..remember the era when pci-e motherboards were a new thing? many people were refusing to upgrade 'cause they would have to get a new graphics card as well.most of motherboard vendors simply ignored this with "screw them,everybody will have to upgrade to pci-e sooner or later",but some were trying to remedy the situation by providing a motherboard that would be able to accept both agp and pci-e cards alike.the ultimate result were the Dual series boards from Asrock,which offered both slots (a full performance agp8x slot and a full pci-e 16 slot) on one board.and for a very nice price,I might add.
but there was one more solution available-it was called an AGR (advanced graphics riser) slot.it was not very popular.why? well,mainly because it was cr@p-basically,they just slapped together two pci-slots and attached an agp connector to them.unsurprisingly,the performance and compatibility suffered terribly.many cards were almost two times slower (when compared to a real agp8x slot),some did not boot at all.lowend cards performed decently,but that didn't really matter much (4fps or 5fps-its all the same).overally,it was a bad idea,and only very few people have found it useful..
but (there is alway a but
),as one of the
guys over at 3dfx.cz confirmed,this little joke of an agp slot has one ability that might come in handy-after removing the agp8x key,it can run agp 3.3V cards from 3dfx (v5 5500 fully tested) right out of the box,no tweaking necessary..so,if you happen to see one of
these devils on ebay,well,you know what to do