First post, by athlon-power
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I have finally found an AGP video card for this machine that allows it to shine with software rendering, has very good 2D resolutions and color depth (at least for what I'm using it for- max will end up being 1024x768x32. Right now, it's at 800x600x32 because my little 15" Gateway monitor doesn't do so well with anything higher than 800x600, at least, for my comfort. The image quality seems quite good, better than the i740 in some situations (desktop, etc.).
It's an S3 Trio3D 4MB, and while it is apparently awful for hardware accelerated stuff, I'm just using it for 2D/Software Rendering. Activate an AGP 3D accelerator on this motherboard with either OpenGL or Direct3D, and this thing decides it doesn't want to work anymore- this includes 3D accelerated screensavers. It freaked out whilst running 3D Pipes for too long. I have it running Flying Windows at the moment. I think it might have just overheated the S3, though.
It runs Quake quite well, I can push it to 640x480 and I seem (from what I can tell) to get 25-35fps. At lower resolutions, it does great. I will be running other similar games to Quake in the future (obviously, just the OG DOS version).
Seeing as my 486 is having a few issues (the soundcard I tried was dead, it would just screech, and I tried muting every individual setting through VOLSET, plugging broken 3.5mm audio cables in both the line in and microphone jacks, cleaning it, looking at contacts, etc. The month in the elements did nothing in the computer I pulled it from any good. It also has the issue with cards being bent when I install them due to the case transfer mod I did, so I've decided to put the ESS 1869F in the P200, and I will use this thing for DOS gaming until I get enough money to pour into a new 486 build.
Finally, I'll get more than 23fps in Heretic. I have no idea who J.H is. Please don't come back and try to reclaim your computer. I rightfully bought it at a thrift store for $5. Thank you.
Specs:
PCChips M570 Motherboard
Intel Pentium MMX 200MHz
32MB PC-66 SDRAM
S3 Trio3D AGP 4MB
ESS 1869F ISA
3COM EtherLink III ISA
Seagate Medalist 2GB
24x CD-ROM
3.5" 1.44MB FDD
Cable management is done in a haphazard way with no real regard to proper procedure. It works, and it keeps the case free of cables where it might need airflow. Speaking of airflow, the air exiting the PSU is actually warm- I'm used to slightly cold air due to my ridiculous "high-airflow," mid-tower ATX cases that allow me to put a fan in the front and a fan in the back. This case has that front panel fan mount, but there is only one exhaust fan- the PSU fan. So all of the heat from the P200, S3 Trio3D (if it even generates any substantial heat at all...), HDD, etc., goes out the back of the computer through the PSU. It never gets hot, just noticeably warm to the touch. PSU is a newer Dell one by the way, all the voltages check out, it has been opened and caps inspected, I'm just using an ATX to AT adapter.
Also, the Turbo LED is connected to an actual turbo led header on the motherboard. There's no turbo button header on the motherboard, and no physical turbo button on the case, and I'm unaware of any keyboard combinations this motherboard might use to enable turbo, or why a Super Socket 7 board would even need turbo functionality, so I'm not sure what's up with that. It is on all the time, like a power indicator. Once I put it back together after cleaning it, I just plugged it in, and bam, I have a second power LED, to really make sure that the system is on.
Where am I?