VOGONS


First post, by obobskivich

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I'm planning to re-do my Willamette P4 as a Win98 box, since the board has worked well in 98 in brief testing, and I no longer have need for it as an XP machine. However I can't decide on a primary 2D/3D card, so I figured I'd come and ask you all. 😀

The basic specifications:
- Asus P4B-LA motherboard (1.5V AGP slot)
- Pentium 4 2GHz Willamette
- 512MB SDRAM
- Sound Blaster Live!
- Voodoo2 12MB

I have two cards on-hand that I'm considering:

- GeForce FX 5800 Ultra. Reasons for: it can support Forceware 45.23 and somewhat older, it's powerful enough to run high resolution and high AA/AF with a lot of older games. Reasons against: I've observed Forceware 45.23 not properly managing its fan in Windows XP (but maybe it works in 98?), it uses lots of power, it takes up two slots.

- Radeon 9550. Reasons for: it's single-slot, should be more than powerful enough to work, and doesn't use tons of power. Reasons against: I have no idea what driver/application support for this card is like in 9x.

I'm also thinking about a Matrox G400 (which would have to be purchased), based on the bits that I've read about them. I know it would be a performance loss against the 9550 or 5800U, but I don't think that's likely to be a problem for this build.

In regards to the "what games would you like to play?" question - this machine is mostly there to catch whatever falls through the cracks from XP, and can't achieve good performance in DOSbox, as well as supporting the handful of old Glide games I have (like Nuclear Strike).

So with that in mind, and of those three, or another option, what would you pick, and why?

Finally, a 3dfx question: does mismatched SLI have any hope of working? I have a Creative Voodoo2 12MB, and I have not seen one for sale in quite a while (I do look, from time to time), however there seems to be no shortage of other branded cards on ebay at any given point. So I'm curious if I were to just snag another 12MB card, what hoops would have to be jumped through to enable SLI between them? And is it even worth it for the performance/resolution jump?

Reply 1 of 23, by meljor

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5800, because it is a beast.

Voodoo2 mismatched Works with soms cards. It Works with my creative with a trust voodoo Dragon
2 But not with a diamond....matched is best solution. yes its worth it! Much faster and Nice 1024x768 res.

asus tx97-e, 233mmx, voodoo1, s3 virge ,sb16
asus p5a, k6-3+ @ 550mhz, voodoo2 12mb sli, gf2 gts, awe32
asus p3b-f, p3-700, voodoo3 3500TV agp, awe64
asus tusl2-c, p3-S 1,4ghz, voodoo5 5500, live!
asus a7n8x DL, barton cpu, 6800ultra, Voodoo3 pci, audigy1

Reply 2 of 23, by obobskivich

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Oh I forgot to mention - 5800 will negate Voodoo2 SLI as it's dual-slot.

Reply 3 of 23, by Gamecollector

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Radeon 9xxx works ok in Win9x with Catalyst 6.2. With 2 graphical bugs. Table fog and negative blending are broken. The fog was fixed only in Xp with Catalyst 7.11+, the blending is still broken (yeah, 10 years)...

Asus P4P800 SE/Pentium4 3.2E/2 Gb DDR400B,
Radeon HD3850 Agp (Sapphire), Catalyst 14.4 (XpProSp3).
Voodoo2 12 MB SLI, Win2k drivers 1.02.00 (XpProSp3).

Reply 4 of 23, by brostenen

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For me, I have had really good results using Matrox G400 and Voodoo1 (yeah I know it's not V2)
I would say, that you should try out the Matrox G400, as it has a good signal output.
For 2d gfx, I allways go for G400, if the processor is fast enough.

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

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Reply 5 of 23, by obobskivich

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brostenen wrote:

For me, I have had really good results using Matrox G400 and Voodoo1 (yeah I know it's not V2)
I would say, that you should try out the Matrox G400, as it has a good signal output.
For 2d gfx, I allways go for G400, if the processor is fast enough.

If I went with G400, is there any preference for drivers? Or just go with the latest and greatest?

Reply 6 of 23, by brostenen

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Just go for those wich are on their website. They work well. 😀

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

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Reply 7 of 23, by smeezekitty

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brostenen wrote:

For me, I have had really good results using Matrox G400 and Voodoo1 (yeah I know it's not V2)
I would say, that you should try out the Matrox G400, as it has a good signal output.
For 2d gfx, I allways go for G400, if the processor is fast enough.

But for a Pee-4, those cards seem kind of dated/underpowered

Reply 8 of 23, by meljor

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5800 gets in the way of the v2's? Well, in my book, voodoo wins (but i am 3dfx biased)

The radeon will do well also, considering it is a p4 2ghz. That p4 is not a fast cpu so both cards will be overkill unless you use a good deal of AA in your games.

Matrox? meh..... i have these cards (g200, g400 and g450) and i just can't get a good use for them. 2d is great? Yes, but many other cards are good at that and i can't see the difference. 3D? Almost every card that can do 3D is just as good and most of the time way better....

If you want to use it for games, no Matrox imho.

For a p4 2ghz a geforce 4ti is a good option as well, with the v2's in place ofcourse 😎

asus tx97-e, 233mmx, voodoo1, s3 virge ,sb16
asus p5a, k6-3+ @ 550mhz, voodoo2 12mb sli, gf2 gts, awe32
asus p3b-f, p3-700, voodoo3 3500TV agp, awe64
asus tusl2-c, p3-S 1,4ghz, voodoo5 5500, live!
asus a7n8x DL, barton cpu, 6800ultra, Voodoo3 pci, audigy1

Reply 9 of 23, by obobskivich

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smeezekitty wrote:

But for a Pee-4, those cards seem kind of dated/underpowered

The CPU is massively over-powered for what this build needs to do; pretend we're talking about a mid-grade Pentium 3 if it helps. As far as why the CPU is chosen: it's the only 100% working mATX system I have, and I have no interest in messing about with a new platform, so it gets to stay (and this exact CPU/MB pair has been successfully winning this argument since 2003). 🤣

meljor wrote:

5800 gets in the way of the v2's? Well, in my book, voodoo wins (but i am 3dfx biased)

It can take a single V2 (and I've had that working fine in testing (and no, when combining NV30, Voodoo2, and Willamette it did not melt through the floor china syndrome style 🤣)), but SLI is a no-go unless I want to give up sound, or the 5800, because there simply aren't enough available slots. Given that I don't have a second V2 on-hand right now, it isn't really a big deal *today*, but if I wanted to go SLI (which would probably require buying two cards, since most of what I'm finding on ebay is Diamonds - I'm not sure I'm up to spending ~$100 on that at the moment) it'd be a problem.

My bigger "gotcha" with the 5800 is if 45.23 can't make that fan work right - when I tested it in 98 I used the latest drivers from the nV website (81-something if I remember right), and it seemed to work correctly just as it does on XP. But testing 45.23 on XP resulted in the fan never turning on at idle, and a very hot GPU (I turned the machine off and blasted it with a gas duster once it hit 75* C sitting in Windows). Of course, I don't think I have any games that conflict with newer-than-45.23, so I could probably just go with newer drivers, but I'd really be annoyed if down the road I loaded something up and it didn't work right due to the newer drivers. 😵

The radeon will do well also, considering it is a p4 2ghz. That p4 is not a fast cpu so both cards will be overkill unless you use a good deal of AA in your games.

Yeah, that's kind of the point of the 5800 (or a card in its class) being considered - I could just leave 4x or 8x AA on all the time. 🤣 (not that I really need 4x or 8x AA all the time, it just could; at least that's how it worked out when this thing ran XP).

Matrox? meh..... i have these cards (g200, g400 and g450) and i just can't get a good use for them. 2d is great? Yes, but many other cards are good at that and i can't see the difference. 3D? Almost every card that can do 3D is just as good and most of the time way better....

If you want to use it for games, no Matrox imho.

Thanks for an alternate opinion - I'll have to think about it. I'm guessing I'm going to vote "no" given that I'm seeing a G400 would cost around $30, and for that price I can get a GF3 or 4 Ti (and at that point, why not just go with the bigger-and-better 5800?).

The other thought I've had, is to ignore the 45.23 thing entirely, and dig out my 5900XT - it's somewhat slower than the 5800, but it's single-slot (the cooler looks fairly similar to some GF4 Ti cards), so I could have the option of V2 SLI (or some other #3 PCI card). Physically it'd be the same situation as the Radeon or a Matrox card though, and it should still be able to run with AA enabled all over the place.

Reply 10 of 23, by smeezekitty

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The CPU is massively over-powered for what this build needs to do; pretend we're talking about a mid-grade Pentium 3 if it helps.

Still wouldn't suggest the Matrox.
Matrox is one of the most overrated cards in my opinion. They have next to no 3d support.

Good image quality in 2d mode but otherwise quite limited.

I wouldn't pair a Matrox with anything faster than a fast P1 or a P2

Reply 11 of 23, by obobskivich

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Alright, was going to go with the FX 5900XT based on the mostly negative feedback for the Matrox, questionable support situation for the Radeon, and wanting to leave all the PCI slots open for potential V2 SLI...and then I found an eVGA GeForce 2 Ultra for under $10. So I went ahead and snagged that for this build. It supports 45.23 (and lots of older revisions (given how far back it can go, any prime suggestions? Or just go with 45.23?))), is single slot, can't possibly use as much power as the 5800 or 5900, and will still provide good DX5-7 performance. If I remember, I'll update the thread when it arrives.

Thanks for all the input thus far. 😀

Reply 12 of 23, by oerk

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Good choice. I would've said GeForce 3 or 4, but for a 98 box, a GeForce 2 is plenty.

Reply 13 of 23, by tayyare

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I had the same dilemma a few weeks ago. Started with an FX6200, down to FX5200, tried some Geforce4 MX's, and settled for a Geforce2 Ultra at the end. I don't know what you will play, but the games that I wanted to play are mainly older SW titles (X-Wing, TIE Fighter -both w9x versions- and X-wing Alliance) and all had different problems with the more powerful/modern cards. I also suggest loading older drivers as much as possible, if your requirements (i.e. games you will play) allows you to (I had problems with newer drivers, too). Any of these cards and even their older drivers are already more than what a w98 system needs, in any case, as far as I know.

Mismatched brand Voodoo2 SLI is theoretically possible, but in practice, I never reached a stable solution with my four different brand Voodoo2's in any possible combination (one is a Creative). There is only one combination that "seems" to work when you first installed, but gives problems when you try it under load. By the way, instead of stock drivers, you can also try 3rd party drivers, which claims SLI capability with mismatched brand cards (falconfly.de).

Last edited by tayyare on 2014-11-19, 19:49. Edited 1 time in total.

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 14 of 23, by JayCeeBee64

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For the GeForce 2 Ultra I would suggest 30.82 drivers first, they're very stable in Windows 98. If problems with games arise, then try 12.41; 7.58 are the oldest drivers I would go back to. I used these when I had my GeForce 2 GTS back in 2000-2001.

Ooohh, the pain......

Reply 15 of 23, by obobskivich

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Thanks for the tips on the GF2 and V2. JayCeeBee64: any reason not to start with something like 12.41 or whatnot? Or is there a big performance difference between those and newer drivers? (I don't know what the GF2 Ultra's "release" drivers are so I have no idea how new/old these versions are against it). I think I'm just going to hold out until I eventually find another 12MB Creative V2 (or a really good deal on two matched cards) - the single one and the GF2 will more than satisfy my purposes at the moment, and eventually I'll find another one to complete it. 😊

Reply 16 of 23, by smeezekitty

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obobskivich wrote:

Thanks for the tips on the GF2 and V2. JayCeeBee64: any reason not to start with something like 12.41 or whatnot? Or is there a big performance difference between those and newer drivers? (I don't know what the GF2 Ultra's "release" drivers are so I have no idea how new/old these versions are against it). I think I'm just going to hold out until I eventually find another 12MB Creative V2 (or a really good deal on two matched cards) - the single one and the GF2 will more than satisfy my purposes at the moment, and eventually I'll find another one to complete it. 😊

Is there any reason TO start with something old? I would try the newest drivers since they will likely support the most features
and be the fastest and go for older if you have problems.

Reply 17 of 23, by obobskivich

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smeezekitty wrote:

Is there any reason TO start with something old?

Personally I never had issues with the FX 5800 + 71.89 under XP, so I'm inclined to just install 45.23 or 30.82 or whatever else "new" and hope for the best, but if there's some glaring, important reason to pick an even older driver, I was hoping to hear about it beforehand. 😊

Reply 18 of 23, by JayCeeBee64

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obobskivich wrote:

any reason not to start with something like 12.41 or whatnot? Or is there a big performance difference between those and newer drivers?

None really, just personal choice. The 30.82 drivers are very compatible and have no graphical glitches or issues with games. 12.41 is also compatible, just older. Performance-wise they are about equal (some have claimed that 30.82 is slower, but I haven't seen this myself). Newer drivers do slow down the GF2 significantly.

(I don't know what the GF2 Ultra's "release" drivers are so I have no idea how new/old these versions are against it)

The earliest Nvidia driver I have that supports the GF2 Ultra is 6.31, so I'll presume this is probably the original "release" driver it came with.

Ooohh, the pain......

Reply 19 of 23, by obobskivich

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I wasn't aware they slowed the GF2 so early - I thought that coincided with the "optimization" period starting in the 50.xx series. For example in XP I've seen 45.23 improve the 5800's performance versus 71.89, and I just assumed that other cards that it supported would be equally benefited. Guess I'll just try 30.82 and see what I get.