Originally posted by: FPSguy
Thanks OP! I have a GA-7VAX motherboard (the author of the article had a GA-7VAXP) and I have noticed "hitches" in Windows periodically. I'll have to see if this helps.
Originally posted by: FPSguy
Thanks OP! I have a GA-7VAX motherboard (the author of the article had a GA-7VAXP) and I have noticed "hitches" in Windows periodically. I'll have to see if this helps.
Originally posted by: FPSguy
Thanks OP! I have a GA-7VAX motherboard (the author of the article had a GA-7VAXP) and I have noticed "hitches" in Windows periodically. I'll have to see if this helps.
Originally posted by: FPSguy
Originally posted by: FPSguy
Thanks OP! I have a GA-7VAX motherboard (the author of the article had a GA-7VAXP) and I have noticed "hitches" in Windows periodically. I'll have to see if this helps.Everything is set to 32 except my AGP video card which is set at 248. It doesn't look like this will be any help for my periodic "hitching".
![]()
But a value of 248 only amounts to 60 microseconds so why does it matter?but nothing "needs" it 248 or whatever the video was set to.
Originally posted by: zephyrprime
But a value of 248 only amounts to 60 microseconds so why does it matter?but nothing "needs" it 248 or whatever the video was set to.
But that's not a valid relationship between terms. The PCI latency is analogous to Windows timeslice lengths not to chip clock speed.I just tested 2 video cards one with 3.33ns ram and one with 2.86ns ram. The difference is about 600 point improvement in 3DMark03. I would argue that comared to that 0.47ns difference, 60 microseconds is quite large, in computer terms anyway.
Originally posted by: Snatchface
Eh, it all academic for me anyway. There's no way I'm going to deal with having another application loading everytime I start windows and a bloody pop-up "Tips" box (which you cant get rid of unless you register, apparently) just to play with my PCI latencies.
Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Snatchface
Eh, it all academic for me anyway. There's no way I'm going to deal with having another application loading everytime I start windows and a bloody pop-up "Tips" box (which you cant get rid of unless you register, apparently) just to play with my PCI latencies.
There's GOTTA be another way to do it. How does power strip do it? Wouldn't be a registry setting... how bout if you just make a small bat file that does what powerstrip does, then put it in the startup folder?
Originally posted by: eGAK
Perhaps the information is within Phil's text;
"I discovered the likely source of my hitching problems: my video card's PCI latency was at 248, my network device's value was 128, and my poor Audigy 2 sound card was set at 32. In other words, the video card and network card could easily hog the PCI bus to the point whereat my sound card might not be able to keep up with the load. PowerStrip makes it a simple matter to set those values to 80, 32, and 64 respectively. "
George Breeze's VIA IDE patch is set for 96, I believe.
