quicksilk Posted July 12, 2005 Posted July 12, 2005 Question?What are the recommended BIOS settings for my motherboard to give me the best experience with my NVIDIA based graphics card?Answer!There is no industry standard among motherboard manufacturers for BIOS options. Each motherboard manufacturer will feature different BIOS options which work best with their products. The following recommended settings are BIOS settings when used with NVIDIA based graphic cards. If these options are not present in your motherboard's BIOS, or differ in the way they are phrased, please consult with your motherboard manufacturer for further BIOS setting information:BIOS settingsAssign IRQ to VGA: EnablePnP O/S Installed: EnableVGA Pallet Snooping: DisablePCI Bursting: Disable PCI Latency Timer: 128 Peer Concurrency: DisableVideo BIOS Shadowing: DisableVideo RAM Cacheable: DisableUSWC: Disable/UCPipeline Cache Write: DisablePCI 2.1 Compliance: Enable (Only needed when using PCI graphic cards)Passive Release: EnableDelayed Transaction:EnableVGA Boot Sequence:AGP (When using an AGP graphics card)Graphics Aperture Size: 128MB (When suing an AGP graphics card)AGP Turbo Read Mode: DisableAGP Turbo Write Mode: Disable
svasutin Posted July 17, 2005 Posted July 17, 2005 (edited) Overall agp/pci/usb/isa spec settingPnP O/S Installed: Disabled. The Pnp standard refered to in the BIOS is the 9x specification for Win 95/98/98se. If you have 2k or XP, this should be disabled.PCI settingsPCI Bursting: EnabledPCI Latency Timer: Board Default This is a "hack" used by mfr's to increase certain device performance. This controls the "packet size" for info along the PCI bus. Each device is allocated more time, thereby increasing a specific test. If you set it to 128, and only run an hdd, sound, or video test, you get a higher benchmark for the specific test. If you run a hdd + sound + vdo test, then you get a lower benchmark.PCI 2.1 Compliance: Enable Better be enabled or your board won't support irq sharingPeer Concurrency: Enable Ya, I multitask and usually have more than one pci device operating at a time. For example, most systems use USB and PCI devices at the same time.Applies to CPU + RAMPipeline Cache Write: Enable Disable only if you over-clock. Allows for faster refresh.Legacy:Passive Release: Enable I look forward to the day Msft removes support for Super I/O and 16 bit devicesDelayed Transaction:Enable I look forward to the day Msft removes support for Super I/O and 16 bit devicesVideo Settings:Video BIOS Shadowing: Disable Ya, as cga isn't used to much anymoreVideo RAM Cacheable: Disable However, you might lose some sleep states depending upon the board. Uses k of RAM. On some cards you might see an increase, but it is specific to your system.VGA Boot Sequence: The type of your video card connectionGraphics Aperture Size: Set to the size of your video cardAGP Turbo Read Mode: Enable [Edit] for 8x If you get random crashes, first disable Fast WriteAGP Turbo Write Mode: Enable [Edit] for 8x If you get random crashes, disable this one first, and then disable read modeUSWC/UC: Uncacheable Speculative Write Combining / Uncached: USWC should give better performance, this is the last thing to disable. Edited July 17, 2005 by svasutin
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