Wow, that's weird!
Interesting. Reminds me of a similar problem that happened with old QDI boards back in the Pentium 2 & 3 days.
Never heard about this issue before, would you mind sharing more info (or resources?). I got two QDI Advance mobos here, one with Pentium II (Intel 440BX) & the other one with Pentium III (VIA Apollo) & so far didn't have any issues. At least none that I've noticed *shrug*
Talking about Slot-1, let's discuss numbers & benchmarks...
Finally got around to finish that PII 266 build. It was meant to be exact copy of my Celeron 333 system, but due to uhh ... unforseen circumstances I ended up doing entirely fresh installation on Celeron 333. It also got a new cable management, CD-ROM drive, network card, additional 64MB of RAM, etc. The list goes on & on but either way - once I was done with Celeron 333, I dumped the entire hard drive on PII 266 system, since they're basically identical. Same mobo, same sound card, same amount of RAM. They only got different GPUs & CPUs, along with dial-up modems & CD-ROM (vs DVD on PII) I like to think of these as Data & Lore ... for those of you who don't get it, it's a Star Trek reference
On one end we have Celeron 333, paired with S3 Savage4 Pro (AGP) card, and the other one is of course Pentium II 266, paired with nVidia TNT2/M64 & single Diamond Monster 3DII, 12MB. What I find interesting is that M64
outperformed Voodoo2 by a small margin. I'm sure the CPU plays important role in all this, being the bottleneck for BOTH nVidia & 3dfx. But still ... fascinating nevertheless! Here are the actual numbers, for both of the cards:
Now, you may be wondering - OK, but how does PII 266 & M64 compare against (in)famous Celeron, running at 333MHz & S3 Savage4 Pro? The answer is almost identical, although slightly better. If it wasn't for crappy S3 card, this Celeron would probably do much, MUCH better!
By the way, we recently discussed nVidia's drivers & related issues. Here are the ones used for this project, ForceWare 29.42. Personally, I find 43.45 to be somewhat better (more reliable) but with that being said, I didn't have any reasons to include 43.45 since TNT2 series was already supported under 29.42. And you know what they say - if it ain't broke, don't fix it!