VOGONS


First post, by m5215tx

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Anyone has one of these or is familiar with it? It was given to me but I know next to nothing about Nvidia chipset based motherboards. Its in great shape and I was told it was pulled from a working system. Is this a good motherboard or more trouble than its worth?

Roland MT-32 (old), CM-32LN, SC-55, SC-88VL, MT-120, SD-35, SD-20, SD-80, SD-90
Yamaha TG100, TG300, MDF2, MU15, MU100, MU2000EX + PLG150-DR + PLG150-PF + PLG150-VL
KORG NS5R, X5DR
AKAI SG01k
KAWAI GMega
KETRON SD2

Reply 1 of 5, by Gatewayuser200

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Usually, nforce2 based socket A boards are among the fastest socket A boards available since they support dual channel DDR. However, your board has three memory slots and the manual doesn't mention dual channel operation so it might not support it which makes it a slower and a typically less desirable board.

Test it out. If it works and its the only older board you have, it would make a good board for a Windows 9x gaming PC.

Last edited by Gatewayuser200 on 2017-05-08, 10:17. Edited 1 time in total.

"network down, IP packets delivered via UPS" - BOFH
“The bitterness of poor quality remains long after the sweetness of low price is forgotten” – Benjamin Franklin

Reply 2 of 5, by m5215tx

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I already have 2 Intel chipset based motherboards with Intel CPUs (PIII 1GHz & P4 1.6GHz) runnning W98SE and ME. I have always preferred Intel hardware as the last time I had AMD processors was back with the great 386DX 40MHz and 486DX4 120MHz 🤣. Since this was given to me its a bit of an oddity in my collection so I guess I will play around with it. Thanks for the feedback!

Roland MT-32 (old), CM-32LN, SC-55, SC-88VL, MT-120, SD-35, SD-20, SD-80, SD-90
Yamaha TG100, TG300, MDF2, MU15, MU100, MU2000EX + PLG150-DR + PLG150-PF + PLG150-VL
KORG NS5R, X5DR
AKAI SG01k
KAWAI GMega
KETRON SD2

Reply 3 of 5, by gdjacobs

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Gatewayuser200 wrote:

Usually, nforce2 based socket A boards are among the fastest socket A boards available since they support dual channel DDR. Your board has three slots and the manual doesn't mention dual channel operation so it might not support it which makes it a slower and a typically less desirable board.

Test it out. If it works and its the only older board you have, it would make a good board for a Windows 9x gaming PC.

In practice, dual channel wasn't very compelling. It provided some extra bandwidth for off CPU DMA transfers, but the FSB was limiting for CPU related memory operations. The nforce2 did have an efficient memory controller which was arguably more important.

All hail the Great Capacitor Brand Finder

Reply 4 of 5, by PhilsComputerLab

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I looked into nForce2 in this video: https://youtu.be/z_sfv8kO3Nw

With dual channel and CL2 memory, it can achieve a nice lead over a KT600 system for example. So yea, well worth keeping / using.

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Reply 5 of 5, by m5215tx

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PhilsComputerLab wrote:

I looked into nForce2 in this video: https://youtu.be/z_sfv8kO3Nw

With dual channel and CL2 memory, it can achieve a nice lead over a KT600 system for example. So yea, well worth keeping / using.

Thanks for the info. I will check out your video to get more familiar with it. I have a Voodoo 5500 AGP sitting around doing nothing so maybe this would be a good home for it?

Roland MT-32 (old), CM-32LN, SC-55, SC-88VL, MT-120, SD-35, SD-20, SD-80, SD-90
Yamaha TG100, TG300, MDF2, MU15, MU100, MU2000EX + PLG150-DR + PLG150-PF + PLG150-VL
KORG NS5R, X5DR
AKAI SG01k
KAWAI GMega
KETRON SD2