Originally
posted 8/28/02
Updated 10/10/02 and 02/17/03
regarding the ADC Display/Adapter Compatibility
Issue
by rob-ART morgan, Bare Feats mad scientist
with thanks to the University of Hawaii, Dept. of
Physics,
for use of their Rev 1 "AGP Graphics" G4/500
Sawtooth Power Mac.
Some of you are
getting concerned that your old Rage Pro graphics
card with only 16MB of VRAM is going to cough and
sputter when you run Jaguar with Quartz
Extreme. So I decided to stick some of the
newest graphics cards in an old G4/500 "AGP
Graphics" Power Mac or "Rev 1 Sawtooth" to see what
they would do.
I'm not clear yet
on how to measure the effect of Quartz Extreme on
these graphics cards. However, I read these words
in Apple's
Description
which states Quartz Extreme "...uses the
integrated OpenGL technology to convert each window
into a texture, then sends it to the graphics card
to render on screen." That's very similar to
what Quake3 Arena does so I chose to use it as a
test in both "Fastest" and "Max" mode to show the
potential for speed gain on the Sawtooth even
without a CPU upgrade.
As you can see,
detailed textures and quality geometrics leave the
original Rage card gasping for air. However, the
faster graphics cards hit the wall just over 50
frames per second. This is as fast as you can go
without upgrading the CPU. Keep in mind that a DDR
1GHz MP Power Mac attains 115 frames per second
when running Quake3 in "Max" mode.
Of course, you
could always run Quake3 in low resolution like the
graph above, which is what you probably do now to
get decent frame rates. But that wouldn't be the
typical setup for someone running normal apps under
OS X with a 17" or 22" display.
CLARIFICATION
Let me clarify
what I'm trying to show here. Quartz Extreme will
NOT make Quake3 run faster. It won't make any
OpenGL app run faster. It uses OpenGL and the
graphics card to make system windowing functions
run faster... such as overlapping windows, shadows,
transparency, etc.
I'm not sure how
to measure that gain, although Apple claims they
know how and produced some graphs at the bottom of
the Quartz
Extreme web page.
The context of
Quake3 used here is to show how much is gained
using these graphics cards in a situation where
OpenGL is used to store and manipulate textures and
geometric patterns... in the same way as Quartz
Extreme. If a card helps run Quake3 faster, it
should be fully utilized by Quartz Extreme to do
system window functions faster.
WILL A CPU
UPGRADE HELP GET HIGHER THAN 50 FPS IN AN OLD G4
TOWER?
Possibly. Running
OS X and the OS X version of Quake3 in a Dual
G4/500 with a Radeon card, I got 133fps in "Fastest
640x480" mode and 60fps in "Max 1024x758" mode. A
Dual G4/533 with a GeForce3 card got got 149fps in
"Fastest 640x480" mode and 118fps in "Max 1024x758"
mode. So maybe a Dual G4 upgrade would help you get
more from the card.
WHICH CARD IS
BEST FOR AN OLDER G4 TOWER?
What I am about
to say only applies only to the first generation
"AGP Graphics" Power Mac or "Rev 1 Sawtooth." All
the models introduced since the first AGP series
(including the "Gigabit," "Digital Audio," and
"QuickSilver") fully support ADC. (See Apple's
Tech Article 58418 on "How
To Differentiate Between
Models"
and Apple's
Tech Article
#58692
on Display Compatibility.)
The best
bet for those of you searching for a repacement
for their Rage 128 Pro for your first generation
Sawtooth ("AGP Graphics" on Apple Web Site) is
the ATI
Radeon 8500 Mac
Edition.
HUH? That's because it is just as fast on the Rev 1
Sawtooth as the other cards, comes with 64MB of DDR
RAM, and features a VGA and DVI port -- making it
the ONLY graphics card of those tested that will
support up to two displays on that model. What?
Read on...
I can't recommend
the ATI
Radeon 9000 Mac
Edition
for the "AGP Graphics" Sawtooth even though it is a
very good card. It offers a DVI and ADC port.
That's great for the other G4 Power Macs with ADC
support built into the AGP slot, but NOT on the Rev
1 "AGP Graphics" Power Mac. The 9000's ADC
connector does fit the connector from an ADC
display, but nothing happens... why? because
there's no power sent from the "AGP Graphics" Power
Mac through the Radeon 9000's ADC connector to the
ADC display. Got it? So the ADC connector is
useless and dual display support is not an option
with this card on an "AGP Graphics" Sawtooth Power
Mac (first model to offer AGP). It only supports
DVI and VGA. (See Apple's tech articles referenced
in first paragraph.)
However, the
9000 with ADC connector runs fine on the 2nd, 3rd,
4th, etc model of Power Mac with AGP slot including
the "Gigabit," "Digital Audio," and "QuickSilver"
models. (See first paragraph of this section for
tech articles.)
You CAN use an
ADC display on the earliest AGP Power Mac but only
by using the DVI connector through a DVI to ADC
converter box. By the way, the DVI to ADC
converter is $99 at Apple's Online Store. Or you
can just use a DVI or VGA display. Instead of
buying the 9000 card and an adapter, just get the
Radeon 8500 for your Rev 1 "AGP Graphics"
PowerMac.
The $150
GeForce3
and the $400 GeForce4
Titanium
have the same problem as the Radeon 9000 when used
on the Rev 1 "AGP Graphics" Power Mac. But they
work fine on the "Gigabit," "Digital Audio," and
"QuickSilver." I hope I've made the ADC vs DVI
issue clear as mud.
WHERE TO BUY
THESE CARDS and CONVERTERS?
ATI has their own
online
store
where you can purchase the Radeon 7000, 8500 and
9000.
Check also with
Other
World Computing
and Buy.Com.
For the GeForce3,
check with MacResQ
and Other
World Computing.
For the GeForce4
Titanium kit and DVI to ADC converter, check with
the DISPLAYS section of the Apple
Online Store.
Check also with MacResQ.
(Since this
article was written, the ATI Radeon 9700 Pro is
starting to be offered as a BTO option on the Apple
Online Store. Watch for it to be offered as a
retail option or separate kit as some
point.)
RELATED
LINKS
See the Bare
Feats tests with these
graphics cards installed in the new DDR
Macs.
Read about what
Apple has to say about the nVIDIA GeForce4 Titanium
on the GRAPHICS
page of
the Power Mac section. It includes an interesting
graph showing the relative speed of the three DDR
Power Macs running Quake3 Arena. (It looks like
they were running at "High Quality" instead of "Max
Quality" like I use. Regardless, the 1.25GHz DDR
Power Mac is only 13% faster than the 1GHz DDR
Power Mac!)
See nVIDIA's
specs on the GeForce4
Titanium.
(Apple's card is comparable to the 4600 chip
set.)
ATI has a
description page for the Radeon
8500 Mac Edition
and Radeon
9000 Mac Edition
on their site.
Anandtech
compares the Radeon
9000 to
the 8500, GeForce4 MX, and GeForce4 Titanium AGP
cards for Windows PC's. They also compare the
Geforce4
Go to the Radeon 9000
Mobility
(both are NEW chips for laptops.)
Read about the
new Radeon
9700 (Mac
Edition coming in a few months), which, according
to Anandtech.com's
tests, is 30 to 50% faster than the GeForce4
Titanium... at least when run on a Windows
PC.
TEST
NOTES
The test "mule"
was a G4/500 "Sawtooth" Power Mac with 1.5GB of RAM
running OS X (10.2) from an IBM 120GXP 120GB
drive.
For details on
each real world test, read "HOW
I TEST."
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