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-   -   TNT2 Ultra 1.5V (http://www.hardwarebanter.com/showthread.php?t=164488)

[email protected] January 27th 08 11:36 PM

TNT2 Ultra 1.5V
 
This is an old hardware question, so bear with me. Are there ANY TNT2
Ultra cards that are 1.5V?

Notches in the card are not reliable: a lot of TNT2 Ultra cards (maybe
most?) are improperly keyed, for both 3.3V and 1.5V slots, when in
fact they are only 3.3V.

And the designation AGP 4X is not reliable either. Even though the AGP
4X specs call for 1.5V, in fact, again, there are many TNT2 Ultra
cards that claim to be AGP 4X and implement at least part of the AGP
4X specs, but they are still 3.3V cards.

So I just want to know which TNT2 Ultra cards, if any, are actually
1.5V.

Claude

deimos[_2_] January 28th 08 11:10 PM

TNT2 Ultra 1.5V
 
wrote:
This is an old hardware question, so bear with me. Are there ANY TNT2
Ultra cards that are 1.5V?

Notches in the card are not reliable: a lot of TNT2 Ultra cards (maybe
most?) are improperly keyed, for both 3.3V and 1.5V slots, when in
fact they are only 3.3V.

And the designation AGP 4X is not reliable either. Even though the AGP
4X specs call for 1.5V, in fact, again, there are many TNT2 Ultra
cards that claim to be AGP 4X and implement at least part of the AGP
4X specs, but they are still 3.3V cards.

So I just want to know which TNT2 Ultra cards, if any, are actually
1.5V.

Claude


I never saw a TNT2U that was specifically 1.5v only. My Guillemot at
the time was a standard AGP Pro card and so were the rest of that
period. Perhaps the later M64's or TNT2 Pro's were.

Is there a reason you specifically need 1.5v? Even in my old 440LX
board, anything that physically fits in the slot works. From a Riva 128
to a TNT to a GF2 to a GF6 6600GT. From what I understand, it's mostly
a chipset deal for incompatibility issues.

First of One[_2_] January 29th 08 02:40 AM

TNT2 Ultra 1.5V
 
wrote in message
...
This is an old hardware question, so bear with me. Are there ANY TNT2
Ultra cards that are 1.5V?

Notches in the card are not reliable: a lot of TNT2 Ultra cards (maybe
most?) are improperly keyed, for both 3.3V and 1.5V slots, when in
fact they are only 3.3V.

And the designation AGP 4X is not reliable either. Even though the AGP
4X specs call for 1.5V, in fact, again, there are many TNT2 Ultra
cards that claim to be AGP 4X and implement at least part of the AGP
4X specs, but they are still 3.3V cards.


Indeed, and some TNT2 cards (like the heavily-marketed Diamond Viper V770)
reportedly support both 3.3V and 1.5V signaling, but require the user to set
a jumper on the card's PCB to select 1.5V. Even cards of the same brand may
see small design changes through its life due to cost-cutting, so 1.5V
capability may have gotten removed in a newer PCB revision. Just because I
say brand-X works at 1.5V, doesn't mean the card you buy will do the same.

So I just want to know which TNT2 Ultra cards, if any, are actually
1.5V.


The way you are asking the question, suggests you are looking to purchase a
TNT2 Ultra. Any reason a Geforce256 or Geforce2 GTS can't meet your needs?
These cards are certain to work at 1.5V. Prices should be about the same
nowadays.

--
"War is the continuation of politics by other means.
It can therefore be said that politics is war without
bloodshed while war is politics with bloodshed."





Benjamin Gawert January 31st 08 11:49 AM

TNT2 Ultra 1.5V
 
* :

This is an old hardware question, so bear with me. Are there ANY TNT2
Ultra cards that are 1.5V?


Yes, there are.

Notches in the card are not reliable: a lot of TNT2 Ultra cards (maybe
most?) are improperly keyed, for both 3.3V and 1.5V slots, when in
fact they are only 3.3V.


Right.

And the designation AGP 4X is not reliable either. Even though the AGP
4X specs call for 1.5V, in fact, again, there are many TNT2 Ultra
cards that claim to be AGP 4X and implement at least part of the AGP
4X specs, but they are still 3.3V cards.

So I just want to know which TNT2 Ultra cards, if any, are actually
1.5V.


Hard to say as this is dependent on the GPU revision which often changed
within a given product series so you can't just say "card xxx is safe".
IIRC there is no reliable way to tell if the card really is 1.5v capable
other than to test it in an AGP 4x/8x mobo with protection circuitry.

But honestly, with GF2MX cards which are way faster and newer and fully
AGP 4x compatible available for almost nothing on the used market I
wonder why anyone would take up the effort to fiddle around with the old
TNT2 series.

Benjamin

[email protected] February 14th 08 06:07 AM

TNT2 Ultra 1.5V
 
On Jan 31, 3:49�am, Benjamin Gawert wrote:
* :

This is an old hardware question, so bear with me. Are there ANY TNT2
Ultra cards that are 1.5V?


Yes, there are.

Notches in the card are not reliable: a lot of TNT2 Ultra cards (maybe
most?) are improperly keyed, for both 3.3V and 1.5V slots, when in
fact they are only 3.3V.


Right.

And the designation AGP 4X is not reliable either. Even though the AGP
4X specs call for 1.5V, in fact, again, there are many TNT2 Ultra
cards that claim to be AGP 4X and implement at least part of the AGP
4X specs, but they are still 3.3V cards.


So I just want to know which TNT2 Ultra cards, if any, are actually
1.5V.


Hard to say as this is dependent on the GPU revision which often changed
within a given product series so you can't just say "card xxx is safe".
IIRC there is no reliable way to tell if the card really is 1.5v capable
other than to test it in an AGP 4x/8x mobo with protection circuitry.

But honestly, with GF2MX cards which are way faster and newer and fully
AGP 4x compatible available for almost nothing on the used market I
wonder why anyone would take up the effort to fiddle around with the old
TNT2 series.

Benjamin


True, and I'm sure the reason will seem even more bizarre but there it
is:

As far as I know, the TNT2 Ultra is the "fastest" card that still has
drivers for Windows 3.1x. Then i865 is the "newest" chipset that still
supports AGP, but it has to be 1.5V, also as far as I know.

So there you have it. If you want a reasonably fast machine that will
run every version of Windows from 3.1x to XP, a 1.5V TNT2 Ultra is the
way to go. Second choice, and not a bad one, is Matrox G400 MAX, but
it has to be an MMDH4A32G, only those with a "4" in the model number
are 1.5V cards.

Thanks for the tips.


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