GF4-MX400 or Voodoo5 5500?
Laugh at me , but I am still using a Voodoo5 5500 in my main computer. I recently acquired a GeForce4 MX400 from my bro-in-law. I am planning on building a new computer in the near future (this Fall looks good), but that is not guaranteed. My new system will have something less prehistoric.
Is it worth my time/trouble to stick the MX400 in my main comp?
I must admit that I'm awfully tired or wrestling with my orphaned Voodoo card, and it's lack of any serious drivers for XPpro. However, having my two 12-year-old nephews here this week has rekindled my interest in 3-D gaming.
Tell me what you think.
Prof
Is it worth my time/trouble to stick the MX400 in my main comp?
I must admit that I'm awfully tired or wrestling with my orphaned Voodoo card, and it's lack of any serious drivers for XPpro. However, having my two 12-year-old nephews here this week has rekindled my interest in 3-D gaming.
Tell me what you think.
Prof
0
Comments
I doubt he is willing to spend any money, he already has the card and wants o know which of the 2he has to use.
I'd go with the MX400
In both synthetic & gaming benchmarks, the GeForce 2 GTS managed to best the Voodoo 5 5500 in 99% of the tests.
I'd highly recommend the GF4 MX-440 and save your pennies for a DX9 video card.
//Edit: There is no "MX-400" edition of the GeForce 4, unless NVidia has released some severely scaled down version of the MX420 (how you can scale down from SDR VRAM, I have no idea...)
AFAIK, there's a GF4 MX420, 440, and 460, and GF2 MX200s and 400s. No GF4MX400... or am I wrong?
Which card is this?
eg,
http://www.vartotechnologies.com/item331.htm
Says that the card is the "MX-400", but then contradicts that in the first sentence, stating the "MX-440 packs 64MB of DDR memory...."
It also depends on what types of games you are playing on this video card. If the majority of your games support Glide, then go with the V5500. However, if they only support Direct3D or OpenGL, your better off with the "MX400" (whatever that is...) as it actually supports DX7.
Even if it is the GeForce 2 MX400, back in the day, people were able to get decent overclocks out of them, provided you upgraded the cooling system.
When trying to get my old Voodoo 5 6000 (yes, 6000) to run on Windows XP, I find it easiest to install "unofficial" beta drivers by 3DHQ. The creator usually includes the 3DFX Tools menu and a really stable driver on all OS's (especially 98 & Me).
The latest release is Beta 10. A link can be found below:
http://www.voodoofiles.com/9529
The big problem was with Unreal Tournament. I dusted it off for my nephews to play, but couldn't get it to play (except in a dinky window, fer crying out loud) unless I used software rendering. SimGuy, nice call. I went with the drivers you mentioned and now all is as it should be.
I had used 3rd-Party "Unofficial" drivers in the past (with Win2K), but always ran into some sort of problem which led me to dump them out of frustration. These seem to be working fine, and it is certainly nice to have the 3dfx tools back.
The only time I have ever bought the "latest-and-greatest" video card was the Voodoo 5. Then 3dfx went TU and left me with a driverless orphan. If it wasn't for the IBM "DeathStar" drives, which consume most of the energy I allot for griping, I would probably complain about my Voodoo experience more than I do. I bought two Voodoo 2 cards for SLI - one died within weeks. I had bought them from a vendor at a computer show, who I never saw again. Went to the store and bought another Voodoo 2 - wasn't compatible with the first one. Went back and bought another one (same brand, etc.). Four cards to get two working. Then I upgraded to the Voodoo 3. Whoopty-Doo, didn't see much difference. Then came the Voodoo 5.
Since I plan to build a whole new system before long, I think I'll just stick with the Voodoo 5 (and SimGuy's driver tip) for now. Unless I get curious and run some benchmarks on the Voodoo and decide to install the GF4 MX440 for comparison.
Thanks for the help!
Prof
(Would have replied sooner, but took the boys fishing )
The ol' Voodoo 5 could really push the poly's back on games like UT that supported Glide
The GF4-MX is quite a bit better than the GF2 GTS though.
NS
The GeForce 4 MX (NV17) is an enhanced version of the GeForce 2 GTS (NV15), fully supporting DirectX 7 API's and featuring a 2x64-bit Cross-Bar Memory Controller (LMA-II).
Also included is NVidia's Second Generation T&L Engine and NVidia's Shading Rasterizer (per-Pixel Shaders). I should mention that these Pixel Shaders are NOT programmable, but can only be utilized if the software makes calls for the pre-programmed Pixel Shaders included in the GPU.
It does NOT support Vertex Shading at all and is inferior to the GeForce 3/Radeon 8500 or faster families of video cards.
You can ROUGHLY compare the performance of the following devices to eachother:
GF4MX460 -> GF2 Titanium
GF4MX440 -> GF2 Ultra/Pro/GTS
GF4MX420 -> GF2 MX (the GF4MX420 is a SDR-based board).
I'm looking forward to getting something a little more 21st century, though.
Thanks for all the advice.
Prof
(Who will probably be back to pester you again when it comes time to order my new stuff )