Reply 40 of 57, by douglar
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- l33t
songoffall wrote on 2025-09-22, 07:09:I wonder, with these older cards, can you mod them to make them 128-bit by populating the missing memory chips?
Or is the memory bus locked down in firmware?
You could always get the 128bit firmware and compare it to what is on the cut down card. I bet the VGA BIOS is the same on the full cards and the cut rate cards, because custom VGA BIOS costs money. But the BIOS is mainly used in DOS and the difference between 64bit ram and 128bit ram isn't going to be noticeable in DOS.
The Windows driver is likely more important. If the full amount of memory it is detected by the windows driver, you have unlocked the additional memory bandwidth. Each chip has a direct path to the GPU on these cards, so if the driver can see the chips, you have unlocked the bandwidth.
If your Windows drivers can't see the memory after adding the chips, (and you got the right chips and your solder is good) seems more likely that there's a resistor or two placed different on the cut down board that indicates the ram capacity rather than custom VGA BIOS preventing the Windows driver from seeing the extra RAM.
Edit: Specifically these guys look different between the 16MB/64 vs 32MB/128:
Edit 2: And these capacitors: