- Jan 21, 2002
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I'll try to make this short...
My current rig is in my sig (hehe). I've just recently installed WindowsXP and am very impressed with the speed and stability that my current machine offers at this point. But, I'm in a position to be able to switch to the new MSI nForce board at absolutely no cost to me.
I've researched the board and it seems quite fast and stable, and has nice features that the similarly-priced Asus nForce board lacks, but the benchmarks on review sites that I'm seeing aren't very consistent. On some of the benchmarks, the nForce pulls ahead of all other platforms. On others, the KT266a boards keep a decent lead. Some reviews conclude that the nForce is faster overall than the KT266a boards, yet some of the benchmarks tell a different story. I've seen the nForce beat the KT266a by a couple frames per second in Max Payne, only to lose by 10 or 12 fps in Quake III.
I just want some opinions on whether or not this would actually be an "upgrade" for me. Don't worry, I'm not expecting a huge speed increase (if any), but the nForce is kind of interesting and I'd like to try new things. Normally I wouldn't consider doing this, as I am not the type of person to go out and buy the newest thing every week just to stay on top (hence the reason why I don't have an Athlon XP 2000+
). But, as I said, this switch would be free.
To be honest, I'm sort of tired of VIA's problems. I had the Iwill KT133a mobo and now I have the Soyo KT266a board. The speed of these boards is awesome, and they have excellent stability once you get everything set up right and tweaked optimally. I had an SB Live! with my Iwill KT133a board, and I won't even go into how much I went through to get my rig stable and running right just because I happened to have a VIA board.
But I have a feeling nForce would give me similar speed to KT266a without having to worry about 4-in-1 drivers, VIA patches, and other bullcrap that you have to download and install and update just to get your VIA platform running correctly. The idea of a unified driver for everything on the mobo sounds awesome to me...I am an enthusiast and yes a unified driver is simpler and may "take some of the fun away" but to me, fun is tweaking and experimenting, not being forced to download 20 different files each time you format or install a different OS just because you have a VIA board that's plagued with various issues. Examples of this include the SB Live! problems, the Windows2000 DMA problem, the VIA latency issues, the AGP problems, etc etc etc...
So, has anyone else here gone from KT266a ----> nForce? If so, what was your experience? Any regrets? Should I jump to nForce or do you think it will die a premature death? Now that my KT266a rig is running like a scalded dog (and a super-stable dog, at that), should I just keep it and wait for KT333/333a?
Thanks!
My current rig is in my sig (hehe). I've just recently installed WindowsXP and am very impressed with the speed and stability that my current machine offers at this point. But, I'm in a position to be able to switch to the new MSI nForce board at absolutely no cost to me.
I've researched the board and it seems quite fast and stable, and has nice features that the similarly-priced Asus nForce board lacks, but the benchmarks on review sites that I'm seeing aren't very consistent. On some of the benchmarks, the nForce pulls ahead of all other platforms. On others, the KT266a boards keep a decent lead. Some reviews conclude that the nForce is faster overall than the KT266a boards, yet some of the benchmarks tell a different story. I've seen the nForce beat the KT266a by a couple frames per second in Max Payne, only to lose by 10 or 12 fps in Quake III.
I just want some opinions on whether or not this would actually be an "upgrade" for me. Don't worry, I'm not expecting a huge speed increase (if any), but the nForce is kind of interesting and I'd like to try new things. Normally I wouldn't consider doing this, as I am not the type of person to go out and buy the newest thing every week just to stay on top (hence the reason why I don't have an Athlon XP 2000+
To be honest, I'm sort of tired of VIA's problems. I had the Iwill KT133a mobo and now I have the Soyo KT266a board. The speed of these boards is awesome, and they have excellent stability once you get everything set up right and tweaked optimally. I had an SB Live! with my Iwill KT133a board, and I won't even go into how much I went through to get my rig stable and running right just because I happened to have a VIA board.
But I have a feeling nForce would give me similar speed to KT266a without having to worry about 4-in-1 drivers, VIA patches, and other bullcrap that you have to download and install and update just to get your VIA platform running correctly. The idea of a unified driver for everything on the mobo sounds awesome to me...I am an enthusiast and yes a unified driver is simpler and may "take some of the fun away" but to me, fun is tweaking and experimenting, not being forced to download 20 different files each time you format or install a different OS just because you have a VIA board that's plagued with various issues. Examples of this include the SB Live! problems, the Windows2000 DMA problem, the VIA latency issues, the AGP problems, etc etc etc...
So, has anyone else here gone from KT266a ----> nForce? If so, what was your experience? Any regrets? Should I jump to nForce or do you think it will die a premature death? Now that my KT266a rig is running like a scalded dog (and a super-stable dog, at that), should I just keep it and wait for KT333/333a?
Thanks!
