I found a case I like that I had laying around and I will try to get it cleaned up soon. It is missing the metal plate that the power switch attaches to but I found one (included AT switch, I have an ATX switch on hand) on eBay for less than $8.00 with free shipping, I didn't feel like fabricating one. The turbo button will be used for JP4 on the motherboard which will change the CPU between 133 and 233 MHz (just have to reboot for change to take effect). I will have to figure out the front LED display since all the wires and jumpers were removed.
Quake shareware 1.06, 320x240, Timedemo 1
Dell/STB Nitro 3D 1.3 Virge/GX 4MB
no sound, Windows 98 DOS Terminal
Numbers I recall, probably not 100% accurate but within 1 FPS anyways
133-MHz: 37.8 FPS
233-MHz: 51.7 FPS
About a 30% difference that might be helpful at some higher resolutions. I will load full version of Quake and try 400x300 and 512x384 (really curious to see how the 1024x768 4:3 15" LCD looks with that one).
I have not 'tuned' any values at all in the BIOS yet.
An interesting side note. I have not had any luck getting DMA to stay enabled on the hard drive. I check the box, reboot Windows, and then it is unchecked again. The CD-ROM stays checked and I have loaded Intel chipset drivers. It could be that particular hard drive, which is UDMA 5 capable, or something else. Have not had a lot of time to investigate just mentioning in case someone knows of an easy fix that I am overlooking. It was loaded with Windows 98 SE with APM and not ACPI because of default BIOS settings.
Gateway 2000 Case and 200-Watt PSU
Intel SE440BX-2 Motherboard
Intel Pentium III 450 CPU
Micron 384MB SDRAM (3x128)
Compaq Voodoo3 3500 TV Graphics Card
Turtle Beach Santa Cruz Sound Card
Western Digital 7200-RPM, 8MB-Cache, 160GB Hard Drive
Windows 98 SE