ATI Radeon 64MB DDR

by Matthew Witheiler on July 17, 2000 9:00 AM EST

The Test

For the testing, we used the same systems as were used for the GeForce 2 GTS review, with updated drivers. In the case of the Radeon, we tested with the shipping drivers with V-sync disabled as well as "Convert 32-bit textures to 16-bit" turned off. Below is the testing section from the GeForce 2 GTS review.

We chose three systems to measure the performance of these video cards.  Remember that this is a comparison of the performance of video cards, not of CPUs or motherboard platforms.

For our High End testing platform, we picked an Athlon 750 running on a KX133 motherboard.  The Athlon 750 is fast enough that it won’t be a limiting factor in the benchmarks and should also provide a good estimate of how all of the cards compared would perform on a 600 – 800MHz Athlon or Pentium III system (it will at least tell you which card would be faster).

For our Low End testing platform we picked a Pentium III 550E running on a BX motherboard.  Although this isn’t a very “low-end” processor, it is fast enough  to see a performance difference between video cards without the processor stepping in as a huge limitation.  If we used something like a Celeron 466, the performance of virtually all the cards would be virtually identical at the lower resolutions because the CPU and FSB/memory buses are limiting factors.  Once again, this is a test of graphics cards not of CPU/platform performance. 

For our FSAA testing, we picked a 1GHz Pentium III running on an i820 motherboard with RDRAM.  The reason we picked this platform (we are aware that it isn’t widely available) is because it eliminates virtually all bottlenecks that would be present and allows us to illustrate the biggest performance hit enabling FSAA would result in.  Slower setups would have lesser performance hits because they have more bottlenecks. 

Windows 98 SE Test System

Hardware

CPU(s)

Intel Pentium III 1.0EB

Intel Pentium III 550E

AMD Athlon 750
Motherboard(s)
AOpen AX6C
AOpen AX6BC Pro Gold AOpen AK72
Memory
128MB PC800 Samsung RDRAM

128MB PC133 Corsair SDRAM

128MB PC133 Corsair SDRAM
Hard Drive

IBM Deskstar DPTA-372050 20.5GB 7200 RPM Ultra ATA 66

CDROM

Phillips 48X

Video Card(s)

3dfx Voodoo5 5500 AGP 64MB
3dfx Voodoo5 4500 AGP 32MB
3dfx Voodoo3 3000 AGP 16MB

ATI Radeon 64MB DDR
ATI Rage 128 Pro 32MB

ATI Rage Fury MAXX 64MB

Matrox Millennium G400MAX 32MB (would not run on Athlon platform)

NVIDIA GeForce 2 MX 32MB SDR (default clock 175/166)
NVIDIA GeForce 2 GTS 64MB DDR (default clock - 200/166 DDR)
NVIDIA GeForce 2 GTS 32MB DDR (default clock - 200/166 DDR)
NVIDIA GeForce 256 64MB DDR (default clock - 120/150 DDR)
NVIDIA GeForce 256 32MB DDR (default clock - 120/150 DDR)
NVIDIA GeForce 256 32MB SDR (default clock - 120/166)

NVIDIA Riva TNT2 Ultra 32MB (default clock - 150/183)

S3 Diamond Viper II 32MB

Ethernet

Linksys LNE100TX 100Mbit PCI Ethernet Adapter

Software

Operating System

Windows 98 SE

Video Drivers

3dfx Voodoo5 5500 AGP 64MB - final drivers v1.00.01
3dfx Voodoo5 4500 AGP 32MB - final drivers v1.00.01
3dfx Voodoo3 3000 AGP 16MB - final drivers v1.04.07

ATI Rage 128 Pro 32MB - 6.33CD21
ATI Rage Fury MAXX 64MB - A6.40CD06
ATI Radeon 64MB DDR - D7.11-CD01

Matrox Millennium G400MAX 32MB - 6.00.010 Beta

NVIDIA GeForce2 MX 32MB SDR - Detonator 5.30
NVIDIA GeForce2 GTS 32MB DDR - Detonator 5.30
NVIDIA GeForce2 GTS 64MB DDR - Detonator 5.30
NVIDIA GeForce 256 64MB DDR - Detonator 5.30
NVIDIA GeForce 256 32MB DDR - Detonator 5.30
NVIDIA GeForce 256 32MB SDR - Detonator 5.30

NVIDIA Riva TNT2 Ultra 32MB - Detonator 5.30

S3 Diamond Viper II 32MB - 4.12.01.9006-9.51.01

Benchmarking Applications

Gaming

GT Interactive Unreal Tournament 4.04 AnandTech.dem
idSoftware Quake III Arena demo001.dm3
idSoftware Quake III Arena quaver.dm3

idSoftware Quake III Arena NV15.dm3

The Drivers- Pictures Quake III Arena - Athlon 750
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  • Thatguy97 - Tuesday, May 5, 2015 - link

    ahh i remember anadtechs jihad against ati

    wow im dating myself
  • Frumious1 - Monday, August 29, 2016 - link

    I don't remember it at all. The only thing I recall is a bunch of whiny ass fanboys complaining when their chosen CPU, GPU, etc. didn't get massive amounts of acclaim. The very first Radeon cards were good, but they weren't necessarily superior to the competition. You want a good Radeon release, that would be the 9700 Pro and later 9800 Pro -- those beat Nvidia hands down, and AnandTech said as much.

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