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Technology

How to change your Radeon 9500 into a 9700 256

Ian Bell writes "We have just posted a very difficult guide to turning your ATI Radeon 9500 into a 9700. But you have to have the correct 9500. A 9500 with 4 rendering pipelines, modified to enable all 8 pipelines, will effectively double the memory bus, if you have the extra 64 Meg of memory to attach it to. We will explain below which card to acquire for this awesome graphics card transformation. Check out how to do this yourself and get the power of a 9700 at half the price." Update: 01/19 18:33 GMT by T : And for those running Windows, Sanity writes "Aside from the hardware mod, there is a program called Riva Tuner that has, among other things, a software mod for unlocking those gates, plus overclocking to a full 9700 pro! Gives me more $$$ to spend on cool stuff."
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How to change your Radeon 9500 into a 9700

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  • by DasAlbatross ( 633390 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:09PM (#5113261)
    This seems like a really good way to have to buy two graphics cards.
    • I thought that. Bugger up the original card, and you then have to go buy a replacement - so you either pay twice and end up with 1 working card, or pay even more the second time, get the performance you wanted from the mod, but for much more than the face price. Modding like this is a bit over the top. There's being economical, and then there's just being plain tight.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:34PM (#5113373)
      Not quite. Most of these 9500 to 9700 articles fail to mention that there is a very good chance that one of the four extra pipelines will be defective. To increase the yield rate, many 9700 boards (the board used on the Sapphire 9500) with defective pipelines are made to use four of the working pipelines in 128 bit memory/4 pipeline mode with microcode. Other defects that don't affect the the card in 9500 mode are also possible. So when you pay $160 for your 9500 you might just get what you paid for. (Yay for RMAs)
  • uh (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:14PM (#5113281)
    Well, you might get lucky and have good memory in the new 'enabled' section, allowing you to have the 9700.

    Or, you might get zilch - since that's why those are 9500's and not 9700's. That memory is suspect.
  • selling these (Score:5, Interesting)

    by SnAzBaZ ( 572456 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:14PM (#5113282) Homepage
    Would it be illegal for people to modify these 9500's then sell them on somewhere like eBay for example? You could probably make a killing.
    • Re:selling these (Score:3, Interesting)

      It would be illegal to sell them claiming they are 9700's, just sell them as modded 9500's...
    • Re:selling these (Score:3, Insightful)

      by mindstrm ( 20013 )
      No.. as long as you didn't pretend it was a 9700. You have the right to re-sell it however you want.

      However.. that doesn't mean that ATI won't find some bullshit reason to sue you and throw confusion on the whole issue to make you look like a bad guy. (presuming you are in America, where this kind of things is all so common)

      Remember when US Robotics had a fit becase they were selling their Dual Standard modems at twice the price of their Sporster (single standard), yet using the same board/chipset? Someone published an init string that would enable dual mode on the sporster.... and ATI had a fit, trying to say it was copyrigh violation, illegal, etcetera.

      • Yeah, I remember that.. whooo boy, that was a mess. To this date I still have no clue why ATI went nuts for people hacking USR modems, but there doesn't need to be a reason. </asshole> :)
      • Re:selling these (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Troed ( 102527 )
        Ah, someone remembers this .. it was a friend of mine who dissected them and found this out. ATGW and .. um .. heck, I know one of my old FidoNet-posts about this is still somewhere .. *googling*


        http://usrfaq.koepke.net/usrfaq.txt [koepke.net]


        (Search for "Troedsson" in that document)


        Proper credit to "Zaphod Beeblebrox" of old Atari ST-fame - he's the "guy" I'm referring to.

    • Re:selling these (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      It wouldn't be allowed by ebay because you are not allowed to sell modded items on ebay.
      • Care to point someone to proof of your claims?

        Did any of the people who modded this up bother to verify these claims?

        http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&it em =2701501425&category=16037

        http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&it em =3001937771&category=294

        Or do a search for iOpener...

        Or do a search for TiVo and find items like this:

        http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&it em =3001937771&category=294
    • If I buy it, it's mine. First Sale Doctrine and all that. I can rip it to pieces and sell it, I can mod it and sell it. I can do what ever.
    • yes and no (Score:3, Interesting)

      by artemis67 ( 93453 )
      You couldn't sell them as 9700's, but you could sell them as modified 9500's that run at 9700 speeds.

      The problem, as everyone is pointing out, is that this is a very tricky hack, and that there's a very good chance that the 9500 you buy will not be physically capable of the hack. For the entrepreneur, that means that every 9500 worked on that doesn't result in a speed increase will have to be resold for well *below* cost, since it may be damaged and is no longer under warranty. Secondly, you have to figure out how many failed attempts you will have before you have a successful one (let's say the ratio is 5 to 1); and probably one of those 5 is totally unusable and unresellable. Now we can figure out your profit per "good" card. Add up the cost of your losses on the 5 bad cards, and add that amount to the cost of the one "good" card you are selling (which, BTW, you have to sell for a good discount below the 9700's price). Assuming you made a profit at that point, you then have to divide your profit by the total amount of hours you have invested in both modifying AND selling all of the cards.

      By comparison, what's your opportunity cost? That is, what is the highest compensation alternatives you are giving up to spend time on this project (selling linux systems on eBay, delivering pizzas, etc.), and which is the better time investment?

      Selling hacks and sophisticated hardware upgrades on eBay really only makes sense when the profit potential is significant enough for you to absorb all of the losses of failed attempts (not in this case, because the 9700 effectively sets a price cap on the project).
  • Dunno about the guide for modding video cards but they should have used one for they webserver, already /.ted :/
  • by HalfFlat ( 121672 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:17PM (#5113297)

    This mod and its possible failure modes have been discussed [rage3d.com] on the rage3d forums.

    It seems the best theory as to why some checkerboard and some do not, is that the 9500 uses binned chips, where not all eight texture pipelines necessarily operate correctly at normal speeds, voltages, or possibly at all.

    The mod apparently works by unlocking or changing a hard-wired ID field, which then allows the 9700 bios to be used on the 9500 board.

  • What a rippoff (Score:5, Informative)

    by cioxx ( 456323 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:18PM (#5113301) Homepage
    This guide appeared on a russian site [ixbt.com] on January 5th.

    Yet today's article says:
    "We have just posted a very difficult guide to turning your ATI Radeon 9500 into a 9700..."

    Oh yeah! "We". I'm sure you thought of it first. Not even a single mention of the Russian hackers who first came up with this easy hack. Not really brain surgery. Few people I know hacked up the board in less than few hours.

    • Oh yeah! "We". I'm sure you thought of it first. Not even a single mention of the Russian hackers who first came up with this easy hack. Not really brain surgery. Few people I know hacked up the board in less than few hours.

      Very clever trick, but we all know where this is going:

      In Soviet Russia, ATI Radeon 9700 can be turned into a 9500 with just a simple hack.

  • Word to the Wary (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Azerphale ( 137733 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:20PM (#5113310)
    Note that this only applies to the 9500 and not the 9500 PRO.

    This hack has been crawling around the boards for a while and it seems fairly legit. The basic layout and architecture of the 9500 and 9700 are the same and this hack attempts to:
    1) Re-enable the extra pixel pipelines that are present on the 9500 just not enable. A simple resister swap near the gpu is required.
    2) Flash the bios of the 9500 with a 9700 bios image.
    3) Overclock the 9500's core clock to compete with 9700.
    4) (Optional) Add more memory.

    The biggest problem I see is that the stock memory on the 9500 is of a cheaper variety and isn't rated for the frequency that a 9700 operates at.

    So, even if you indeed have the skills/luck involved to pull off this cute hack, then you'll not necessarily be able to compete with a 9700.

    My advice, go with the 9500 Pro. Out of the box it's only a step slower than the 9700 Pro and costs half the coin of a 9700/9700 Pro.

    But if you've got a 9500 in your machine and some time/money to spare. Why not see if you can achieve great things with a minimum cost?
    • Re:Word to the Wary (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Guspaz ( 556486 )
      Assuming this article is referring to Unwinder's Soft9700 or a similar method of patching drivers to unlock the extra pipelines (Why do the hardware hack when the software one is just as effective and safer to boot), then number 2 is not required. None of the software hacks require the bios to be flashed, in fact this may cause problems.

      See http://www.guru3d.com/rivatuner/ for more information on the software method.
  • Some links (Score:5, Informative)

    by Gyan ( 6853 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:20PM (#5113311)

    http://www.xbitlabs.com/news/story.html?id=10425 78 447

    http://www.rage3d.com/board/showthread.php?s=&th re adid=33658209
    • by Gyan ( 6853 )

      The same ppl who brought you the SoftQuadro(4) hack. One that allows you to use Quadro drivers on geforce cards. Unwinder 'at' Guru3d.com
  • by puto ( 533470 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:21PM (#5113315) Homepage
    You know I have been tinkering with computer equipment since HeathKit. Yep, OLD SKOOl, bread boarding and soldering, and learned a great deal by doing it.

    I love the hacker ethic, kludge something until it works. Sometimes you have to, sometimes you want to, and sometimes just for the hell of it.

    I understand trying to save a few bucks, but COME ON PEOPLE.

    What I am seeing more and more is these whack hardware hacks which 20% of the time do increase the hardware potential and the 80% fry whatever you are fooling with. So you clean the part of real good, RMA it, and get a new one. Screwing the rest of the world in the process cause you wanted to hack it.

    I remember in the day of the Celeron 300A, I was working in a shop that sold them hand over fist. And we got them back hand over fist due to over clockers"Dunna what happened man, just didn't work one day, I didn't over clock it though, musta been defective"

    You futz up the graphic card, clean the solder off, and bring it back to Best Buy. They don't look it, they just give you another, and prices go up.

    But everyone doesn't take that into account when they bring it back.

    I don;t have unlimited funds, but I know you get what you pay for.

    People that buy that Athlon 1800, cheap ass board, cheap ass fan, cheap ass power supply, overclock it, then spend 200 bucks on cooling, which could have applied to just buying a better cheap, board, and power supply.

    And what scares me is this is the next generation of admins. I see the result now in the field. Some young computer whiz has outfitted an entire office with no name stuff, only a years guarantee, then he quits, six months later stuff starts to go out. And I have to tell them they have to buy new stuff cause they nearly new stuff was crap.

    So I ask the community this. If you mod it and fry it. Throw it in the garbage, dont make me pay by bringing it back or RMA ing New Egg. But howsa about this. If it ain't broke. Don't fuck with it.

    Puto

    • People seem to have the ethos in computing of buying the cheapest junk with the highest specs possible, not realizing that they just supported junk instead of quality. This is how quality is ratcheted lower, and it becomes difficult or impossible to find anything decent. $15 PSUs that weigh maybe .5 lbs are frighteningly common, as are CAT5 cables thinner than a drinking straw, motherboards with %20 defect rates, and on-board audio that just crackles instead of recording.

      I don't agree that "if it ain't broke, don't fuck with it," as tweaking and playing are both very natural and very educational: but don't return it. You broke it: you fix it. If you can't fix it: you buy one that can do what you wanted it to do in the first place. But don't fall into the pit of buyers remorse by getting a wall-mart, emachines, or other low-quality computer to save a few dollars, then chop it up to try and compensate for not buying something that could satisfy you. Buy and support the things that you want. And always, always do your research. If you could spend 3 hours finding out what the best available PSU for your system is, you could save 6 hours later on trying to cut it open and cool it.

      (Which reminds me, my PSU is too loud. Where did my Dremel go?)

      -C
    • >And what scares me is this is the next generation of admins. I see the result now in the field. Some young computer whiz has outfitted an entire office with no name stuff, only a years guarantee, then he quits, six months later stuff starts to go out. And I have to tell them they have to buy new stuff cause they nearly new stuff was crap.

      While I agree with everything else you've said, I have to dissent on this.

      Honestly, when you buy a Compaq, Dell, HP, or whatever brand name PC, you're buying into the fact that they can repair/replace it, which means that you are at their mercy for quality of service -- there's nothing you can do yourself to get things up and running.

      If the company has computer staff, they should be fixing it. Anyone who has dealt with machines from major manufacturers knows they are nothing but the worst PITA ever made, in every way possible (all the way to the point of proprietary memory somtimes!) when it comes to repairing it yourself.

      By buying non-brand name system he has left the new workers with something they can fix without having to depend on one company. If the CD-ROM breaks, they don't need to call up Compaq and wait 3 days for a replacement with the screw holes in exactly the right place to ship -- they can walk down to the local computer store and buy a new one on the spot, not to mention one made by the same company as Compaq would have sent you, but also for about $300 cheaper.

      And, while you might think he bought "crap", I can tell you with great certainty that that "crap" are exactly the same parts in the name brand computer, except that the "crap" he bought conforms to standards, whereas the OEM part is irreplaceable except by the OEM.

      Example: Does the name PC Chips make your skin crawl? Probably. Did you know that many of the boards in brand name computers were made by them?

      I'm supposing not...
      • Uh, I don't think you've ever done purchasing in a corporate environment. In a small firm you might get away with it but a larger company would rather pack a machine up and send it off to La La land to get repaired. It isn't a technical challenge to replace the part but it is a red tape hassle. Companies don't want people on the clock driving around because they are liable if anything happens to them. Obviously there's exceptions where the person's job description includes driving around but computer techs rarely have this included.

        It is also a political problem. If the tech manager is allowed to build a bunch of custom computer systems the computer illiterate in the company are at their mercy. Upper management is not going to buy a system that gives a middle manager complete control over like that. They'd rather spend more time/money buying from Compaq or IBM so any problem can be outsourced and the IT department gets to do as little as possible.
  • Software mod (Score:5, Interesting)

    by muzzynat ( 631911 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:22PM (#5113317)
    I have a friend that just did the software mod, and that alone nearly doubled his 3D mark. I would have to say with the ease and relative safety of the software mod, its probably best not to get greedy and kill your card. At least that my opinion. Either way my gForce 3 is starting to feel a little inferior.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    When you purchase an engine, it is yours to modify. For instance, you may bore over the cylinders and as a result get more power from the engine. You may also purchase a video card and increase overclock it to make it run faster.

    When you purchase a video card, however, and "unlock" a feature that is only meant to be purchased, isn't that stealing?
    • Johansen vs Mitsu knives. The customer had purchased a steak knife and was caught slicing bread with it...
    • Last time I bought hardware, I didn't see any lists of things that it wasn't "meant to" do. I bought the hardware. It's mine. If I find a button somwhere that makes it twice as fast, it's STILL mine.

      How the hell could that possibly be illegal? I didn't coerce anybody...I didn't defraud anybody...I didn't deprive anybody of anything at all. So what could possibly be wrong with that?
    • Stealing is if you are deprived of your posessions without your consent. If you sell me a crippled graphics card and I modify it for higher performance, you are sure not deprived of any posessions. So if I break the law, it's not a natural law. Rather its one of the rules society made to give an artifical advantage to some people because it might benefit everyone in long term. But while I can see why copyright or patents might benefit society, I don't see a big point in anti-tampering laws.

      Lets say that it was always legal to modify anything you bought, hardware, software or data. It would be still illegal to distribute copies of other people's code without permission, but not to post any new code that modifies its behavior. So what's the big deal?

      Obviously ATI makes money selling cheaper cards. So they would still sell them and turn profit even if a cheap, legal mod kit was available. If 9500 is in fact artifically crippled, they would probably just remove the performance restriction and everyone would have more fun gaming than now. ATI would still have an option of selling a high end card that really has better hardware or low end that is really cheaper to make. If 9500 is a defective 9700, ATI might provide a control panel that lets users turn on extra features at their own risk. Remember that NVIDIA does have an overclocking control panel? Windows XP Home addition will either have the same featues as XP Pro or will have the extra code really compiled out rather than just artifically disabled. In the later case, home users will have a leaner, faster OS.

      Shareware programmers will release two versions of their code. The free version will not have any timeout, nagging dialogs or ads, because those might be removed by a legal patch. Instead if will just not have code for certain features. This is mostly a win to the users, because low-budget or low-need people will have free software without getting annoyed and spamed.

      Sample music will be distributed as 24KHz MP3s or clips. Or perhaps, a couple of songs in an album will be free in full quality. When you pay for music, you will get a full-quality MP3. You just will not be allowed to distribute it. Perhaps it will be watermarked to try to catch you. It will not be illegal to try to remove watermarks, but you will be scared to post a file because you can never know if you removed all of them unless you really mess up file's quality.

      All I see is benefit to the users and only a slight challenge to manufacturers. There will be some companies for which current system is so ingrained in their business that they would go under. Some other companies will make less money. But its not the purpose of the law to guarantee that everyone makes as much money as they want. Just that someone is motivated enough to create and manufacture new products.

    • In addition to the theft question, I'm wondering if the DMCA could come into play.

      Could the manufacturer claim that their product was reverse engineered? After all, you had to 'hack'/study/modify the product in order to get the new functionality.

      Scary stuff. Very scary.
    • When you purchase a video card, however, and "unlock" a feature that is only meant to be purchased, isn't that stealing?

      What about cars? You buy a brand new Vette only to find out that the factory limited your speed by programming one of the computer chips to lock out at 167 MPH. So you buy a different chip to "unlock" your cars full potential. Is that stealing?

      I say it's not. You bought the card, it's yours, do whatever the hell you want with it. But I agree with another poster about not trying to return it if you fry it. You fuck it up, it's your problem. Deal with it. Don't take it back to the store and cause prices to go up. I don't overclock any of my stuff because I can't afford to replace it if I mess it up. I bought items that were fast enough for my use and when they aren't fast enough I'll replace them. After I have replaced them, I may then try to speed them up a bit just for fun because at that point, if I make a mistake it doesn't matter because I already have a replacement.

      • What about cars? You buy a brand new Vette only to find out that the factory limited your speed by programming one of the computer chips to lock out at 167 MPH. So you buy a different chip to "unlock" your cars full potential. Is that stealing?
        Interesting comparison. I have talked to a few people in the Corvette engineering group, and they have told me that there a quite a few "Easter eggs" in both the mechanicals and software of the Corvette. These are typically capabilities that Marketing or Legal nixed and that Engineering removed from the product by disabling rather than removing ("can't change that PROM code - too risky at this stage - we will jump over the affected area"). Now, do they want you to not find these? Or to find them? And what are ATI's intentions?

        sPh

  • by SuperDuG ( 134989 ) <<kt.celce> <ta> <eb>> on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:34PM (#5113370) Homepage Journal
    ... a good way to throw $100 out the window. I know that this is a hardware hack that actually is rather impressive, but lets face it people, not everyone is really meant to use a soldering iron. This mod is nothing really new as things have been overclockable/upgradeable for quite some time.

    The one thing that bothers me is the "Turn your 9500 into a 9700" that's not really true, see a 9700 was meant to run like a 9700 and a 9500 is meant to run like a 9500, this will be more or less a memory/speed upgrade for a 9500.

    I seriously doubt that ATI would try to keep the market inflated by purposefully dumbing down a high end card, this sort of thing doesn't happen in real life. It's not like Intel has ever used a pIII chip with the cache disabled/ripped out for celerons before. I mean jeeze people why would a hardware company want to make something intentionally slower, it's not as if 3 steps from the top cards cost nearly 200% less. Next someone is going to tell me it costs roughly $18 to manufacture a Radeon 9700. I tell you, it's all lies, all lies.

    • by Minupla ( 62455 ) <`moc.liamg' `ta' `alpunim'> on Sunday January 19, 2003 @01:19PM (#5113553) Homepage Journal
      Not that I don't agree with you in this case, but there have been cases, historically speaking, of companies releasing two models for marketing reasons and finding it cheaper to make a hard coded 'feature switch'. I recall a hard drive of olde that could be upgraded to twice the size. The engineers designed a drive. Marketing decided they needed one half the size too. It was cheaper and faster to do a mode switch then it was to pay the extra engineering and manufactering costs to build a second model of HDD.

      See also the 'flippy discs' of the C-64 era. It was cheaper/easier for companies to use the double sided media they used on other systems, then produce new single sided floppies just for the c-64 market. You punched a second hole in the floppy, and turn it over.

      Again, I don't argue that's what ATI is doing here. I personally agree with the person above who suggested they're probably using 'bin chips' that for some reason didn't make the cut for the 9700 boards.

      So you pays your monies and you takes your chances. Mmmm I love the smell of newbies with solder suckers in the morning :). As for me, I know my skills do not extend into the land of hot insterments of destruction, so I'll take a pass :)
    • I don't know if I should even be posting this, but I have a question about the last thing you said. The bit about it costing $18 to manufacture the card. I cannot tell if you are telling true information in the same form as the previous ones, or if that is actually false (as it seems). Is that really the case?
      • Well it's basic business world math ...

        $50 mil for R&D $50 mil for Engineering and Design $50 mil for Advertising

        make 100 million of them ... end product costs $1.50 to make.

        Pending all 100 million are bought. I don't understand exactly how this system works, but yeah it is very possible that a radeon 9700 costs ati $17 overall to make. Will they ever admit it? Hell no they won't.

  • by anon*127.0.0.1 ( 637224 ) <slashdot@@@baudkarma...com> on Sunday January 19, 2003 @12:41PM (#5113396) Journal
    I figure that the lost profits from people who buy a 9500 instead of a 9700 will be more the compensated for by the folks who mung the mod up and have to go buy another video card.

    Heck, I wouldn't be surprised if ATI leaked this mod in the first place. Just think of all the money they save on voided warrantys alone. Not to mention tech support...

    "Hello, ATI technical support. Can I help you?"

    "Yeah, I have a problem with my video card. It keeps locking up"

    "I see... what kind of card is it?"

    "Well, it's a 9500, but I modded it so that..."

    *click*

    • This is the opposite of the truth. The RMAs will cost you more money because the store will send them back to the manufacturer and the manufacturer will pass the cost on to them, and they will pass it on to you.
  • Let's see:
    • Initial investment is one half of the cost of a Radeon 9700
    • You screw it up in any one of a hundred different ways and the magic smoke escapes
    • You get pissed off and purchase a the new GeForce card when it comes out instead
    Final cost is nearly twice a Radeon 9700. Hmmm...
  • by mlknowle ( 175506 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @01:24PM (#5113582) Homepage Journal
    Actually, this will work to convert ANY card into a 9700 - simply take the card (no matter how old) and jam your soldering gun into it, go to CompUSA and buy a 9700. Easy as that!
  • Sounds familiar... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by dotgod ( 567913 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @01:55PM (#5113746)
    This reminds me of when the Radeon LE came out ($71) and by doing a couple simple things with some 3rd party software and the windows registry, you could make it perform the same as a Radeon DDR [anandtech.com], which sold for about $139 at the time.
  • by All Dat ( 180680 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @01:59PM (#5113770) Homepage
    Lets look at this in 2 ways why it is NOT stealing from Ati, or the consumer. For years, people with Nvidia cards have been using coolbits or some other software hack to enable overclocking on their Geforce and Tnt Cards. With the GF4 series, it's easily possible to make a Ti4200 run as fast as a Ti4600, depending on who makes the card. Now people that argue that these people are buying this card instead of the $399 Ti4600, dont you realize that the people that perform these kinds of "hacks" probably don't have the money to buy a $399 video card, so as such they buy a cheaper on and overclock it. Thus nvidia sells a cheaper card, instead of no card at all.

    Also, the same applies to this ati hack. While many people can afford the 9500, far less are willing to spring for the 9700. As such, ATI is STILL selling cards. Bottom line, if it is moving product out the door, it's a good business deal. Add this to the fact that ATI may entice former nvidia-only people to try their products, and this software hack (the hardware hack is no longer necessary with Wizzards and Rivatuner software hacks out) becomes a means for ATI to get a load of free press/publicity/interest, and sell some cards.
  • Cant Be legal (Score:2, Offtopic)

    by nurb432 ( 527695 )
    You are modifying things you dont *own*, only have a *right to use* ( under restrictions set forth in your EULA ) .

    Plus it smells of 'reverse engineering'..

    Today, both of these gets you in trouble.

  • What puzzles me about the whole 9700 thing is this: as far as I can see from monitoring the general-interest hardware press, the 9700 has been #1 in performance for about one full product release cycle for the "best of the best of the best" in video cards (6 months or thereabouts). Presumably by this point ATI have a 9900 waiting in the wings to counter nVidia's next move. That means that in order to retake the medal, nVidia would have to make an order-of-magnitude jump over the 9700. Is that possible?

    sPh

  • by crstophr ( 529410 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @02:58PM (#5114083) Homepage
    I just did this at home. FYI a Radeon 9700 (non pro) sells for about $225 on pricewatch. Once the bios is reflashed that card can be clocked up to the exact same memory and core speed as the Radeon 9700 Pro. I've been gaming on it for weeks and it's rock solid stable. It's very easy to turn your $225 card into a $380 card, and you don't have to solder anything. As always YMMV
  • They could have placed a OTP fuse inside the chip which downgrades the chip from a 9700 to a 9500 but not the other way. The fuse could be set via a test mode so no extra pins or resistors are needed. Sometimes I think these companies (ie ATI and AMD) go the simple route so that people find out and the mod community gets all exicted about that product.
  • Some tips. (Score:3, Informative)

    by Martigan80 ( 305400 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @04:11PM (#5114385) Journal
    For the soldering part that is:

    1) Use low heat and good solder a 63/27 tin content.
    2) Use a small tip, and I mean small, not the stock screwdriver tip!
    3) Use flux, most people don't and wonder why the solder doesn't melt.
    4) If you dont want the little SMD to "stick" to anything else, cover the other solder point with a little oil (just clean it when you are done)
    5) Don't get frustrated, just take a break if you feel yourself getting worked up.
    6) Do use an ESD strap and make sure you and the strap are grounded.
    7) If you have not done much soldering don't do it, unless you have money to burn along with your finger tips.
    • Re:Some tips. (Score:2, Informative)

      by shepd ( 155729 )
      Top tip you missed, that really must be followed:

      Don't use your cheap two prong plug iron. Your iron MUST have a ground lead, or you WILL zap your chips.
    • 1) Use low heat and good solder. 63/37 lead/tin content. I like Kester, because it's consistant. YMMV. Don't use 63/27, or your card will be 10% slower.

      2) A large tip can be filed down to a small one. Sometimes they're copper, sometimes they're iron. Either is soft enough to be easily worked, but copper can get rather flimsy if filed down too small; be careful with it.

      3) Avoid acid flux like you find at the hardware store. Acid flux is for plumbing projects, where it's actually desirous to have a bit of metal eaten away to get a clean surface to accept solder. With SMD work, a little bit of metal disappearing can mean that -all- of it disappearing. Water-soluable flux is available, and works fine. Look for it if you have any intent on cleaning the board once you're done with it. Otherwise, rosin flux is fine, but can be difficult to clean in a world without CFCs.

      4) There is no 4)

      5) Work slow. Double-check what you've done, and then check it again.

      6) Ground yourself. Ground your work area, if conductive. Avoid working on surfaces capable of holding a static charge, which could discharge through the part you're working on into your grounded body. Wooden benches are good for this. Failing that, a disposable pie pan, aluminum foil, or other metallic kitchen object would probably be fine.

      7) If you have not done much soldering, you wouldn't have read this far. Thus, I suggest that you not undertake any project involving surface-mount components, and get back to wasting time on Slashdot in between gaming sessions of humanly indiscernable framerate on your Radeon 9500. You'll thank me later.

    • Actually, DON'T use low heat, unless you can still melt the joint in less than a second. "Low" heat is not that low, and will lift traces if applied for too long, but it's harder to desolder when it can't adequately warm up the joint.
  • Kill joys (Score:3, Interesting)

    by be-fan ( 61476 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @04:52PM (#5114620)
    You /. guys are no fun. Somebody comes out with a really nifty hack, and all you guys talk about is how dangerous it is. People who live on the edge like this generally know what they're doing and go in accepting the risk. Personally, I do this stuff occasionally (I OC'ed a 300A, joined the L1 bridges on an Athlon and modded my MP3 player) and I go in fully aware that I might be throwing $200 down the tube. That's okay, because I never try it unless I can afford to replace it if something goes wrong. If something doesn't go wrong, then I just saved a few bucks. So far, I'm ahead. The 300A and the Athlon are still running, but I killed the screen on my MP3 player (which gives me an excuse to get an iPod :)
  • by ruiner13 ( 527499 ) on Sunday January 19, 2003 @09:46PM (#5116053) Homepage
    I'm going to go weld on a couple of extra cylinders on my 3 cylinder geo metro to enable it's 140 hp mode. rumor has it, it's built into the car if you only add twice the parts.

    </sarcasm>

  • I tried this on my old-skool 32mb radeon. It exploded. Is that bad? Morrowind did run smooth for .0000001 seconds, though.

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