From: peter on 25 Jan 2010 18:27 The onboard memory of the Video card does not care what kind of RAM you use on the Mobo,The more memory the video card has the better for you. peter -- If you find a posting or message from me offensive,inappropriate or disruptive,please ignore it. If you dont know how to ignore a posting complain to me and I will be only too happy to demonstrate :-) "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message news:OKYo5ZenKHA.1548(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... > > "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message > news:uHYj5UenKHA.3164(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >> >> "Paul" <nospam(a)needed.com> wrote in message >> news:hjki22$hl$1(a)speranza.aioe.org... >>> Roger wrote: >>>> "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message >>>> news:%23HvSVXcnKHA.4628(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>>>> "SC Tom" <sc(a)tom.net> wrote in message >>>>> news:OhVy09bnKHA.5700(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >>>>>> "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message >>>>>> news:eyhztxbnKHA.1544(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>>>>>> Please advise not sure if it is my Monitor LG1919s or graphic card >>>>>>> Creative Labs CT 6970 at fault. Problem my screen is now displaying grey >>>>>>> horizontal lines as though looking through a Venetian blind. >>>>>>> any window I open showing grey tint where as before would be white >>>>>>> background. I have refitted said card, done a auto set with monitor, >>>>>>> done a system restore point but still no improvement. >>>>>>> I run Xp pro sp2 and had no problem before, so something is breaking >>>>>>> down. My board is ECS SIS 735 K7S5A system a few years old but has >>>>>>> worked great. Any checks !! PS device Manager no problems but have >>>>>>> checked it for update drivers. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Regard Roger >>>>>>> ----------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- >>>>>>> >>>>>> Try changing the resolution and see if the problem goes away. If you know >>>>>> anyone with a laptop, have them come over and hook your monitor up to it. >>>>>> If you go into a full screen game, do you get the same effect? >>>>>> -- >>>>>> SC Tom >>>>>> >>>>> Thanks for prompt reply, changed res, no good, My normal is 1280x1025 >>>>> 32bit. I have a desktop but trying to borrow another flat screen for test. >>>>> I am a pensioner so don't play the games ! Like this reply where the word >>>>> line finishes the banding continues to edge of doc >>>>> >>>>> Roger >>>>> Well I have since connected my Monitor to a neighbours Desktop and it >>>>> appeared to display OK without any banding lines across screen when a >>>>> window is open .i.e like email window etc. So is it now only my graphic >>>>> card playing up ? >>>> If so if I am to replace my Creative CT 6970 what type would suit my old >>>> board etc etc. It may pay me to get a used, as system oldish compared to >>>> new standards and would be waste spending to much as I don't do gaming but >>>> don't want to drop performance. >>>> >>>> Roger >>>> >>> >>> You have plenty of choices. Your K7S5A supports AGP 4X cards (1.5V operation >>> on I/O). >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010380048+1069609639&ShowDeactivatedMark=False&Subcategory=48 >>> >>> There are two main brands there, ATI or Nvidia based solutions. >>> >>> ATI uses PCI Express GPU chips on their newest cards. They use a bridge chip >>> to convert to AGP protocol. The "Rialto" chip is the one here, on the back >>> of the video card, surrounded by pink protective material. Rialto is a 4X/8X >>> bridge. >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S04?$S640W$ >>> >>> The ATI HD 4650 would be a relatively powerful card for gaming. I know you >>> don't care about gaming, and that would be its chief advantage. A second >>> advantage it would have, is acceleration for playback of certain kinds of >>> video. So if you found your CPU wasn't powerful enough to play back DVDs >>> for example, the GPU on a card like this may provide some measure of >>> acceleration on playback. A third advantage of modern cards like this one, >>> is support for dual link DVI interface, allowing a 30" Apple monitor to be >>> driven by the card. Owning this card might also enable the AVIVO >>> converter software which you can download from ATI/AMD. The AVIVO software >>> was offered at one time, for video format conversion (if you process movies >>> you've downloaded). >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S01?$S640W$ >>> >>> You'll notice that card has two DVI connectors. If you have a VGA monitor, >>> they include a passive adapter dongle to make the proper 15 pins for VGA. >>> It is shown as an item included within the package. ("DVI to VGA") >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S05?$S640W$ >>> >>> The main downside of the most modern ATI cards, is the state of the drivers. >>> You should read the reviews on Newegg, to find the location of the best >>> driver >>> for the card. As long as the reviews for the card can identify a good >>> driver version to use, this is a safe purchase. >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814102851 >>> >>> On the Nvidia side of things, Nvidia too used to make bridged designs. >>> They'd take their new PCI Express chips and add a bridge chip they designed >>> called "HSI". The story is, that the foundry making the HSI chip, is no >>> longer making it. This effectively means the end of Nvidia addressing >>> the AGP market in an active way. >>> >>> Interesting. This 7600GS still has the HSI chip on it. The HSI chip is the >>> small rectangular aluminum heatsink below the main fan. This card has >>> VGA and DVI on the faceplate, so for a single monitor, no adapter dongle >>> need be installed. >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814143069 >>> >>> The Geforce 6200 is about the oldest one I know of, that still has driver >>> support. (I haven't checked lately to see if it is still on the newest >>> drivers.) >>> This would support a 1280x1024 monitor without any complaints, but you never >>> know - it might have issues with higher resolution monitors if you buy one >>> some day. The driver situation on this should be OK. The keying on this >>> one, shows universal keying, so in theory, you could even slap this >>> card in a ten year old, AGP equipped computer. >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130452 >>> >>> A number of the 6200 cards are fanless. They still get warm. Depending on >>> the cooling present in the computer case, they may get hot while you're >>> gaming. I own a couple fanless FX5200 cards (the card just before 6200 >>> came out), and one of those, I have to point an 80mm fan at the heatsink >>> of the video card, to keep it cool. A fanless card can give you quiet >>> operation, >>> as long as the heatsink is effective enough for the heat load. (I bolt a >>> wooden >>> paint stirrer stick to a PCI slot cover, and suspend the 80mm fan with nylon >>> wraps to keep it pointed at the video card :-) ) >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-130-452-S01?$S640W$ >>> >>> You can see here, an example of a recent Nvidia driver download. >>> Clicking the "Supported Products" tab shows 6200, 6200 Turbocache and >>> the like, are still listed. (You don't really want Turbocache cards, >>> because when gaming, they can steal some system memory for textures.) >>> >>> http://www.nvidia.com/object/winxp_196.21_whql.html >>> >>> If I didn't value movie playback acceleration (which comes with no >>> guarantees, >>> and depends on the player application as well), then a 6200 may be good >>> enough >>> for a 1280x1024 monitor. If I wanted a card that I could use to drive a >>> 30" Apple LCD monitor via dual link DVI connector, I'd pick the HD 4650. >>> >>> For some technical info about AGP selection in general, you can try this >>> page. >>> But with your 4X slot, I don't expect a problem. >>> >>> http://www.playtool.com/pages/agpcompat/agp.html >>> >>> Have fun, >>> Paul >> Well thank you Paul for plenty to study and the other posters as well, it all >> helps. >> I only use SDRAM which is 750 at moment as board max is 1GB. As with my old >> card CT6970 is for my RAM but the CT6971 is for DDR type so I must be >> careful. >> Roger >>PS Sorry I missed this off The info for CT6970 I beleive is 32mb G Force 256 >>Annililator Pro AGP ! Would higher MB have an effect on my board as I see you >>quote Radeon 512mb when looking for an AGP any caution about its memory > Roger >
From: Roger on 26 Jan 2010 09:09 "Paul" <nospam(a)needed.com> wrote in message news:hjki22$hl$1(a)speranza.aioe.org... > Roger wrote: >> "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message >> news:%23HvSVXcnKHA.4628(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>> "SC Tom" <sc(a)tom.net> wrote in message >>> news:OhVy09bnKHA.5700(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >>>> "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message >>>> news:eyhztxbnKHA.1544(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>>>> Please advise not sure if it is my Monitor LG1919s or graphic card >>>>> Creative Labs CT 6970 at fault. Problem my screen is now displaying >>>>> grey horizontal lines as though looking through a Venetian blind. >>>>> any window I open showing grey tint where as before would be white >>>>> background. I have refitted said card, done a auto set with monitor, >>>>> done a system restore point but still no improvement. >>>>> I run Xp pro sp2 and had no problem before, so something is breaking >>>>> down. My board is ECS SIS 735 K7S5A system a few years old but has >>>>> worked great. Any checks !! PS device Manager no problems but have >>>>> checked it for update drivers. >>>>> >>>>> Regard Roger >>>>> ----------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- >>>>> >>>> Try changing the resolution and see if the problem goes away. If you >>>> know anyone with a laptop, have them come over and hook your monitor up >>>> to it. If you go into a full screen game, do you get the same effect? >>>> -- >>>> SC Tom >>>> >>> Thanks for prompt reply, changed res, no good, My normal is 1280x1025 >>> 32bit. I have a desktop but trying to borrow another flat screen for >>> test. I am a pensioner so don't play the games ! Like this reply where >>> the word line finishes the banding continues to edge of doc >>> >>> Roger >>> Well I have since connected my Monitor to a neighbours Desktop and it >>> appeared to display OK without any banding lines across screen when a >>> window is open .i.e like email window etc. So is it now only my graphic >>> card playing up ? >> If so if I am to replace my Creative CT 6970 what type would suit my old >> board etc etc. It may pay me to get a used, as system oldish compared to >> new standards and would be waste spending to much as I don't do gaming >> but don't want to drop performance. >> >> Roger >> > > You have plenty of choices. Your K7S5A supports AGP 4X cards (1.5V > operation on I/O). > > http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010380048+1069609639&ShowDeactivatedMark=False&Subcategory=48 > > There are two main brands there, ATI or Nvidia based solutions. > > ATI uses PCI Express GPU chips on their newest cards. They use a bridge > chip > to convert to AGP protocol. The "Rialto" chip is the one here, on the back > of the video card, surrounded by pink protective material. Rialto is a > 4X/8X > bridge. > > http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S04?$S640W$ > > The ATI HD 4650 would be a relatively powerful card for gaming. I know you > don't care about gaming, and that would be its chief advantage. A second > advantage it would have, is acceleration for playback of certain kinds of > video. So if you found your CPU wasn't powerful enough to play back DVDs > for example, the GPU on a card like this may provide some measure of > acceleration on playback. A third advantage of modern cards like this one, > is support for dual link DVI interface, allowing a 30" Apple monitor to be > driven by the card. Owning this card might also enable the AVIVO > converter software which you can download from ATI/AMD. The AVIVO software > was offered at one time, for video format conversion (if you process > movies > you've downloaded). > > http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S01?$S640W$ > > You'll notice that card has two DVI connectors. If you have a VGA monitor, > they include a passive adapter dongle to make the proper 15 pins for VGA. > It is shown as an item included within the package. ("DVI to VGA") > > http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S05?$S640W$ > > The main downside of the most modern ATI cards, is the state of the > drivers. > You should read the reviews on Newegg, to find the location of the best > driver > for the card. As long as the reviews for the card can identify a good > driver version to use, this is a safe purchase. > > http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814102851 > > On the Nvidia side of things, Nvidia too used to make bridged designs. > They'd take their new PCI Express chips and add a bridge chip they > designed > called "HSI". The story is, that the foundry making the HSI chip, is no > longer making it. This effectively means the end of Nvidia addressing > the AGP market in an active way. > > Interesting. This 7600GS still has the HSI chip on it. The HSI chip is the > small rectangular aluminum heatsink below the main fan. This card has > VGA and DVI on the faceplate, so for a single monitor, no adapter dongle > need be installed. > > http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814143069 > > The Geforce 6200 is about the oldest one I know of, that still has driver > support. (I haven't checked lately to see if it is still on the newest > drivers.) > This would support a 1280x1024 monitor without any complaints, but you > never > know - it might have issues with higher resolution monitors if you buy one > some day. The driver situation on this should be OK. The keying on this > one, shows universal keying, so in theory, you could even slap this > card in a ten year old, AGP equipped computer. > > http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130452 > > A number of the 6200 cards are fanless. They still get warm. Depending on > the cooling present in the computer case, they may get hot while you're > gaming. I own a couple fanless FX5200 cards (the card just before 6200 > came out), and one of those, I have to point an 80mm fan at the heatsink > of the video card, to keep it cool. A fanless card can give you quiet > operation, > as long as the heatsink is effective enough for the heat load. (I bolt a > wooden > paint stirrer stick to a PCI slot cover, and suspend the 80mm fan with > nylon > wraps to keep it pointed at the video card :-) ) > > http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-130-452-S01?$S640W$ > > You can see here, an example of a recent Nvidia driver download. > Clicking the "Supported Products" tab shows 6200, 6200 Turbocache and > the like, are still listed. (You don't really want Turbocache cards, > because when gaming, they can steal some system memory for textures.) > > http://www.nvidia.com/object/winxp_196.21_whql.html > > If I didn't value movie playback acceleration (which comes with no > guarantees, > and depends on the player application as well), then a 6200 may be good > enough > for a 1280x1024 monitor. If I wanted a card that I could use to drive a > 30" Apple LCD monitor via dual link DVI connector, I'd pick the HD 4650. > > For some technical info about AGP selection in general, you can try this > page. > But with your 4X slot, I don't expect a problem. > > http://www.playtool.com/pages/agpcompat/agp.html > > Have fun, > Paul It looks as though I will be going for AGP Geforce 6200 as you said my old board should support it but there appears to be more slots in gold pins, will this still fit the K7S5A board, As my old card CT 6970 only has one gap in pins. Roger
From: peter on 26 Jan 2010 10:17 The length of the Gold connectors are the same. The extra slot does not connect a certain aspect of the video card. I suspect in that case it has no HDMI and therefore the connection is not needed. peter -- If you find a posting or message from me offensive,inappropriate or disruptive,please ignore it. If you dont know how to ignore a posting complain to me and I will be only too happy to demonstrate :-) "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message news:OvRGtEpnKHA.5524(a)TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl... > > "Paul" <nospam(a)needed.com> wrote in message > news:hjki22$hl$1(a)speranza.aioe.org... >> Roger wrote: >>> "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message >>> news:%23HvSVXcnKHA.4628(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>>> "SC Tom" <sc(a)tom.net> wrote in message >>>> news:OhVy09bnKHA.5700(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >>>>> "Roger" <Monkey(a)Zoo.fsnet.co.uk> wrote in message >>>>> news:eyhztxbnKHA.1544(a)TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >>>>>> Please advise not sure if it is my Monitor LG1919s or graphic card >>>>>> Creative Labs CT 6970 at fault. Problem my screen is now displaying grey >>>>>> horizontal lines as though looking through a Venetian blind. >>>>>> any window I open showing grey tint where as before would be white >>>>>> background. I have refitted said card, done a auto set with monitor, >>>>>> done a system restore point but still no improvement. >>>>>> I run Xp pro sp2 and had no problem before, so something is breaking >>>>>> down. My board is ECS SIS 735 K7S5A system a few years old but has >>>>>> worked great. Any checks !! PS device Manager no problems but have >>>>>> checked it for update drivers. >>>>>> >>>>>> Regard Roger >>>>>> ----------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------- >>>>>> >>>>> Try changing the resolution and see if the problem goes away. If you know >>>>> anyone with a laptop, have them come over and hook your monitor up to it. >>>>> If you go into a full screen game, do you get the same effect? >>>>> -- >>>>> SC Tom >>>>> >>>> Thanks for prompt reply, changed res, no good, My normal is 1280x1025 >>>> 32bit. I have a desktop but trying to borrow another flat screen for test. >>>> I am a pensioner so don't play the games ! Like this reply where the word >>>> line finishes the banding continues to edge of doc >>>> >>>> Roger >>>> Well I have since connected my Monitor to a neighbours Desktop and it >>>> appeared to display OK without any banding lines across screen when a >>>> window is open .i.e like email window etc. So is it now only my graphic >>>> card playing up ? >>> If so if I am to replace my Creative CT 6970 what type would suit my old >>> board etc etc. It may pay me to get a used, as system oldish compared to new >>> standards and would be waste spending to much as I don't do gaming but don't >>> want to drop performance. >>> >>> Roger >>> >> >> You have plenty of choices. Your K7S5A supports AGP 4X cards (1.5V operation >> on I/O). >> >> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010380048+1069609639&ShowDeactivatedMark=False&Subcategory=48 >> >> There are two main brands there, ATI or Nvidia based solutions. >> >> ATI uses PCI Express GPU chips on their newest cards. They use a bridge chip >> to convert to AGP protocol. The "Rialto" chip is the one here, on the back >> of the video card, surrounded by pink protective material. Rialto is a 4X/8X >> bridge. >> >> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S04?$S640W$ >> >> The ATI HD 4650 would be a relatively powerful card for gaming. I know you >> don't care about gaming, and that would be its chief advantage. A second >> advantage it would have, is acceleration for playback of certain kinds of >> video. So if you found your CPU wasn't powerful enough to play back DVDs >> for example, the GPU on a card like this may provide some measure of >> acceleration on playback. A third advantage of modern cards like this one, >> is support for dual link DVI interface, allowing a 30" Apple monitor to be >> driven by the card. Owning this card might also enable the AVIVO >> converter software which you can download from ATI/AMD. The AVIVO software >> was offered at one time, for video format conversion (if you process movies >> you've downloaded). >> >> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S01?$S640W$ >> >> You'll notice that card has two DVI connectors. If you have a VGA monitor, >> they include a passive adapter dongle to make the proper 15 pins for VGA. >> It is shown as an item included within the package. ("DVI to VGA") >> >> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S05?$S640W$ >> >> The main downside of the most modern ATI cards, is the state of the drivers. >> You should read the reviews on Newegg, to find the location of the best >> driver >> for the card. As long as the reviews for the card can identify a good >> driver version to use, this is a safe purchase. >> >> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814102851 >> >> On the Nvidia side of things, Nvidia too used to make bridged designs. >> They'd take their new PCI Express chips and add a bridge chip they designed >> called "HSI". The story is, that the foundry making the HSI chip, is no >> longer making it. This effectively means the end of Nvidia addressing >> the AGP market in an active way. >> >> Interesting. This 7600GS still has the HSI chip on it. The HSI chip is the >> small rectangular aluminum heatsink below the main fan. This card has >> VGA and DVI on the faceplate, so for a single monitor, no adapter dongle >> need be installed. >> >> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814143069 >> >> The Geforce 6200 is about the oldest one I know of, that still has driver >> support. (I haven't checked lately to see if it is still on the newest >> drivers.) >> This would support a 1280x1024 monitor without any complaints, but you never >> know - it might have issues with higher resolution monitors if you buy one >> some day. The driver situation on this should be OK. The keying on this >> one, shows universal keying, so in theory, you could even slap this >> card in a ten year old, AGP equipped computer. >> >> http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130452 >> >> A number of the 6200 cards are fanless. They still get warm. Depending on >> the cooling present in the computer case, they may get hot while you're >> gaming. I own a couple fanless FX5200 cards (the card just before 6200 >> came out), and one of those, I have to point an 80mm fan at the heatsink >> of the video card, to keep it cool. A fanless card can give you quiet >> operation, >> as long as the heatsink is effective enough for the heat load. (I bolt a >> wooden >> paint stirrer stick to a PCI slot cover, and suspend the 80mm fan with nylon >> wraps to keep it pointed at the video card :-) ) >> >> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-130-452-S01?$S640W$ >> >> You can see here, an example of a recent Nvidia driver download. >> Clicking the "Supported Products" tab shows 6200, 6200 Turbocache and >> the like, are still listed. (You don't really want Turbocache cards, >> because when gaming, they can steal some system memory for textures.) >> >> http://www.nvidia.com/object/winxp_196.21_whql.html >> >> If I didn't value movie playback acceleration (which comes with no >> guarantees, >> and depends on the player application as well), then a 6200 may be good >> enough >> for a 1280x1024 monitor. If I wanted a card that I could use to drive a >> 30" Apple LCD monitor via dual link DVI connector, I'd pick the HD 4650. >> >> For some technical info about AGP selection in general, you can try this >> page. >> But with your 4X slot, I don't expect a problem. >> >> http://www.playtool.com/pages/agpcompat/agp.html >> >> Have fun, >> Paul > > It looks as though I will be going for AGP Geforce 6200 as you said my old > board should support it but there appears to > be more slots in gold pins, will this still fit the K7S5A board, As my old > card CT 6970 only has one gap in pins. > Roger >
From: Paul on 26 Jan 2010 11:00 Roger wrote: >> >> http://www.playtool.com/pages/agpcompat/agp.html >> >> Have fun, >> Paul > > It looks as though I will be going for AGP Geforce 6200 as you said my old > board should support it but there appears to > be more slots in gold pins, will this still fit the K7S5A board, As my old > card CT 6970 only has one gap in pins. > Roger > You should be looking at the photos on playtool.com. A card with two slots cut in the edge connector, is a "universal" card capable of operating at 1.5 or 3.3 VIO voltage. http://www.playtool.com/pages/agpcompat/voltageslots.jpg The way this works, is the AGP slot on the motherboard, has a plastic "bump" or key, inside the connector. A "universal" video card, with the two slots cut, can be plugged into a motherboard with a "bump" in either location, and the card will seat. The "key and slot" system is for preventing the mixing of incompatible voltage devices. Your previous video card may have been a 1.5V-only video card. The new card supports 1.5V or 3.3V, so should plug in and fit into the slot. If it does not fit, come back and ask for help here, rather than taking a chance. Don't force a card that doesn't want to go in the slot. These are the playtool.com entries for the hardware you're talking about. Consult the "Practical Motherboard And Card Compatibility" table, to see that these can be safely mixed (any of the options shown here will work). SiS735 Universal AGP Motherboard NVIDIA GeForce 6200 Universal 1.5V AGP 3.0 Card or Universal AGP 3.0 Card (A card with "two slots cut" is the latter one.) There are a limited number of older video cards in circulation, where the slot is cut in the wrong place, for the kind of card. Generally speaking, those are the only cards to be very careful with, if changing video cards, because they can be plugged into the wrong kind of motherboard and ruin it. Cards manufactured in the last 5-8 years should be reasonably safe, as the companies eventually figured out what they were supposed to be doing. HTH, Paul
From: Roger on 26 Jan 2010 11:13 "peter" <peter(a)nowhere.net> wrote in message news:ezN4UqpnKHA.1548(a)TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... > The length of the Gold connectors are the same. > The extra slot does not connect a certain aspect of the video card. > I suspect in that case it has no HDMI and therefore the connection > is not needed. > > peter > > -- [Snip] Thank you for that, I hope this is last query. Do you think it will be a straight Plug-Play and windows load driver, I would not need to do changes to Bios ! Or would i need to uninstall current driver which is NVIDIA GeForce DDR in Display adapters. >>>>> Thanks for prompt reply, changed res, no good, My normal is 1280x1025 >>>>> 32bit. I have a desktop but trying to borrow another flat screen for >>>>> test. I am a pensioner so don't play the games ! Like this reply >>>>> where the word line finishes the banding continues to edge of doc >>>>> >>>>> Roger >>>>> Well I have since connected my Monitor to a neighbours Desktop and it >>>>> appeared to display OK without any banding lines across screen when a >>>>> window is open .i.e like email window etc. So is it now only my >>>>> graphic card playing up ? >>>> If so if I am to replace my Creative CT 6970 what type would suit my >>>> old board etc etc. It may pay me to get a used, as system oldish >>>> compared to new standards and would be waste spending to much as I >>>> don't do gaming but don't want to drop performance. >>>> >>>> Roger >>>> >>> >>> You have plenty of choices. Your K7S5A supports AGP 4X cards (1.5V >>> operation on I/O). >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010380048+1069609639&ShowDeactivatedMark=False&Subcategory=48 >>> >>> There are two main brands there, ATI or Nvidia based solutions. >>> >>> ATI uses PCI Express GPU chips on their newest cards. They use a bridge >>> chip >>> to convert to AGP protocol. The "Rialto" chip is the one here, on the >>> back >>> of the video card, surrounded by pink protective material. Rialto is a >>> 4X/8X >>> bridge. >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S04?$S640W$ >>> >>> The ATI HD 4650 would be a relatively powerful card for gaming. I know >>> you >>> don't care about gaming, and that would be its chief advantage. A second >>> advantage it would have, is acceleration for playback of certain kinds >>> of >>> video. So if you found your CPU wasn't powerful enough to play back DVDs >>> for example, the GPU on a card like this may provide some measure of >>> acceleration on playback. A third advantage of modern cards like this >>> one, >>> is support for dual link DVI interface, allowing a 30" Apple monitor to >>> be >>> driven by the card. Owning this card might also enable the AVIVO >>> converter software which you can download from ATI/AMD. The AVIVO >>> software >>> was offered at one time, for video format conversion (if you process >>> movies >>> you've downloaded). >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S01?$S640W$ >>> >>> You'll notice that card has two DVI connectors. If you have a VGA >>> monitor, >>> they include a passive adapter dongle to make the proper 15 pins for >>> VGA. >>> It is shown as an item included within the package. ("DVI to VGA") >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-102-851-S05?$S640W$ >>> >>> The main downside of the most modern ATI cards, is the state of the >>> drivers. >>> You should read the reviews on Newegg, to find the location of the best >>> driver >>> for the card. As long as the reviews for the card can identify a good >>> driver version to use, this is a safe purchase. >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814102851 >>> >>> On the Nvidia side of things, Nvidia too used to make bridged designs. >>> They'd take their new PCI Express chips and add a bridge chip they >>> designed >>> called "HSI". The story is, that the foundry making the HSI chip, is no >>> longer making it. This effectively means the end of Nvidia addressing >>> the AGP market in an active way. >>> >>> Interesting. This 7600GS still has the HSI chip on it. The HSI chip is >>> the >>> small rectangular aluminum heatsink below the main fan. This card has >>> VGA and DVI on the faceplate, so for a single monitor, no adapter dongle >>> need be installed. >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductReview.aspx?Item=N82E16814143069 >>> >>> The Geforce 6200 is about the oldest one I know of, that still has >>> driver >>> support. (I haven't checked lately to see if it is still on the newest >>> drivers.) >>> This would support a 1280x1024 monitor without any complaints, but you >>> never >>> know - it might have issues with higher resolution monitors if you buy >>> one >>> some day. The driver situation on this should be OK. The keying on this >>> one, shows universal keying, so in theory, you could even slap this >>> card in a ten year old, AGP equipped computer. >>> >>> http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130452 >>> >>> A number of the 6200 cards are fanless. They still get warm. Depending >>> on >>> the cooling present in the computer case, they may get hot while you're >>> gaming. I own a couple fanless FX5200 cards (the card just before 6200 >>> came out), and one of those, I have to point an 80mm fan at the heatsink >>> of the video card, to keep it cool. A fanless card can give you quiet >>> operation, >>> as long as the heatsink is effective enough for the heat load. (I bolt a >>> wooden >>> paint stirrer stick to a PCI slot cover, and suspend the 80mm fan with >>> nylon >>> wraps to keep it pointed at the video card :-) ) >>> >>> http://images17.newegg.com/is/image/newegg/14-130-452-S01?$S640W$ >>> >>> You can see here, an example of a recent Nvidia driver download. >>> Clicking the "Supported Products" tab shows 6200, 6200 Turbocache and >>> the like, are still listed. (You don't really want Turbocache cards, >>> because when gaming, they can steal some system memory for textures.) >>> >>> http://www.nvidia.com/object/winxp_196.21_whql.html >>> >>> If I didn't value movie playback acceleration (which comes with no >>> guarantees, >>> and depends on the player application as well), then a 6200 may be good >>> enough >>> for a 1280x1024 monitor. If I wanted a card that I could use to drive a >>> 30" Apple LCD monitor via dual link DVI connector, I'd pick the HD 4650. >>> >>> For some technical info about AGP selection in general, you can try this >>> page. >>> But with your 4X slot, I don't expect a problem. >>> >>> http://www.playtool.com/pages/agpcompat/agp.html >>> >>> Have fun, >>> Paul >> >> It looks as though I will be going for AGP Geforce 6200 as you said my >> old board should support it but there appears to >> be more slots in gold pins, will this still fit the K7S5A board, As my >> old card CT 6970 only has one gap in pins. >> Roger >>
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