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Reply 20 of 33, by feipoa

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Am I correct in assuming that I need only find a higher clocked RAMDAC with the same pin configuration as my existing 80 MHz RAMDAC to achieve 1024x768x64k? It should not be too difficult for me to replace the existing RAMDAC with a socket.

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Reply 21 of 33, by Anonymous Coward

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I wouldn't be so sure about that. You may also have to modify the clock generator to boost the frequency. Who knows, something might also be hard coded into the BIOS about which RAMDAC the card is equipped with. I've never tried it before, but it would be an interesting experiment. Maybe you can try seeing if your RAMDAC will overclock first before slicing it off and soldering on a socket.

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Reply 22 of 33, by Sedrosken

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FGB wrote:
Anonymous Coward wrote:

I have seen 8-bit and 16-bit RAMDACs. What is the difference if they both operate at the same speed?

Also, I believe the MicroLabs card DOES support 1024x768 at 64k colours, but only in interlaced mode.

The difference is the color depth: 8-Bit means the DAC is capable of 256 colours, 15-Bit 32768, 16-Bit 65536 and 24-Bit 16 Million colours.

This sort of begs the question of why modern video cards try for 32-bit true color when oftentimes the monitors are only capable of 24-bit.

Very interesting stuff here, will have to hold onto it for when I start getting 286/386 systems together.

Nanto: H61H2-AM3, 4GB, GTS250 1GB, SB0730, 512GB SSD, XP USP4
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Reply 23 of 33, by alexanrs

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Sedrosken wrote:
FGB wrote:
Anonymous Coward wrote:

I have seen 8-bit and 16-bit RAMDACs. What is the difference if they both operate at the same speed?

Also, I believe the MicroLabs card DOES support 1024x768 at 64k colours, but only in interlaced mode.

The difference is the color depth: 8-Bit means the DAC is capable of 256 colours, 15-Bit 32768, 16-Bit 65536 and 24-Bit 16 Million colours.

This sort of begs the question of why modern video cards try for 32-bit true color when oftentimes the monitors are only capable of 24-bit.

Very interesting stuff here, will have to hold onto it for when I start getting 286/386 systems together.

CRTs have infinite color depht... Not that it matters even on LCD, as 24 and 32 bits color depht are the exact same thing as far as the number of colors they can represent: on 32-bit modes the highest byte (alpha) is ignored, and sometimes used for transparency in image files. The extra byte is just so that the pixels are QWORD aligned (and thus faster to address and manipulate)

Reply 24 of 33, by Sedrosken

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Then that explains why a good CRT has always been better for color reproduction for me than any LCD monitor I have. Even the Ultrasharps pale in comparison to a good old NEC Multisync.

Nanto: H61H2-AM3, 4GB, GTS250 1GB, SB0730, 512GB SSD, XP USP4
Rithwic: EP-61BXM-A, Celeron 300A@450, 768MB, GF2MX400/V2, YMF744, 128GB SD2IDE, 98SE (Kex)
Cragstone: Alaris Cougar, 486BL2-66, 16MB, GD5428 VLB, CT2800, 16GB SD2IDE, 95CNOIE

Reply 25 of 33, by yamnaka

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hello !!
my machine is a
COMPAQ PROLINEA 4/66
486dx2/66mhz
16 mo ram
hhd 3 go
the video card integrated to the motherboard is a tseng ET/4000W32 and 1mo ram
im running WINDOWS 95 and ive got just only to the maximum possibility 256 color
i want 16 million color but when reboot its not possible
its ok or not ? please help me

Reply 26 of 33, by tayyare

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Providing that the graphics card itself has no problems in supporting hi/true color modes, as far as know, with 1mb video RAM, 16.7 million colors (true color) is only possible at 640x480 resolution. If you want it at higher resolutions like 800x600 and 1024x768, you need to have 2MB or more video RAM on your graphics adapter. I might be wrong, but this is what I remember from the days long past.

GA-6VTXE PIII 1.4+512MB
Geforce4 Ti 4200 64MB
Diamond Monster 3D 12MB SLI
SB AWE64 PNP+32MB
120GB IDE Samsung/80GB IDE Seagate/146GB SCSI Compaq/73GB SCSI IBM
Adaptec AHA29160
3com 3C905B-TX
Gotek+CF Reader
MSDOS 6.22+Win 3.11/95 OSR2.1/98SE/ME/2000

Reply 27 of 33, by Anonymous Coward

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At 1024x768 you actually need more than 2MB.

"Will the highways on the internets become more few?" -Gee Dubya
V'Ger XT|Upgraded AT|Ultimate 386|Super VL/EISA 486|SMP VL/EISA Pentium

Reply 29 of 33, by Anonymous Coward

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It should do 640x480x24bit, but it will be slow. Bet to stick with 64k colour.

"Will the highways on the internets become more few?" -Gee Dubya
V'Ger XT|Upgraded AT|Ultimate 386|Super VL/EISA 486|SMP VL/EISA Pentium

Reply 30 of 33, by dr.zeissler

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Hi elianda,

it's interesting that the ET4000/W32p on my D882 (SNI-PCD4L) also shows no picture within Win95 and the correct monitor-setting (60hz).
It seems that I need to load vmode as you mentioned before.

Thx!

Retro-Gamer 😀 ...on different machines

Reply 31 of 33, by elianda

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FGB wrote:
Anonymous Coward wrote:

I have seen 8-bit and 16-bit RAMDACs. What is the difference if they both operate at the same speed?

Also, I believe the MicroLabs card DOES support 1024x768 at 64k colours, but only in interlaced mode.

The difference is the color depth: 8-Bit means the DAC is capable of 256 colours, 15-Bit 32768, 16-Bit 65536 and 24-Bit 16 Million colours.

There are usually two important bit widths. One is the bit width for the color output and one is the bit width for memory access.
Typically the older DIL DACs have 8 bit memory access and palettized 8 bit color width (256c). The later small squared surface mounted DACs mostly have 16 bit memory access and up to 24 bit color width. (like the AT&T ATT20C498-13 135 MHz)
This always goes in hand with the clock (max. pixel frequency) and memory amount. It doesn't make sense to have 4 MB graphics RAM a DAC that can do 24 bit color but only has a 8 bit memory interface. The memory interface would severely limit the available modes.

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Reply 32 of 33, by Anonymous Coward

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elianda wrote:

The later small squared surface mounted DACs mostly have 16 bit memory access and up to 24 bit color width. (like the AT&T ATT20C498-13 135 MHz)

I disagree. From what I have seen, 8-bit was still the most common variant in surface mount form.

"Will the highways on the internets become more few?" -Gee Dubya
V'Ger XT|Upgraded AT|Ultimate 386|Super VL/EISA 486|SMP VL/EISA Pentium

Reply 33 of 33, by elianda

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Ok, I might have no actual significant statistical overview about how common specific DACs were. So it was more speculation. I may also have my focus a bit more on the higher end cards.

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