Hello all. Try to make this long story short.
Current system:
ECS K7S5A
AMD Athlon 1.0ghz
256meg Crucial PC2100 ram
Windows XP Home
Hercules Kyro II Prophet 4500 TV out
Mostly used for surfing/email/gaming. Currently I'm laid off, looking to learn something while I look for another job. I can buy a student edition of either Autodesk Inventor or Solidworks. Leaning towards Inventor. These are both 3d solid-modeling programs (my background is in mechanical design using Autocad, up thru release 14). My current video card, the Prophet, will not run either Inventor or Solidworks, so the first thing on my list is upgrading my video card. Autodesk strongly suggests staying away from gaming cards, as do several forums I have looked at. So, I have narrowed my video card choice to one of these two cards:
3Dlabs Wildcat VP760 for 189.00 (from newegg) (http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProdu...=48&manufactory=1439&DEPA=1&sortby=14&order=1)
PNY NVidia Quadro4 550XGL for 115.00 (from microx-press) (http://www.emicrox.com/eShop/product.aspx?pid=944777)
The PNY card is recommended thru several Autodesk forum members, and the price is unbeatable (about 115.00 less than newegg). These cards are intended more for industrial 3D graphics processing than gaming, but I think it is safe to assume that most OpenGL games will run fine. The only thing I like better about the Wildcat is that it does score pretty decently on Autodesk's tests (http://www.autodesk.com/us/inventor/graphic_cards/chartsindex.htm)(as does the 550XGL), and has better support (website forum, where PNY has no such thing). But I'm not sure that justifies the extra 70 bucks.
This leads to my questions. I'm thinking of upgrading the CPU from 1.0 to something like an AthlonXP 2000+ for 60 bucks. Or would I see more performance from another stick of ram (about 48 bucks)?
Also, if I do upgrade the CPU, can I remove the heatsink/fan that I already have and use it on the new CPU, or is it best to buy new heatsink/fan, since it is attached to the CPU with the little sticky thing?
And just to make sure, AMD's CPUs are listed as 2000+ (266 FSB). ECS's website says the K7S5A will support up to 2600+ at 133mhz? What gives? Can I use a 266FSB CPU on my motherboard? AMD does not list the K7S5A as being a recommended mb for this CPU, nor most of the other AthlonXP's (http://www2.amd.com/us-en/recmobo/ResultsHandler/1,,30_118_3734_4348^7923~63674,00.html)
Thanks for all your help!
Current system:
ECS K7S5A
AMD Athlon 1.0ghz
256meg Crucial PC2100 ram
Windows XP Home
Hercules Kyro II Prophet 4500 TV out
Mostly used for surfing/email/gaming. Currently I'm laid off, looking to learn something while I look for another job. I can buy a student edition of either Autodesk Inventor or Solidworks. Leaning towards Inventor. These are both 3d solid-modeling programs (my background is in mechanical design using Autocad, up thru release 14). My current video card, the Prophet, will not run either Inventor or Solidworks, so the first thing on my list is upgrading my video card. Autodesk strongly suggests staying away from gaming cards, as do several forums I have looked at. So, I have narrowed my video card choice to one of these two cards:
3Dlabs Wildcat VP760 for 189.00 (from newegg) (http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProdu...=48&manufactory=1439&DEPA=1&sortby=14&order=1)
PNY NVidia Quadro4 550XGL for 115.00 (from microx-press) (http://www.emicrox.com/eShop/product.aspx?pid=944777)
The PNY card is recommended thru several Autodesk forum members, and the price is unbeatable (about 115.00 less than newegg). These cards are intended more for industrial 3D graphics processing than gaming, but I think it is safe to assume that most OpenGL games will run fine. The only thing I like better about the Wildcat is that it does score pretty decently on Autodesk's tests (http://www.autodesk.com/us/inventor/graphic_cards/chartsindex.htm)(as does the 550XGL), and has better support (website forum, where PNY has no such thing). But I'm not sure that justifies the extra 70 bucks.
This leads to my questions. I'm thinking of upgrading the CPU from 1.0 to something like an AthlonXP 2000+ for 60 bucks. Or would I see more performance from another stick of ram (about 48 bucks)?
Also, if I do upgrade the CPU, can I remove the heatsink/fan that I already have and use it on the new CPU, or is it best to buy new heatsink/fan, since it is attached to the CPU with the little sticky thing?
And just to make sure, AMD's CPUs are listed as 2000+ (266 FSB). ECS's website says the K7S5A will support up to 2600+ at 133mhz? What gives? Can I use a 266FSB CPU on my motherboard? AMD does not list the K7S5A as being a recommended mb for this CPU, nor most of the other AthlonXP's (http://www2.amd.com/us-en/recmobo/ResultsHandler/1,,30_118_3734_4348^7923~63674,00.html)
Thanks for all your help!
