Hello,
vidmouse;Ok, I finally installed a new (used) 1GB video card and am still having some issues. At first I got everything all whited-out, then I adjusted the alpha settings to lowest level. Now, it plays w/o the pixelation, but it stutters and it's slow. Any reason for this given my system specs? (1st post)
It's one thing to have adequate memory to render demanding tables, especially with Alpha transparencies; it's another to get that data where it has to be in a timely fashion
. Is your 'new' vid card a PCI, as was your FX5200? If so, bear in mind that AGP8X is theoretically sixteen times as fast as PCI
. Even if your mobo has the 66MHz PCI, which the manual doesn't mention, the bandwidth multiple is still eight
. Here are my video settings:
Fullscreen, 1280x1024x32, At Full Screen anti-stretch ball 16:9. Draw ball shadows, Draw ball decals, Antialias ball.
Hardware Device Rendering, Max texture dimension 1024, Alpha Ramp Accuracy slider all the way left.
1280 x 1024, a 5:4 aspect ratio, seems weird for a 16:9
FS table on a 16:9 monitor, but if you're happy, so am I
. As for the Details, I don't run any of them, but past experiments seemed to show me that Antialiasing delivers the biggest hit to FPS
. And if Hardware Render works, definitely use it
. (I say 'if', because my ATI Radeon HD4670 (AGP) can't use it on all tables
. $125, and HDR iffy---go figure!)
QUOTE (vidmouse)
Alright, this is weird... I just tried these settings on my desktop, and it appears to work fine. The PC has similar specs to my cab pc... except that the video isn't 1 GB! (I think it's only 256MB? -- a Geforce 6200). I wonder if using
UVP in my cab is slowing things down?
Would that GeForce 6200 happen to be an AGP-8X, by any chance? If so, this demonstrates what that sixteen-to-one does for you
. If not, then maybe the
UVP is suspect; all I play is desktop without a frontend, so I have no experience with
UVP.As far as one-gig cards for
AGP go, I've seen no evidence that NVidia ever made one; that's why I wound up with ATI
. NVidia
did make several PCI versions, though
. I guess that since PCI's evolution to PCI-E was right around the corner, NV figured AGP to be a dead horse
. That left all of us hesitant-to-upgrade types at the mercy of a company that hasn't even provided WHQL certified drivers for products with which they have this market cornered
. I replaced an AGP-8X GF6200 512MB, simply because I wanted 1GB---and I have to go Onboard if I want to play Pro Pinball or FullTilt! because the HD4670 can't handle their flippers or launcher/plunger!
GSG