smtkr wrote on 2024-08-11, 02:29:
AGP4LIfe? wrote on 2024-08-10, 18:18:I have a huge problem buying GeForce 4 Cards lol it's a sickness. 15$ for a nice Ti4200 is great. […]
Show full quote
I have a huge problem buying GeForce 4 Cards 🤣 it's a sickness. 15$ for a nice Ti4200 is great.
I bought this beautiful (and way to expensive) Ti 4680XP thinking it was a Ti 4800 with a weird name... Turns out it was a 4200 Turbo card which is actually kinda interesting in its own way.
It needs more testing though as It did get some artifacting after a long testing session. Might be bad drivers though because it only happened on specific textures/scenes.
Those cards were interesting back in the day. The PCB is arranged like a reference Ti4600, but it's a Ti4200. Are you able to overclock to Ti4600 speeds?
If its a 64mb then it should get very close to Ti4400 speeds on both core and memory. The 128Mb Ti4200 cards usually used cheap slow memory ICs to hit that 128Mb capacity and so cant overclock memory as good but the core should still OC as well as the 64mb models. Ti4600 speeds are quite a jump but it may be possible on certain 64Mb models that have fast memory ICs and a good GPU core but I wouldnt expect it to be stable OC or even a common one for most Ti4200s.
Its worth making sure you have good case cooling if you are going to OC these cards, they all used that terrible thermal epoxy to glue the heat sink to the GPU die and after all these years it may not be fully up to the task of cooling an OCed GPU.
Personally I feel there isnt a lot of reason to overclock the Geforce 4 cards as even the Ti4200 is overkill for games from that era and you run the risk of killing a valuable vintage part, it would be cheaper to just grab a Radeon 9600XT or 9800XT if you wanted something more powerful. 9600XTs are cheap as chips and all of them overclock like demons, they also have far better cooling and temperature monitoring.