you're running Windows 95, 98, or ME, it may be possible to manually assign addresses and get it to work but I've seen people try this and the process is about as enjoyable as a root canal and usually fails to fully solve the problem anyway. If you're running Windows 2000 or XP then it's probably impossible to fix because the newer versions of Windows almost always prevent you from manually assigning addresses, IRQs, etc. That's almost always true even if you select the standard PC HAL while installing Windows with the hope that it will allow you to assign resources manually. If you run into one of these memory resource conflicts then you should probably give up and try a different video card. It's rarely fixable.
"
I should try Win 98, or linux or a FX 5900 ...
Good Luck
$mart
MSI 6163 Pro (BX440) + PNY 6600 GT 128M
the result is ..... KO.
I've a photo of the 6600GT : it has the 3.3V connector, that is why I did try.
The boot was OK, install drivers OK, reboot OK, Windows loads and ...black screen.
In www...playtool, it says:
" You can also occasionally get memory resource conflicts by installing a new AGP video card into an old AGP 1.0 motherboard. The video card will work properly until you install the display driver. Once you try to install the driver, a memory conflict shows up. The range of conflicting addresses varies from case to case. This problem is very unusual and when it happens it is rarely possible to fix it. I'm not sure exactly what causes the problem but apparently the motherboard and the video card are incompatible in some way which prevents Windows from properly assigning memory addresses to the video card. In the cases I've seen, there doesn't seem to be any way to predict from the video card chipset and motherboard chipset whether there will be a problem. Sometimes a particular video card chipset and motherboard chipset get along well and other times they don't. I'd guess that it's some kind of incompatibility caused by an outdated motherboard BIOS and possibly the video card BIOS. The one thing you can try is to flash your motherboard with the most recent BIOS. But since it's an old motherboard, the manufacturer will most likely not have anything but old BIOSes available. If you're running Windows 95, 98, or ME, it may be possible to manually assign addresses and get it to work but I've seen people try this and the process is about as enjoyable as a root canal and usually fails to fully solve the problem anyway. If you're running Windows 2000 or XP then it's probably impossible to fix because the newer versions of Windows almost always prevent you from manually assigning addresses, IRQs, etc. That's almost always true even if you select the standard PC HAL while installing Windows with the hope that it will allow you to assign resources manually. If you run into one of these memory resource conflicts then you should probably give up and try a different video card. It's rarely fixable.
"
I should try Win 98, or linux or a FX 5900 ...
Good Luck
$mart
You might try taking a look at this thread. Different video card, but same problem.
http://k6plus.com/index.php?name=PNphpB ... 76bfd58249
Long time ago, I had similar problems getting my ATI 9000 to work in an ASUS P5A-B Rev104. I went on line to Microsoft and they told me how to solve it, though I have long since forgotten how.
http://k6plus.com/index.php?name=PNphpB ... 76bfd58249
Long time ago, I had similar problems getting my ATI 9000 to work in an ASUS P5A-B Rev104. I went on line to Microsoft and they told me how to solve it, though I have long since forgotten how.
Superpuppy 3
K6-3+ 450 ACZ (6x100)
DFI K6BV3+/66 Rev B2 (2 Meg) w/ 2x28mm Chipset Fans
2x256 Meg PC 133 Hynix SDRAM
1x 20G Maxtor (7200)
2x 80G Maxtor (7200) Ducted w/ 2x486 Fans Mount
52/24/52/16 LG CDR/RW/DVD
8/4/3/12/24/16/32 LG Super Multi
ATI 9000 aiw Radeon AGP
SB Audigy 1 MP3 Sound
CMD 649 IDE Controller
NEC USB 2 Card
K6-3+ 450 ACZ (6x100)
DFI K6BV3+/66 Rev B2 (2 Meg) w/ 2x28mm Chipset Fans
2x256 Meg PC 133 Hynix SDRAM
1x 20G Maxtor (7200)
2x 80G Maxtor (7200) Ducted w/ 2x486 Fans Mount
52/24/52/16 LG CDR/RW/DVD
8/4/3/12/24/16/32 LG Super Multi
ATI 9000 aiw Radeon AGP
SB Audigy 1 MP3 Sound
CMD 649 IDE Controller
NEC USB 2 Card
- Stedman5040
- Veteran K6'er
- Posts: 271
- Joined: Mon Sep 05, 2005 4:22 pm
How good is your SS7 system with regards to some of the simple benchmarks? What is your best superpi 1m score with your set up? How fast can you run the fsb?
It would be interesting to compare your scores with the MVP3G2 board. We can then see how much influence 1m of extra L3 cache is worth.
What is your complete set up?
Stedman
It would be interesting to compare your scores with the MVP3G2 board. We can then see how much influence 1m of extra L3 cache is worth.
What is your complete set up?
Stedman