I believe that model would need an LC-PDS video card, which personally I've found to be rare and few and far between. Plus, since most were aimed at 68030-era machines, I imagine they're probably not much faster than the 5200s native video. I might be wrong though, but hopefully someone with personal experience will chime in.I read in one technote that it is possible to put a graphics card in the PDS slot on the performa 5200... what cards are out there that should work for it?
Are you referring to the mirror cable for the 5200? (I have that one, mostly interested if there are other video cards that would work for it and if they might be faster than the valkyrie chip)There are Apple branded GIMO adapters that let you mirror the internal CRT to external too; pretty cheap at times
Thanks, the valkyrie chip that came with the 5200 (and 5300/6200/6300) is actually the exact same chip as in the Performa 630, and it is a pretty slow gfx chip.I believe that model would need an LC-PDS video card, which personally I've found to be rare and few and far between. Plus, since most were aimed at 68030-era machines, I imagine they're probably not much faster than the 5200s native video. I might be wrong though, but hopefully someone with personal experience will chime in.
Are you referring to the mirror cable for the 5200? (I have that one, mostly interested if there are other video cards that would work for it and if they might be faster than the valkyrie chip)
That is very interesting, thanks. Would you consider trying it out it in your 6200?I have a Micron Xceed Color Fusion card, it’s based on a Weitek 9000 chip (I used to have a Vesa Local Bus graphics accelerator card for PC called Wizard 9000 that used this exact same chip), and it’s great. I mounted inside a Mystic CC and it works really well - better than the integrated adapter, since it has a lot more VRAM too. Not sure about the speed though, it’s still a measly LCIII PDS interface.
Oh sorry to hear that. A pity it would have been very interesting to hear how it performed. I tried look for the card but it seems hard to find and quite expensive.unfortunately the 6200 logic board was heavily damaged by acid leakage or something, years and years ago so I do not have it anymore….
Not exactly that one but a few Micron Xceed Color30 which were like 500 eur to 1875 eur, most likely folks trying their luck“Quite expensive”? Did you find any for sale? Im pretty curious, what kind of prices did yo find?
You are probably right, I don't know much about the LC3/LC1 and how the 030 bus works. Are you saying that an LC3+PDS at best runs at 16mhz? THe thing is, from what I understand from the developer notes, it seems PrimeTime II has its own buffers, so if the PrimeTimeII is on the 68040 bus of the 5200, and can store fast to those buffers, and I can then spend cycles doing other things with the ppc chip while the LC3+PDS would get data from those buffers without stalling the cpu, that could beat the valkyrie chip. (Because the valkyrie chip has only 4 entries in its buffer, and it drains those very slowly as video out is being scanned from dram, and during this time the 603 chip has its LSU stalling)I would be amazed if any LC-PDS video card would be faster than the integrated graphics in framebuffer performance (unaccelerated). Going from the main 040-type bus to 030 PDS is expensive [slow]. Worse still if it's a LC1 type PDS (like the Color Fusion card) with 96 pins as this will use simulated 16 mhz signalling rather than native bus speed signalling possible on the extended LC3 + PDS.
You are probably right, I don't know much about the LC3/LC1 and how the 030 bus works. Are you saying that an LC3+PDS at best runs at 16mhz? THe thing is, from what I understand from the developer notes, it seems PrimeTime II has its own buffers, so if the PrimeTimeII is on the 68040 bus of the 5200, and can store fast to those buffers, and I can then spend cycles doing other things with the ppc chip while the LC3+PDS would get data from those buffers without stalling the cpu, that could beat the valkyrie chip. (Because the valkyrie chip has only 4 entries in its buffer, and it drains those very slowly as video out is being scanned from dram, and during this time the 603 chip has its LSU stalling)
Btw the valkyrie chip is pretty slow as-is, that's why I'm thinking another card might be faster (those in bold below have valkyrie chip, source: https://groups.google.com/g/comp.sys.mac.hardware.misc/c/cc_47GAHYb0/m/zNbbBXRSAIcJ?pli=1)
Speedometer 8 bit Graphics Speed Scores
DESKTOP POWERMACS (bigger number is better)
MODEL RATING
5215/75 .90
6218/75 .78
6230/75 .79
6220/75 .90
IIci "hot rod"(1) 1.44
6100/60 1.76
7200/75 1.97
7100/80 2.05
6100/66(2) 2.13
6100/60(2) 2.17
7200/90 2.33
7100/80(2) 2.37
7500 2.85
7500(2) 3.11
5200 developer notes:
PDS connects to PrimeTimeII with D32, and directly to the 68040 Address bus.
I don't know the 68030 bus protocol but if it is 16mhz and it can transfer in burst mode 32bits per bus cycle, then that is ~60mb/s. If every other cycle it is ~30mb/s
With valkyrie I can write (sustained) ca 17mb/s to the valkyrie chip. So despite 16mhz bus and PrimeTimeII inbetween, it is at least possible it might beat the valkyrie chip?
@zigzagjoe "■ data bus buffers for the internal I/O bus", I think/hope that this implies that the data to the PDS (marked IOD32) has buffers directly on PrimeTimeII so that if CPU writes to it, PrimeTimeII will store in the buffer and immediately signal to the CPU (via the 68040 bus -> 603) that the store completed.