arrowHome
MVKTech Home Page
Main Menu
Home
News
Guides
Reviews
Previews
Downloads
Forums
Uploads
Links
Contact Us
Price Comparison
Compare prices Australia
Laptop
Tomtom
Digital Camera
Mobile Phones
Ink cartridges
VOIP
Compare prices NZ
Compare prices ZA
Latest Version
May.21
Downloads
FileNiBiTor v6.06
Latest Downloads
May.21
Downloads
FileNiBiTor v6.06
May.10
Downloads
FileEVG GTX680 (HC) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
May.10
Downloads
FileASU GTX680 (DT) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
May.10
Downloads
FileZTC GTX680 (DF) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
May.10
Downloads
FileEVG GTX680 (SC) PCIe 2048MB - Rev 01
Login Form





Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
XGI Volari V8 versus S3 Deltachrome S8
Written by Mavke   
Thursday, 07 October 2004
OCW has posted a review on the XGI Volari V8 and the S3 Deltachrome S8 graphics card. It seems that we just can't get enough of performance and power these days. However, many of you out there are not necessarily looking for the highest performance available, but rather for value. Most people want a cost effective video card that performs well for their needs for moderate gaming. They could care less about competitive benchmarking scores.

ImageXGI Volari V8 versus S3 Deltachrome S8

We have examined ATI and NVIDIA's mainstream solutions, and have also included mainstream solutions from both S3 and XGI. The cards we will be looking at are the ATI Radeon 9550, NVIDIA GeForce FX5700 LE, XGI Volari V8 and S3 Deltachrome S8. Though the S3 Deltachrome and the XGI Volari graphics cards are not readily available everywhere in the world, they can be found in certain parts of Europe and Asia and this is why the cards were included in this article.

The Volari V8 certainly proved to be a very interesting piece of hardware. This card has pretty good performance for the average gamer as we can see and proved to be a worthy alternative to the Radeon 9550 and Geforce FX5700 LE which are both in the same price range. Its performance seems to match the Radeon 9600/9600 PRO too.

We did not mention about overclocking in the review. The Volari does have some overclocking potential though: we were able to clock the card from 300/300MHz to 395/390MHz. As a result, we were able to reach a score of 3118 in 3DMark03.

But what really separates it from all other graphics architectures is that it natively supports outputting to your HDTV. This gives XGI quite an edge over the competition: could you imagine outputting straight from your PC or laptop straight to your HDTV? The Volari supports resolutions of 480p, 720p, 1080i, and 1080p through the component as well as the S-Video output. As a result, the Volari's 2D and video capabilities make it an excellent candidate for use in a multimedia box such as a small form factor system that's being used as a home theater PC, or a micro-ATX case that's used to perform similar duties.

Overall, a good card with good performance at a good price and certainly something many gamers will be interested in as not everyone can afford a Radeon X800 XT PE just for playing games. My only real gripe is the fact that the card is not readily available everytwhere in the world. As we mentionned everywhere, the card can be found in certain parts of Europe and Asia only, and therefore many of you out there may have difficulties in finding one. Hopefully this will change soon.

The Deltachrome turned out to be a complete disappointment. The card does offer some interesting video features (Chromotion) which may be interest some of you such as the real time artistic effects such as emboss and neon, but it's really more of a gadget than anything else and it slows things down a lot. The card was stable in normal normal desktop use and the card was perfect for this purpose. Unfortunately that's where the positives end.

As it stands the Deltachrome's drivers are acceptable when using the most heavily used benchmarks (3DMark2001, 3DMark03 and Aquamark 3). For the less thorough reviewer or one with limited time, this would almost certainly make the card look like a reasonable performer. However, when running titles such as Quake 3 or Call of Duty, performance would start falling far behind all the other cards.

When we compare the benchmark performance to real games and see that none of the games we tested ran without issue (if they even ran at all), it seems S3 has got some serious driver rewriting to do. It's quite tough to say if the hardware itself is good, there are so many driver issues that you don't even get to see the performance of the card. It's worth pointing out that all of our game tests featured up to date games, some of the best sellers from the past few months. Another point worth mentionning is that any attempts to use FSAA above 1024x768 would result in immediate program crashes.

Testing older games was no fun either: we tested some all time classics and also encountered issues. Microsoft's Age of Empires 2, one of the most compatible games and one of the least system demanding titles, refused to run and reported some error in initializing Direct Draw. EA's Sim City 4 ran but suffered from graphics corruption.

Though these issues will no doubt be corrected through future driver updates, there is no indication that driver improvements will be fast in arriving…all of the issues we experienced with games such as in Age of Empires 2 were also present in the WHQL driver released back in January 2004... As it stands, you could not purchase a Deltachrome S8 and be confident that any recent game (or even classic titles) will run on your card.
 
Compare Prices
Compare prices Canada
LCD TV
GPS
Digital Cameras
Smartphones
Laptops
LCD Monitors
MP3 Players
Appliances

Comptoir Hardware

New Reviews
Patriot Xporter Magnum 64GB USB Flash Disk
Gainward GeForce GTX 260 Standard Version
Gainward BLISS 9800 GX2 Dual-GPU Version
PowerColor Radeon HD 3650 Xtreme Cooling
Dragon Lasers Hulk Green Laser Technology
New Previews
NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GX2 Dual-GPU Version
PowerColor Radeon HD 3850 Xtreme Edition
PowerColor Radeon HD 2600 XT 256MB Card
HomeNewsGuidesReviewsPreviewsDownloadsForumsUploadsLinksContact UsTop
Copyright (c) 2009 - All rights reserved Powered by Flexwebhosting