PC Techware heeft een vette socket7 TNT rally in elkaar gepleurd. Erg handig als je van plan bent om een TNT op een socket7 bord te gaan draaien.
De TNT kaarten die ze in de test hebben meegenomen zijn komen van Asus, Canopus, Creative Labs, Diamond, Elsa, Leadtek, Hercules en STB. Hier een stukje:
These 8 cards all ship with very safe default settings. The standard for the TNT-core / memory would be 90/110 MHz, with exception of the Creative GB TNT, which uses a slightly higher clock. (Like 92/115 or so), Dynamite TNTs with the newer drivers also ship with higher default settings. The TNT, however, allows higher clocking -- if you have a utility which allows that, that is. A popular utility for that is PowerStrip, by Entech Software. It allows by default core settings up to 115MHz and memory clock settings up to 133MHz and offers a "Fast Memory Timing" setting which is, one wouldnŽt believe it, a setting for faster memory timing. Duh. Similar to those "normal, fast, turbo" settings for your system RAM in your local BIOS.Since itŽs a sin to let performance lie around unused, I had to see how high I could push each card. Of course, trading in system stability is no option, so I played it reasonable. Here how I did it.