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Did I Get a Bum Daystar Card?

I try and figure things out by myself first, but since I am new at this I am running into a lot of new situations. I recently installed a Daystar Powercache card (P33 designation) in my IIci and downloaded and installed the control panel from Daystar, but I do not notice any performance difference. Is there a good way to check this out and see whether it is doing anything for my machine?

Best,

John

 
Look for the control panel and make sure it is turned on.

On the 040 cards you see a 040 icon when booting, I don't have an 030 to see what it does.

 
There is a Daystar Icon that pops up during windows load, so I guess it's there. Boot time was 44 seconds instead of 56, but I was guessing that boot time is primarily an issue of hard drive speed. My benchmarking methods without a formal benchmarker right now are kinda crude: I just time certain functions, such as boot to termination of stopwatch, open a Word document, open PageMaker, general feel of performance in games like Syndicate. Didn't seem much different, is all, so I was confused as I would have figured that with a 50MHz clock speed 1992 to 1994-era software under 7.1 would be pretty snappy.

Then again, this card doesn't have the FPU so maybe there is a big difference there.

Best,

John

 
FPU does nothing for boot times.

All CPU upgrades do is speed up calcs, I have a IIci with a Daystar 68040 running at 48Mhz with a heat sink and fan. Speeds up apps , but cache would make it even faster.

 
Yeah, that's what I 've come to an awareness of--that the things that I was wanting faster were functions of hard drive seek and access time, not CPU speed. Cool.

Best,

John

 
Get a faster HD and maybe a UWscsi HD controller. FWB Nubus Jackhammers are fast and bootable, 68 pin 10K RPM SCSI drives are super cheap these days.

 
Get a faster HD and maybe a UWscsi HD controller. FWB Nubus Jackhammers are fast and bootable, 68 pin 10K RPM SCSI drives are super cheap these days.
[Nitpick]There is no UWSCSI HD controller for NuBus. The FWB JackHammer was *Fast* and Wide SCSI, which has a theoretical maximum speed of 20 MB/s and is much slower in practice. You'll be lucky to get actual sustained transfers of 12 MB/s and 6 MB/s seems more common.[/Nitpick]

 
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