Patience just had an excellent Idea about the PCB and Revision Markings :
Example :
Techworks Voodoo1 > 9744
= Manufactured in 1997, Calendar week # 44
Miro Highscore Pro (Banshee) > 9845
= Manufactured in 1998, Calendar week #45
Best example :
VillageTronic MP850 (Banshee) > 9844
On the other side, the Card has embossed on the PCB in plain language :
V1.1 1998-10-19
It makes sense (especially when looking at the different numbers of other Cards as well)
--- update --- We've looked at the following Cards :
Trident 9750
S3 Virge DX
ATI Rage Turbo Pro
Quantum Obsidian2 AGP
Matrox G200
S3 Savage 2000
PoverVR Series 1
Radeon 9000pro
Radeon 7000
CompaQ QVision PCI
Silicon Graphics Extreme (a SGI Indigo2 Graphics subsystem)
The Numbering convention is actually
standard for all Graphic Cards, across all manufacturers.
And we've checked a big spread of my Hardware stock, including some very old Items :
It is a standard numbering convention for
all PCB's it seems, be it Soundcard, Motherboard, PCI, ISA or whatever (checked stuff dating all the way back to 1993)...
The only thing that changed apparently is that the digits for year and calendar week switched position at one time in Hardware history.
ConclusionIt is now possible to put literally every piece of Hardware
exactly in its timeframe, when it was produced
It is beyond me how this Item got missed so long, considering tons of Hardware went through our hands.