Radeon HD 3850 AGP The fastest AGP Graphics Card

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  • čas přidán 29. 07. 2024
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 676

  • @OzTalksHW
    @OzTalksHW Před 6 lety +167

    I had the PCIe version of the 3850 (picked it up from VisionTeks Mystery Box a year or two ago) and it was a solid 720p to 1080p card for eSport titles at the time. It's no shock that it's doing so well with games from the early 2000s, even at higher resolutions. Nice video! Everytime I watch I always want to build a retro PC lol. I suppose that means you're doing your job well! Keep it up :D

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +32

      Thank you man! Yea I dabbled a bit into the modern stuff, but my heart is really with the older gear. Playing around with parts that I lusted for back in the day, that's what it's all about. I will still do the occasional modern video though :D

    • @benjiderrick4590
      @benjiderrick4590 Před 6 lety +7

      those cards are still better than those integrated graphics solutions from 4th Gen Intel core processors.

    • @isvarco
      @isvarco Před 6 lety +8

      5th as well :D my thinkpad x250 can't handle far cry even at low with decent fps on HD5500 integrated with i5 5300U

    • @RetroTinkerer
      @RetroTinkerer Před 6 lety +2

      So nice to see you interacting with Phil! I really like your videos too and the way you approach parts and system value on a pretty tight budget!

    • @berto649
      @berto649 Před 6 lety +2

      Watch both of your videos before work. What a time to be into tech. Looking forward to your guys next vid’s!

  • @philippepanayotov9632
    @philippepanayotov9632 Před rokem +6

    I have both the HD3850 and the HD4670. The first one is better for FPS games, however Civ5 benefits better from the second card. I own the two top AGP video cards and it is a very satisfactory feeling. Both needed a change of two capacitors each but I still enjoy them both to this day. The AGP era of gaming was so romantic.

  • @WaybackTECH
    @WaybackTECH Před 3 lety +39

    I remember years ago the Chinese were selling PCI-E to AGP adapters with that bridge chip on them. Sadly i never found one after starting my channel. I guess they were not around very long and no one bought them apparently.

  • @another3997
    @another3997 Před rokem +10

    Years ago I had an old P4 machine as my main PC. I cobbled it together from used parts I collected, but I eventually upgraded the GPU to a brand new Radeon HD4670 AGP. It was about the fastest AGP card I could find at the time, and it did cope admirably, although the P4 was a bottleneck. I still have that P4 + GPU. 😁

  • @joncarter3761
    @joncarter3761 Před 6 lety +15

    Think I swapped from AGP to PCIE when I upgraded my Pentium 4 to a Core2Duo back in 2008, I remember being so glad I wouldn't be having to look for AGP specific reviews again when shopping for a graphics card!

  • @khoifoto
    @khoifoto Před 6 lety

    Thanks for reviewing this card. Back in the day, I have the exact same card and a 2600 pro. Those good old days

  • @reed2196
    @reed2196 Před 5 lety +10

    Back in the day I had HD3850 AGP on a socket 939 with Athlon 64 3200+ initially and then upgraded to Athlon 64 x2 3800+ which made a huge difference for games of that era like Batman Arkham Asylum or NFS ProStreet.

  • @uk4890
    @uk4890 Před 6 lety +1

    Congrantz Phil Great video and review of the fastest AGP vcard!!

  • @retropcscotland4645
    @retropcscotland4645 Před 6 lety +22

    Plenty of information here. Very in depth. I have one of these cards still HD3850 AGP. TBH I won't part with it. Keeping it because it is a strong card.
    Great video as always Phil.

  • @mtunayucer
    @mtunayucer Před 6 lety

    YESS! A LONG AWAITED VIDEO FOR ME! Thank you!

  • @JockoV
    @JockoV Před 5 lety +5

    Great video! I love seeing tech that is maxed out. I had a 1.4GHz Pentium III Tualatin (which was the best Pentium III you could get) back in the day with an AGP slot. I never used the AGP slot though but now you've got me daydreaming of going back in time with a HD 3850 AGP card and giving it to myself to have a completely maxed out system :)

    • @solarstrike33
      @solarstrike33 Před 2 lety +1

      If you have a Slot 1 board with a 440BX board, it won't even fit.
      You'll need to find a P3 board with Universal AGP support (i8xx series).

    • @solarstrike33
      @solarstrike33 Před 2 lety +2

      @Torsional Isotope Technophobia It's not about the practicality, man. It's about If It Can™run it at all!

  • @3DfxAslinger
    @3DfxAslinger Před 6 lety +30

    Nice, so many fast AGP cards in your collection!

  • @NightMotorcyclist
    @NightMotorcyclist Před 6 lety +21

    I was one of the stragglers holding onto AGP with my AMD Opteron 170 system. I stuck with the nVidia Geforce 6600GT but my local retailer had the GeForce 7800 AGP and Radeon HD 3850 AGP stocked up and those cards barely sold, thus they dropped the price to around $150 at the time. I wanted to buy one but I figured I should use that money towards a motherboard with PCIe and moving to a more modern graphics card without having to jump through hoops or be left with a dead end.

    • @homelessEh
      @homelessEh Před rokem +1

      im still clinging to a hp wx9300 opteron dual socket opteron 270 system with dreams of some day having extra money to buy the 8 gb of ddr ecc memory to make it purr again... rams died leaving me with only 2gb of ram for it to limp along on single socket mode.. SOOooooOOooommmmEeee dayy......Some where.....some how..... maybe....... its just so obsolete its fallen off the bottom of the prioritys chart..

  • @Robmaniac32
    @Robmaniac32 Před rokem

    Very nice! I have the exact same 3850 in agp and pci-e, pretty happy about that!

  • @KomradeShotabollokov
    @KomradeShotabollokov Před 6 lety +15

    The fact that the bridge chip is called a Rialto is probably not a coincidence. I guess ATI felt a little Venetian at the time. Thanks for the video, Phil. Top notch, as usual.

  • @AncientGameplays
    @AncientGameplays Před 6 lety +8

    Well, this is a video that deserves the biggest like i cab give :D
    I myself, will be testing a GTS 8800 (NVidia) and i am pretty excited to see what it can do :D

  • @FourtySixx
    @FourtySixx Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for the video and code, just ordered a xfx 4670 1gb form electromayne $76.44 aud not too bad

  • @DiGI83
    @DiGI83 Před 6 lety

    The Video I've been waiting for!

  • @zenstrata
    @zenstrata Před rokem +1

    I have one of these (the sapphire 3850 agp), It's the one I bought and put into my system years ago. It allowed me to play more modern games for a long time on my old computer. It's a great card.

  • @nomdplume1606
    @nomdplume1606 Před 6 lety +3

    I had always wanted the agp version of this card. I wound up with the 4650 agp as it was quite a bit cheaper even back then. It was paired with athlon X2 3800+. I still have fond memories of that pc. When the motherboard died (K8M800) just last year I was literally heartbroken.

  • @mafyatekin
    @mafyatekin Před 3 lety

    I love hearing that "PhilsComputerLab Theme Song®/Ending Song/OST". Funky Jazz really does fit to the channel.

  • @Lukas_Miglioranza
    @Lukas_Miglioranza Před rokem

    I've an old agp computer at home and today I was asking myself which was the better, or one of the 2 better graphic card of that era.
    In a really nice video I found the answer!
    Thank You very much!

  • @ZeroG84
    @ZeroG84 Před 6 lety +1

    TV out

  • @greyfox37
    @greyfox37 Před 6 lety +5

    I had the X800XT PE. That was my last AGP card. Really good one too. I upgraded to a 7800GTX which was a great card.

    • @syncmonism
      @syncmonism Před rokem

      That was one of the first ones which was an AGP version of what was originally a PCI-E graphics card, using a bridge chip just like this 3850, right?

  • @BlackDragon-xn2ww
    @BlackDragon-xn2ww Před 6 lety

    Back in those days we got 750 psu's not for the videocard but for the cpu that used extreme amounts of power and put off alot heat I recall my son's Athlon system with a certain config put out enough heat to keep our house warm in middle of winter 20 degrees outside just put alot case fans on it and watched it stoke it never throttled and gamed great summer was hard since the air unit had to contend with it as well as the hot weather outside great video enjoyed it.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Yea for modern PSUs it seems to be no issues. The Athlon CPUs however are heavy on the 5V rail, this isn't an issue with Athlon 64.

  • @kathleendelcourt8136
    @kathleendelcourt8136 Před 6 lety +5

    I had the Powercolor HD3850 paired with a 2800+ XP Barton and 2Gb of 333Mhz DRR memory. I chose the Radeon HD3850 AGP because I couldn't afford a whole new system and it sounded like a reasonable upgrade. I did not regret it. This setup allowed me to play FEAR, STALKER, Mass Effect 1 & 2... with max detail because the only bottleneck was the CPU and all my older games were running wonderfully with max AA and AF for perfect image quality. I only replaced it in 2011 for a brand new Sandy Bridge system (i3-2100 + Radeon HD6850) and I'm still using that same motherboard on my current compter! I replaced the i3-2100 with a i7-3770K, changed the HD6850 for a R9 390 (I had a GTX 970 for a time but got a full refund during the 3.5Gb gate), and went from 4Gb to 12Gb of Ram. And that rig is still kicking strong today.

    • @GraveUypo
      @GraveUypo Před 5 lety

      good cards, all of them. If that 6850 was a 6950 it'd be perfect.
      i went from 6800GS AGP to a 8800GT then a 6950, then 970gtx which i got a full refund for because it was a defective piece of trash that couldn't handle it's own stock clocks and with the money i bought my current rx480 and had some spare change left over.
      later i bought 2 1070s but that was only for mining so it doesn't count. i've sold them for a 25% profit each too back in march. they certainly were my best purchases ever. never had actually profited from gpus before, lol. got a nice $200 extra on them plus the mining time, which from june 17 to march 18 added up to about $2000 with my 3 cards. not bad. will be sure to put that towards my 7nm ryzen and navi card, since this 2500k will probably start showing its age pretty soon, even at 4.7ghz.

  • @Microang
    @Microang Před 6 lety +26

    I have two of these 3850s and a 2600XT AGP as well.
    If I remember correctly I used to download the "AGP" drivers from Sapphire's website as the official ones never worked and they were pretty decent at keeping them updated.
    Back in the day I never had money so stayed on a Pentium 4 1.5-2.4GHz 478 for years in an old Packard Bell iMedia (green) tower, until my brother got me a 3.2GHz Pentium 4, but it was 775 so I ended up buying an AsRock 775 "Frankenstein" AGP board that supported C2Q to upgrade the machine as I had the 2600XT at that point and couldn't afford a graphics card as well. Later I upgraded that machine to the HD 3850 still using the Pentium 4 and remember how it could run Crysis great for about 5 mins until the machine ran out of RAM, oh and it would take like 15 mins to load the map as it only had 1GB RAM and an IDE hard drive and obviously I had to run it at max settings, even at low res. Don't know how I ever managed to finish that game on that machine.
    The best part is I still have that machine built exactly as it was but haven't used it in years. Maybe I should drop in a Q6600 and see how that goes? :D

    • @mvShooting
      @mvShooting Před 6 lety

      Mine had a weird "bug" that made it ran everything stuttery with Windows 7, but not in Windows Vista.

    • @Microang
      @Microang Před 6 lety +1

      M. V. Shooting That was probably a driver issue, I seem to remember drivers made a huge difference on 7 as I ran that machine through the windows 7 betas until RTM as Vista never worked on my machine so I dual booted with XP. But then I was running that machine daily until 2010, which seems insane in retrospect.

    • @Microang
      @Microang Před 6 lety

      M. V. Shooting I think the last catalyst for these cards was 12 from memory so Phil was running an old driver.

    • @Microang
      @Microang Před 6 lety

      Johann Apart from ruining the originality of the motherboard, would that work? They only officially support Kentsfield quad cores...

    • @Microang
      @Microang Před 6 lety

      Johann It's an AsRock 775i65G 2.0, it's the only board that supports AGP only and C2Q I believe.

  • @shamejais9843
    @shamejais9843 Před 5 lety +68

    I actually have the ATI Radeon HD 3850 right now in my computer! :)

    • @airmicrobe
      @airmicrobe Před 4 lety

      I got it yesterday

    • @igorriss3614
      @igorriss3614 Před 4 lety +2

      Me too with P4 478 socket, 865 intel

    • @warrax111
      @warrax111 Před 4 lety

      I doubt they have AGP version, that's why they told " only HD 3850" .

    • @shamejais9843
      @shamejais9843 Před 4 lety

      @Da Mighty Shabba sorry I don't have it anymore

    • @igorriss3614
      @igorriss3614 Před 4 lety

      @Da Mighty Shabba I had three agp HD3850 but now just only one, other with problem. Services do not want to waste time with old graphic cards. Good luck to find any!

  • @KyoshoLP
    @KyoshoLP Před 6 lety

    I never got around to trying NFS: Most Wanted and your footage made me realize the track you were on was a daytime version of one of the tracks in NFS: Underground. Well, daytime and Autumn as well, judging by the leaves on the trees. That's pretty cool! I should really get around to playing it.

  • @RoyHess666
    @RoyHess666 Před 6 lety +1

    Man I had exact that model of the MSI NX6600GT you mentioned in the video.
    Good ol' times.

  • @GiSWiG
    @GiSWiG Před 6 lety

    You must be a very safe driver. Even in NFS, you try to stay in lane!
    I had a regular 6800 AGP before getting two PCIe 7950GT in SLI. Last year I got a GF 7800GS AGP for $8 but seeing that I'm less of a collector, I sold it for $80 and it got me a Voodoo 3 3000. I kept a 6800GT for the Win98 support.
    Nice video! I liked the high-end AGP comparison. Nice idea.

  • @Johny40Se7en
    @Johny40Se7en Před 3 lety

    Great card showing old brilliant games. Good video fella.

  • @draxoronxztgs1212
    @draxoronxztgs1212 Před 4 lety +1

    Have both of the Sapphire HD3850 and HIS H4670 agp's with original boxes and all accessories I bought back in 2008-2009. Never thought it could be worth that much as I payed for them (and even more) 10 years later.

  • @antonelrotaru20
    @antonelrotaru20 Před 5 měsíci

    I still have my PowerColor HD 3850 Xtreme PCI-E version video card that kept most of the games from that time at a more than decent framerate. This was my first really high-end performance graphics card. With its massive cooling system, it still looks impressive for today standards. It still works like a charm and maybe that's why I should try to get it working in a retro PC!
    Congratulations. You have some very good reviews.🤗

  • @njdarudedovich6126
    @njdarudedovich6126 Před 6 lety

    GODBLESS THIS AWESOME CHANNEL!

  • @Jivemaster2005
    @Jivemaster2005 Před 6 lety +1

    Great video, Phil :-) had been waiting for this one.
    Too bad your 4670 card is kaputt, I might bench mine against my 3850 when I get my high end AGP system up and running again.
    If I remember correctly the 4670 felt slower than the 3850 even without doing any benchmarks.
    Finally, it would be fun to see how the AGP version of the 7950GT fares against these cards.

  • @Xbfg
    @Xbfg Před 6 lety +1

    Fantastic content brother keep up the great work i always look forward to seeing you new content

  • @a.sanford8731
    @a.sanford8731 Před 3 lety +1

    I just picked up an Nvidia 7800 AGP for $2. Not sure if it works yet, but either way I'm thrilled to have it. I'm planning to either do a Pentium 4 or Athlon 64 X2 build with it for retro gaming. If not, I'll try and scoop up one of these guys. Great video!

  • @maxgoodman9239
    @maxgoodman9239 Před 6 lety +1

    good job like always

  • @GreatGodSajuuk
    @GreatGodSajuuk Před 6 lety

    My first serious graphical upgrade was a Sapphire HD 3870(going from GF 7600GS AGP) so this video was a bit of a nostalgia trip. A blue AGP sister of my red PCIe card.

  • @uncreative_name48
    @uncreative_name48 Před 6 lety

    Awsome video, keep 'em coming!

  • @saxxonpike
    @saxxonpike Před 6 lety +1

    These things are awesome! I currently own a working HD 4670 AGP and the HDMI output is particularly useful on it. I could only get cards like these to work on boards that had AGP 8x support. Older motherboards probably won't run cards like these at all even if it physically fits in the slot. Of course I had to run some VGA games on it, and Jill of the Jungle appears to have graphics corruption. So not really a good candidate for "let's put HDMI on a DOS box" builds.

  • @pierregrobbelaar9116
    @pierregrobbelaar9116 Před 6 lety +1

    I have the nvidia winforce 5900xt that my friend flashed bios to 5950(i think model was can't remember)and a gigabyte 6800 vanilla which was a 12 pipeline card but could unlock 4 extra pipelines to make it 16 and then my 7800 gt which was a 16pipeline card where if i can remember correct the pcie version was 20 so it had worst performance.Of all of them my greatest joy was with the 6800 pipecooling no fans.Was running a little hot till i made a custom cooler for it.
    Great video.I miss the good ol days where agp was king.

  • @WouterVerbruggen
    @WouterVerbruggen Před 5 lety +3

    Just installed one of those Sapphire HD3850 cards in my P4 extreme retro build! I knew I had to get it when I saw it with an asking price of just €15 on the local second-hand marketplace. But man, that thing is noisy A F! Replaced the fan with a ThermalTake DuOrb, runs great with even a nice overclock on it

  • @josebonilla101
    @josebonilla101 Před 6 lety +1

    Now THIS is a video i wanted to see! I've been hunting for one of these beasts for cheap, to replace my Geforce4 Ti 4200 on my "Frankenstein" AsRock 775i65G with a Core 2 Duo X6800, as i'd like to play at 1600x1200 with all details enabled with XP games, like the benchmarks you ran on here.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Nice motherboard, I'll have something similar soon, but I think I'll go with a 800 MHz FSB CPU, as at 1066 the Chipset is actually being overclocked.

    • @josebonilla101
      @josebonilla101 Před 6 lety

      Yeah, i leave it at 800 MHz anyways. CPU IPC and the extra core should do more than improve performance, however i have not been able to validate that statement.

  • @Tutankhamun1333
    @Tutankhamun1333 Před 6 lety

    I still have my his hd 4670 and it has been used alot and it worked perfectly when i reboxed it nearly four years ago when i upgraded from socket 478 to socket 1366.

  • @CHiLL72
    @CHiLL72 Před 5 lety

    I recently bought a Sapphire HD3850 AGP card for very little money. Now I'm looking for a good Socket 939 mainboard with AGP to put it in. I enjoyed this video, as always! Keep up the good work Phil!

  • @RuruFIN
    @RuruFIN Před 4 lety +5

    I have that Sapphire card myself, paired with Asrock AM2NF3-VSTA, Athlon 64 X2 6000+ @ 3.2GHz & 4GB DDR2-800. Awesome build for WinXP gaming :)

    • @talvisota327
      @talvisota327 Před 4 lety +1

      that board even supports phenom II x4 cpus

  • @brydon10
    @brydon10 Před 9 měsíci

    I had an X850 XT back in the day. That card was so powerful it was amazing. It also looked really cool. I miss the AGP days.

  • @televiciousgoober
    @televiciousgoober Před 6 lety +6

    Had that Sapphire version from 2007 - 2013 with a Core2Quad system and it held up pretty good. The DDR2 RAM bottlenecked more than the AGP Bus interface.

  • @joeyschmidt6841
    @joeyschmidt6841 Před 3 lety

    I used to have so many AGP cards that I sold on when I upgraded. I also upgraded quite often back then, switching between ATi and nVidia on a regular basis. I still have a Radeon X1950 Pro (the one with the AGP-PCI-E bridge chip), but I used to have a GeForce 4800, Radeon 9800 and a GeForce 6800 (which could OC to Ultra specs). I gave or sold most of these on thinking I would never need them again, but I have an old build I need to run Windows 98 on (I know right?!) so I can use some old hardware and software to rescue a bunch of old songs/tunes I wrote back in the day. Windows XP isn't cutting it because it won't register an important SCSI DLL file, which I need to communicate with a sampler.
    Anyway, thank you for some good retro PC content.

    • @joeyschmidt6841
      @joeyschmidt6841 Před 3 lety

      Oh, I also still have a Voodoo 3, but the board has took a wee dunt. :(

  • @austrokraftwerk
    @austrokraftwerk Před 6 lety

    Nice :) I just build today my retro system with a Sapphire 3850 AGP, it's very fast but also very loud^^

    • @austrokraftwerk
      @austrokraftwerk Před 6 lety

      PS: In europe is this card quite easy to find for a good price (

  • @Felix-ve9hs
    @Felix-ve9hs Před 4 lety

    I still have an XFX Radeon HD 4650 1GB AGP, found it in the trash but it looks like new and still works

  • @garethfairclough8715
    @garethfairclough8715 Před 6 lety +4

    Man, I still recognise the old x800xt by sight alone..
    I wanted one of those so badly back in the day.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +1

      Man I remember when I was on a 9800 and reading the X800 reviews. I would follow most of the forums, like Anandtech, soaking up every bit of information. I never got one. Until now :D

    • @garethfairclough8715
      @garethfairclough8715 Před 6 lety

      A 9800? Lucky you! I was still chugging along with a Geforce 2 MX400! :P
      I recall getting a laptop with a 9700 in it not long after though.

  • @mrbrad4637
    @mrbrad4637 Před 3 lety

    I had a GeForce 7600GT AGP card (upgraded too it from a 6600GT) back in around 2007 on my Pentium 4 3.2GHz system, It was a great card for the money back in the day and I still have it in storage today.

  • @th3d3wd3r
    @th3d3wd3r Před 6 lety

    I remember the last agp card I had was the geforce 7800 gs. Pretty solid card and overclocked quite well if i remember rightly

  • @thereallantesh
    @thereallantesh Před 5 lety +1

    This was a really interesting video. AGP seemed like it came and went in the blink of an eye. I think I only had one AGP video card, and before it came time to replace it I was already moving on to a new motherboard. The industry moved so quickly back then. I've really slowed down on new builds since then. My current system is 8 years old now. Wow I really need to build something new again.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 5 lety +1

      AGP was around for a few years at least, starting with the old Riva TNT and first GeForce cards, all the way up to the GeForce 6 and 7!

    • @thereallantesh
      @thereallantesh Před 5 lety

      @@philscomputerlab I'm sure it was around longer than I remember. I had probably simply moved on at that point, and just don't remember anymore. That was so many years ago. Thanks for the great info.

  • @IchRockeInDerDisco
    @IchRockeInDerDisco Před 6 lety

    That really would have been my dream setup back in the days ! I was also really considering buying a 4650 for an old p4 I had lying around in order to make a decent liveable machine for old gaming / CZcams and 1080p videos, unfortunately bad condos made this MB die :( and I wasn't ready to go for parts hunting for this system as it wouldn't have been top notch, and as you said a top notch old gaming PC can cost a lot :(

  • @jeremyjohnson8844
    @jeremyjohnson8844 Před 6 lety

    That FX57... Whew. Product of my dreams for a few years.

  • @blakecasimir
    @blakecasimir Před 6 lety +31

    Another great video, Phil. But a lot of those CPU-bound graphs are telling us - and begging you hint hint :D - to do a follow up video with that "exotic" Core 2 Duo + AGP setup with the 3850! I'd like to see that, at least. :) I wonder if yours is one of those infamous ASRock boards? I had a couple of those, they didn't last long...

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +2

      Yup, Asrock made all the cool stuff :D

    • @Lady_Zenith
      @Lady_Zenith Před 6 lety +1

      Back in the day I had asrock ConRoe865PE + E4300 @ 2,7Ghz in it. I took it cause it was the only full ATX Core2 board with AGP and 4x DDR1 slots. It was a no brainer choice, I had GF 6800LE unlocked to ultra and 4x512MB of DDR1 and I played RTS and mmo games that were mostly CPU limited. Nowadays I also have bunch of small mATX Gigabyte I865 Core2 compatible boards for retro purposes and the Asrock dual VSTA with the VIA chipset which also has DDR2 and PCI-E 4x slot, but that one is pretty crappy when it comes to compatibility and performance, the I865 does better and is fully win98 compatible.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety +2

      Hopefully I will have something similar soon!

    • @Lady_Zenith
      @Lady_Zenith Před 6 lety

      Yeah I actually do not have the Conroe865 from Asrock anymore, it died after about 4 years. It slowly started to lose the ability to run on high FSB and one day it just did not power up. Back in those days, Asrock made many interesting boards and experiments none else went to, but unfortunately the quality of their products was really bad. They even refused 3Y warranty and for a good reason. Only past say 5 years Asrock was able to climb up and now sits I would say at second after Asus. On the other hand the Gigabyte 865 boards for core2, all 3 of them that I have still work fine. Gigabyte was really good back then.

    • @mitsostechtips9047
      @mitsostechtips9047 Před 5 lety

      i know asrock, in my country they are popular, together with gigabyte, i think that asus made those motherboards ''value for money'', for those guys that they want to build a pc with less money, it is asus motherboard with cheaper capacitors, chipsets, and other components

  • @Ty-ri7dy
    @Ty-ri7dy Před 6 lety +1

    Ahhh... the good old days when our video cards came with transparent neon colored fan shrouds and pictures of buxom CGI fantasy girls. What a great time that was to be a gamer.

  • @stijnbagin
    @stijnbagin Před 6 lety

    My last AGP card was a X1600XT 256MB on a 3.0 Prescott.. In 2008 I switched to Wolfdale E8x with PCI xpress HD4850.

  • @trongetsoutofsystem3099

    Im on Radeon since 1950 agp.. Now rocking 7970 :))

  • @sburns015
    @sburns015 Před 6 lety

    I wanted one of these cards so bad back in the day for my socket 478 p4 3.0ghz.

  • @comradeturtle9370
    @comradeturtle9370 Před 6 lety

    I have the PCIe version of the MSI HD 3850 laying around, waiting to be installed in one of my older builds. ;)

  • @sklzlm
    @sklzlm Před 6 lety

    oh this reminds me of my Sapphire Radeon HD 3870 video card. That card impressed the crap out of me at the time back in 2007. I eventually even had 2 of them setup in Crossfire (which was NOT very stable lol).

  • @retropcscotland4645
    @retropcscotland4645 Před 4 lety +1

    Just got one of these paired it with a Pentium 4 3.2ghz Northwood and it is very cpu bound. Testing it with msi afterburner which still works for xp the cpu is definately the bottle neck. So I have an Athlon socket 939 board and one of the early x2 cpu's that go with it. That will be the next test for it.
    Good video.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 4 lety +1

      Yea 3.2 GHz NW isn't that fast actually. These GPUs need a fast Athlon 64, or better a Core CPU.

  • @twopic5408
    @twopic5408 Před 2 lety

    I love your videos

  • @saxxonpike
    @saxxonpike Před 6 lety

    Related to your survey at the end of the video, I used a Radeon 9600 Pro for quite a long time in the 2000s, and only after I went to Core 2 did I start using PCI Express. Though it wasn't due to AGP preference, just what parts I had available at the time.

  • @Tmp2k
    @Tmp2k Před 6 lety

    I've been looking for one of these for months and they never come up in AGP. I actually bought one a while back but it was a PCI they mis-sold me as AGP. I'm never going to find one at a sensible price after this video :D

  • @mdh269
    @mdh269 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow! These AGP cards were super expensive when I was thinking about buying them off ebay years ago.

  • @CommodoreFan64
    @CommodoreFan64 Před 6 lety +2

    This video is excellent timing, as I recently scored a free Dell Dimension 4600 system from the local recycle drop off, and have been looking at video cards for it, so this should help me out on what to keep my eyes open for, as I want the best I can get, and max out the system. So If I can get the drivers to run I'll be dual booting Windows 98, and Windows XP(each setup on different HDD as I have 2 SATA ports in the system). Far as having a system during the AGP to PCI-E switch over, I kind of missed it, since I only had a basic 14in ACER Windows XP laptop for getting online along with older games, lightweight games, and emulators at that point in time, and was doing most of my gaming on a GameCube, along with my other retro consoles, and honestly did not really get back into PC gaming till around late 08 when I had better finances with my work, and was able to build a proper system with dual Nvidia 9500GT 1GB cards in SLI(got a crazy black friday deal on them from Tigerdirect).

    • @AtariBorn
      @AtariBorn Před 5 lety

      Just a heads up, You can pick up a small adapter to convert your 4 pin proprietary fan plug into a standard 3 pin PWM so you can use a regular cooler on a standard ATX case. Also, they make a cable to convert that Soundblaster Live style front panel audio port to a standard front panel audio for that standard case. I also picked a cable to plug into the power switch/reset switch/HDD LED/power LED port and it has standard pins to connect to the front panel. I scored a Dimension 4600 a while back, one that I upgraded for a friend a few years before. 4 GB of DDR 400 and a Pentium 4 3.4Ghz Northwood. I added a Zalman copper core cooler to make sure it never gets hot. You'll need to pick up a socket 478 backplate to mount an aftermarket cooler as the Dell all in one cooling system on a 4600 uses the side panel to mount the heatsink.

    • @mitsostechtips9047
      @mitsostechtips9047 Před 5 lety

      i am doing the same thing, in my computer i have ide hdd drive, i have one with windows xp for retro gaming, and one with windows 7 for modern gaming on pentium4 2.89ghz, 1gb ddr1 ram, and Ati sapphire 2600 pro hd 512mb vram, it is quite decent

    • @mitsostechtips9047
      @mitsostechtips9047 Před 5 lety

      *2.80ghz

  • @JohnAmanar
    @JohnAmanar Před 6 lety

    Great video! :D I still have the 6600 GT with the HSI chip. :) Also tested the HD 3850 AGP, but I was heavily CPU bottlenecked with the Pentium 4. I've also tested in a hybrid board with Core2 Duos and the Q6600 and it was much better, but that mobo was so unstable and slow with IO. :|

  • @xan1242
    @xan1242 Před 6 lety

    Dude you keep reminding me I gotta make the NFS benchmark thingies, I keep forgetting because real life took all my time.

  • @carnivorebear6582
    @carnivorebear6582 Před rokem

    I had a 7600 GT on AGP with a socket 775 P4 (motherboard sadly didnt support upgrade to Core2 Duos), served its purpose for a long while until eventually I upgraded to a first gen i7 with a HD 5770. Quite the upgrade!

  • @pegcity4eva
    @pegcity4eva Před 3 lety

    I did the software flash from an x850 to the xt pe. Pure bliss

  • @Carstuff111
    @Carstuff111 Před 6 lety

    Holy cow!! I used to have an HIS IceQ3 Turbo X1950 Pro AGP, with 512MB of RAM! I loved that card, I used it for years. When I got it, it was already a couple years old, it took another year for me to get a power supply powerful enough to run it, used it for a good, long time on an AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+ that was overclocked to 2.7GHz from 2.2GHz, 2GB of DDR 400 OCZ RAM, MSI K8N Neo2 Platinum motherboard, Creative Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum, running Windows XP Pro 64bit. Every component in that machine had a lot of mileage on them when I got them, and yet, I got many more years out of all of them. I miss old faithful, she was a reliable, amazing work horse. Then I upgraded... and realized just how much I was missing out on....

  • @AndreiNeacsu
    @AndreiNeacsu Před 6 lety

    The last AGP videocard that I used on my main computer was a Radeon X700, that had a PLX PCIe2AGP bridge. It was in 2005 on a P4 Pres"hot" CPU with 2x512 MB Corsair 533MHz DDR1 using an Asus P4C800-E Deluxe (i875) MB . The memory on my particular video card was pretty weak and I was happy when I soon upgraded to a C2D 6750 + HD3850 PCIe in 2007 on an Asus P5K-E (P35) MB.

  • @HMods1991
    @HMods1991 Před 6 lety

    I still have this card Phil, have tons of stories about it running in my Gallatin P4EE system. It’s the HIS version and has 6pin power. Bought it new and it still is used on occasion when I pull out my P4EE system... I bought it to finally max Doom 3 out on my system, it maxed FEAR out and it even allowed me to play COD4 multiplayer on it. If you wanna know about bottlenecks, try GTA IV with it... it’ll run it beautifully but the P4EE won’t lol.

  • @mbe102
    @mbe102 Před 6 lety +3

    I wonder how the 3850 compares to the X1950 Pro 256MB from Visiontek.

  • @YoSuey
    @YoSuey Před 4 lety +1

    I remember buying a bfg 6200 oc new when it came out and got a x800xt for free some time later. The power the x800 had compared to the 6200, was nuts to me.

  • @Synthematix
    @Synthematix Před 4 lety

    Someones got the 3850 working properly on win98se in the winraid forum, excellent stuff.

  • @GrandmasterBBC
    @GrandmasterBBC Před 19 dny

    I had a lot of fun gaming on this card back in the day on my old Dell Pentium 4 system. I could get playable frame rates on COD4 at 1024x768 with everything pretty much set to low graphics. Nail in the coffin was CCO World at War in 2008. It turned into a slideshow and would crash in heavy battle scenes. I still have the PC with the card installed sitting on a shelf in my garage. Need to break it out someday just for fun.

  • @roztoczynski.m
    @roztoczynski.m Před 6 lety +3

    As always, I loved your video Phil. I think that this topic can be covered more deeply, but as it is it's already 20 minutes video :)
    Worth noting is that X850XT is probably the best usable W98 card. A lot of DX6 titles work without a problem and I am using PowerColor X850XT PE AGP to play anything from around 1997-1998 to 2005. 6 and 7 series cards can't come even close in terms of compatibility.
    HD3850 is sort of strange card. You can't use anything older than XP with it, so you can go with PCI-E version, and possibly - much better HD4850 instead. As you said - it's more an collectors item.
    Keep in mind, that NFS series is very CPU bound. I made an comment some time ago regarding 6800 series card underperforming in your videos. I confirmed that some time ago - even Athlon 64 X2 overclocked to 2,6GHz or Pentium D @ 4,2GHz are too slow for NFS: U2 with everything maxed out (and more importantly: rearview mirror turned on). Dips in framerates went away only when I switched to Pentium E5800 @ 4,3GHz! The same applies to first Underground: even X850XT is able to keep 60FPS @ 1600x1200 as long as you feed it with enough CPU power.
    As for me, I jumped to PCI-E quite early in 2006 when I swapped my outdated and voltomodded 9550@9600XT to 7600GS. Change was quite impressive.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Thanks for sharing your experiences. Yea there is so much to cover with these cards, but we will unpack it slowly. I pay good attention to the comments to see what people find interesting :)

    • @roztoczynski.m
      @roztoczynski.m Před 6 lety

      valis Catalyst 6.2 for Windows 98 work nicely with X850 series cards despite not being certified

    • @mvShooting
      @mvShooting Před 6 lety

      That was nice! I was a late PCIe adopter. I was almost forced out of it, since I was stuck with this same 3850 AGP. Had to deal with integrated NVIDIA graphics until I could afford a PCIe graphics card.

  • @ALPHABYTE94
    @ALPHABYTE94 Před rokem +1

    I had high res CRT monitor back in the day, impressive 1440x1080, it was big and heavy AF

  • @junbug2982
    @junbug2982 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi. I have a working Pentium 4 ht OS is the windows vista home. and would like to find a gpu, what could i use?

  • @TheDemocrab
    @TheDemocrab Před 6 lety

    I had an AGP 6800GS along with a PCIe one (Got the PCIe one cheap as chips and had that ASRock board with AGP + PCIe so I figured hey, easy way to allow for future upgrades) which made me realise the importance of vRAM because the 512MB AGP version was a few FPS ahead of the 256MB PCIe one.

  • @andrewdupuis1151
    @andrewdupuis1151 Před 6 lety +1

    i have some older games like UFO After Shock , UFO Afterlight I couldn't get it run on intel HD 3000 and intel HD 4600 does these games run Radeon HD Graphics Card

  • @osgrov
    @osgrov Před 6 lety

    Nice! I had forgotten the 3850 was also available on AGP, that's pretty darn cool considering it's probably too powerful for most AGP setups - which your benchmarks seem to confirm as well. CPU bottlenecks. :)
    I had its bigger PCIe brother, the 3870, for many years and it served me very well! Paired with the lovely Core 2, I believe it was the E8600 I had. That system lasted a long time, good stuff.

  • @picoherbie9987
    @picoherbie9987 Před 6 lety

    In around 2004, I built a dual Opteron system with a 9800 Pro. In 2007 I put an x1950 Pro in it. In 2009 I looked to upgrade it again, but it made more since to go to a new system with PCIe then it was to squeeze any more performance out of it. It speaks more to the dual Opteron system, and lack of multi threaded applications at the time, but had I bought an Opteron board with PCIe, I probably could have gotten at least 5 more years out of that system.

  • @slovenc88
    @slovenc88 Před 3 lety

    Might I ask which motherboard you are using? I'm having cold boot issues with my epox nforce 3 250 mobo. Sometimes it boots normally and then othertimes it gets stuck with post code 25... few resets later all is working great. Once it boots, it works.

  • @davidp4456
    @davidp4456 Před 3 lety +1

    It would be good to see how other cards such the hd 3870 and x1950 xt compare. However finding these today is very difficult.

  • @nezhakan
    @nezhakan Před 8 měsíci

    I got GF7900GTX for AGP in my hands. It looked like designed for XFX, but came without any labels. It was slightly faster than 3850 in my compaq W8000.

  • @JamesSmith-sw3nk
    @JamesSmith-sw3nk Před 3 lety +1

    The last AGP card I had was the 7800gs. It was a good card for it's time.

  • @SHGames97
    @SHGames97 Před 4 lety

    I have an HD 4850 in one of my retro PC's they are great cards

  • @ChristopherBushman
    @ChristopherBushman Před 6 lety

    I just got a 3850 AGP from Free Geek for $5. It certainly upgraded my 754 socket system :)

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab  Před 6 lety

      Man, what a bargain! You could flip that card for well over 100 bucks.

  • @yorrickpinte1556
    @yorrickpinte1556 Před 4 lety

    I have both X1600 cards, the X1600 pro AGP and the PCI version. Are they well looked for? Looking to see whether I can still get some cash for them...

  • @CryptoJordanVR
    @CryptoJordanVR Před 4 lety +15

    I'd love to see either you or someone else do a benchmark comparison between this and the fastest PCI graphics card.

    • @nyxzo
      @nyxzo Před 3 lety

      😂

    • @braydoncoate9583
      @braydoncoate9583 Před 3 lety

      agp is so much faster dude

    • @CryptoJordanVR
      @CryptoJordanVR Před 3 lety +2

      @u knoe wat dis is The Radeon 6900 XT is PCIe. I said PCI.

    • @TheVanillatech
      @TheVanillatech Před 2 lety

      @@CryptoJordanVR The fastest PCI card is probably a Geforce 8400, and the 3850 AGP destroys it. The 4670 AGP destroys it even more.

    • @CryptoJordanVR
      @CryptoJordanVR Před rokem

      @@TheVanillatech Actually, the most powerful PCI graphics card comes down to 3 Zotac Nvidia cards. The GT 430, the GT 520, and the GT 610. Which, although massively more powerful than what you stated, you'd still be correct as the 3870 is still about 50% faster than any of those even when just comparing the PCIe versions.

  • @104d_3rr0r_vince
    @104d_3rr0r_vince Před 6 lety

    This card rocks, I still have one.

  • @Skott62
    @Skott62 Před 5 lety

    I'm confused. The x850XT out performed in the shown games except one but Phil keeps talking about the 3850 as its best. Is there something I'm missing here?