ELSA Gladiac 511,
ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI and
ELSA Gladiac 511 DVI
on NVIDIA GeForce2 MX
Almost a year ago one of NVIDIA GeForce2 MX based cards from ELSA was tested
in our lab. At that time such a card was called ELSA Gladiac MX. Later,
with the release of the NVIDIA GeForce3, ELSA changed its strategy in giving
names to its products, and all later cards were called just Gladiac and
differed only in suffixes.
The ELSA Gladiac 511 series means cards based on the GeForce2 MX. Inside
the series they differ both in interface (AGP, PCI) and in presence/absence
of DVI (TV-out).
Like the ELSA
Gladiac MX all cars in the today's review are based on the reference
design from NVIDIA. Only the PCI based card has its own peculiarities
and specific design.
ELSA is well-known for its professional products such as 3D accelerators
for powerful packets of 3D modelling, high-quality monitors and a game-class
video cards on the NVIDIA's processors.
Until 2000 gaming video cards had only the company's own design. But
then the company decided to purchase OEM cards from other manufacturers,
mark them with its logo, equip with its own software and sell under its
trade mark. The quality, however, was anyway high because the cards were
tested thoroughly. Unfortunately, this made them more expensive as compared
with the products of many Asian companies. This situation, however, is
typical of Europe only, while in the USA you may find them even cheaper
than the cards from Asian makers.
So, today the tests will be conducted for three GeForce2 MX based cards:
two standard cards and the third with a PCI interface and TwinView support.
Cards
1. ELSA Gladiac 511
The ELSA Gladiac 511 has AGP x2/x4 interface, 32 MBytes SDR SDRAM memory located
in 4 chips on the right side of the PCB.
Winbond produces memory chips with 6 ns access time, which corresponds
to 166 MHz. The memory works exactly at this frequency. The frequency,
as you can see, conforms to the recommended by NVIDIA which is 175/166
MHz.
The design is also identical to the reference card. The GPU is equipped
with a big black heatsink similar to the one of the 3dfx Voodoo3 3000.
The ships both in Retail and OEM packages.
The Retail-package contains:
-
User's Manual;
-
CD with drivers and utilities.
Overclocking
The ELSA Gladiac 511 doesn't shine in overclocking. The memory's frequency
is too difficult to raise, while the GPU speed doesn't matter much, as
you know. That is why this card wasn't overclocked for the tests.
2. ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI
The ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI has AGP x2/x4 interface, 32 MBytes SDR SDRAM memory
located in 4 chips on the right side of the PCB.
Hyundai produces memory chips with 6 ns access time, which corresponds
to 166 MHz. The memory works exactly at this frequency.
The ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI has a specific design since NVIDIA offers no
reference design for PCI-models of GeForce2 MX cards. The card has TwinView
support, i.e. two VGA connectors for two monitors and TV-out. Thus, you
may display an image either on two monitors or on a monitor and a TV screen.
So, if you have got a mainboard without an AGP slot this card
is the only (except the Matrox G450 PCI) which can provide you with
a wide range of functions of image displaying on two monitors and
of a sound level of 3D acceleration. However, you shouldn't expect
the performance equal to an AGP card (see our 3Digest).
The GPU has a big heatsink without a fan. But a chipset which works
at 175 MHz can do without cooling at all.
Overclocking
The ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI works rather good at 220/205 MHz.
Well, the overclocking potential is promising, but the performance
will hardly increase much because of the restrictions of the PCI
bus.
3. ELSA Gladiac 511 DVI
The ELSA Gladiac 511 DVI has AGP x2/x4 interface, 32 MBytes SDR SDRAM memory
located in 4 chips on the right side of the PCB.
Samsung produces memory chips with 6 ns access time, which corresponds
to 166 MHz. The memory works exactly at this frequency.
The difference from the first reviewed card is only in the DVI connector
for digital monitors.
Overclocking
We managed to raise the frequency only to the 220/200 MHz. Although it
is not too much, the performance boost will be noticeable.
Installation and drivers
Test system:
-
Pentium III based get-up:
-
CPU Intel Pentium III 1000 MHz;
-
MB Chaintech 6OJV2 (i815E);
-
RAM 256 MBytes PC133;
-
HDD IBM DPTA 20 GBytes;
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OS Windows 98 SE;
-
ViewSonic P810 (21"), NOKIA 447Xav (17") and ViewSonic P817 (21") monitors.
For the tests we used drivers from NVIDIA of 14.40 version, VSync was off.
For comparative analyses the results of the following cards are used:
-
SUMA Platinum K2 (KYRO II, 175/175 MHz, 32 MBytes);
-
SUMA Platinum GeForce2 MX400 (200/183 MHz, 32 MBytes).
Test results
All the card have decent 2D quality which is similar to cards from other
brand-name companies. The image is sharp up to 1280X1024 at 100 Hz. And
even at 1600X1200, 75 Hz you may work comfortably with this card.
For estimation of 3D quality we used id Software Quake3 v.1.17 - a game-test
which demonstrates the card's operation in OpenGL with usage of a standard
benchmark demo002.
Quake3 Arena
demo002
The tests were carried out in two modes: Fast (16-bit color) and High Quality
(32-bit color).
The performance of all these cards is excellent and conforms to their level.
Conclusion
-
ELSA Gladiac 511 and Gladiac 511 DVI demonstrate the expected performance
(nothing else could be expected from the reference card based product).
-
ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI has a lower productivity because of the PCI-bus restrictions,
but this card has a TwinView support which is very advantageous for computors
lacking for an AGP slot.
-
All the cards cost cheaper than their competitors, while their quality
is incredibly good.
Highs:
-
Correspondence of the speed characteristics of the ELSA Gladiac 511/DVI
to the GeForce2 MX based cards, high-quality 2D graphics;
-
ELSA Gladiac 511 PCI, being a PCI card, has a good performance level, modern
3D features and TwinView support;
-
Perfect quality of implementation of the products.
Lows:
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