ATi Rage

This page will show all objects that classify as ATi Rage. The Rage has been made by ATi, a company that makes graphics cards and has been on the block for quite a while (1985). ATi started with EGA and VGA cards long time ago and continues to develop high-end 3D chipsets till this very day. ATi's first 3D accelerator was known as the 3D Rage which technically was a Mach64 with some 3D functions. This didn't turn out to be real speedy but in combination with 3Dfx accelerators it went really well. After a bunch of Rage cards ATi launched the Radeon, a brand name that ATi still uses for today Radeon HD products.

ATi has been acquired by AMD in 2006 but still sells graphics chips under the ATi-flag.

View graphics card detailsATi Rage 128 Pro AIW (AGP)
ATi Rage 128 Pro AIW (AGP)

The ATi All-in-Wonder 128 Pro, one of the last official ATi Rage boards out there. The Rage 128 Pro was a newer ATi Rage 128 chip and featured a better triangle setup engine, DX6.0 texture compression and AGP4x. The ATi Rage Theather chip was used for TV functions. The card works great but has poor performance. Even the most simple Voodoo3 card is able to crush this card in performance.

The card has a sticker on the back which says the following:

SAMPLE ONLY- NOT FOR QUALIFICATION
P/N 102-65601-00 Rev. 11
ISR# 573 - 016
Date: 12/24/99
Made in Canada
ASIC TYPE: RAGE 128 PRO
ASIC P/N: 215R4GAUC21
This prototype seems to work fine. However, I haven't tested the TV functions. > Read more

View graphics card detailsATi Rage 6 (AGP)
ATi Rage 6 (AGP)

I found this card a while ago and thought it would be a good addition to my collection. And sure it is!

The official name of *this* card is ATi Rage 6 which doesn't sound to speedy and spectacular. Back then the ATi Rage 128 (Pro / Fury MAXX) was not the best graphics solution out there and why would the Rage 6 be better? Well, the Rage 6 was actually not a 'Rage'-family but a new iteration of ATi graphic cards. The Rage 6 turned out to be the ATi Radeon R100!

Let's dive into history first instead of talking about the new features compared to the Rage 128.

13 March 2000
Someone saw a working ATi Rage 6 board. Not much details were given at the time but the words 'performance, impressive and running at 50~75% of the planned speed' were set free. They said the board was still fresh and wasn't older then one week! This could be right because the PCB was made in the 9th week of 2000 which is somewhere between end Februari, begin March.

31 March 2000
According to a sticker on the back of the PCB my card is from (or released for testers) 31 march 2000. It's also a revision 6 board and it clearly states 'SAMPLE ONLY- NOT FOR QUALIFICATION'. Also note the CE and FC markings on the PCB are crossed and thus not valid. In this timeframe the card was still known as Rage 6. The PCB date is 11th of 2000 which is somewhere around 11 to 18 March. RAM dates back to 9th week and some parts, like the ATi Rage Theater chip are from 1999.

5 April 2000
ATi claims some domain names. This includes names like radeon128.com, radeoniimaxx.com, radeonpro.com, radeon256.com, radeonsma.com, radeonii.com and radeon256maxx.com.

In this timeframe ATi already decided to name their new board 'Radeon'. By looking at the chosen names ATi also kept options open for Radeon II and Radeon MAXX (dual-GPU) boards. Also note 'Radeon 256' which would be the name of this Rage 6 board. Later on ATi changed the name to 'Radeon' so it would not be the same as GeForce 256 as the Radeon was not meant to compete the GeForce 256 but to surpass it.

Summer 2000
The Radeon with SDR-SDRAM memory was added to compete with the GeForce2 MX. The SDR version is slower and left the market more quickly.

2000; after release of Radeon 8500
The original Radeon name was renamed to Radeon 7200. In the beginning the 7200 was used for the 64MB SDR card which lived short, the 32MB DDR versions remained unchanged. After the cards were discontinued the Radeon 7200 was the name for all R100 boards regardless of their memory configuration.

The old Radeon 32 DDR and Radeon 64 DDR were produced until summer 2001. After then the Radeon 7500 (RV200; 150nm chip with few tweaks) was used.

This card has a sticker on the back with the following text:

SAMPLE ONLY-
NOT FOR QUALIFICATION
P/N 102-70702-00 Rev. 06
ISR# 855 - 030
Date: 03/31/00
Made in Canada
ASIC TYPE: RAGE 6
ASIC P/N: 215R6WASA11
With pencil someone written the following on it, too:

061464.8
0012AA
B1058
Not sure what it means, though. Perhaps something like a BIOS version?

Look at the second picture and see there is a rework on the EM97BF chip :). Final note: this card did not work in my AGP4x i815 system. It didn't boot up at all. However it runs great in an i440BX-based motherboard with only AGP2x. I checked the card using this method and it turned out to be an AGP4x Universal part. In the i440BX I noticed the fan stopped working sometimes. > Read more

View graphics card detailsATi Rage 128 Pro (AGP)
ATi Rage 128 Pro (AGP)

A late Rage 128 Pro sample and actually I have no idea what it's purpose was. The back of the card shows CE/FC markings and normal product numbers which indicate it's a normal production board. Nevertheless, it does have a 'Qualification Sample' sticker.

The card is probably sent out to some tester/reviewer who would like to implement a Rage 128 Pro card in a computer system. ATi sent out a normal board for qualification ... sounds right? Not sure ;).

The sticker on the back says:

QUALIFICATION SAMPLE
P/N 102-63109-11 Rev. M
TR# 00215 - 007
Date: 08/18/99
Made in China
> Read more

View graphics card detailsATi Rage 128 (AGP)
ATi Rage 128 (AGP)

ATi still didn't have the performance crown in the 3D-accelerator world and thus they threw the Rage 128 in the boxing ring. The Rage 128 is a DirectX 6 compliant accelerator and can do two pixels per clock.

Globally two versions exist; the GL and VR. The latter has an 64-bit memory bus opposed to 128-bit.

It's successor; Rage 128 Pro didn't perform too good. Don't expect much of the normal version ;). > Read more

View graphics card detailsATi Rage Fury MAXX (AGP)
ATi Rage Fury MAXX (AGP)

On this card you'll find two Rage 128 Pro chips. They work together using AFR (alternate frame rendering) that almost doubles performance. With AFR each frame is rendered on an independent processor.

The Rage Fury MAXX doesn't have T&L (Transform and Lightning) so it's job to compete with the GeForce 256 was a tough one. It's no surprise that the GeForce 256 will be the better choice.

Also note that this card isn't suitable for Windows 2000 or newer. It will work but only with one chip. The ideal OS for this card is Windows 98/ME. > Read more

View graphics card detailsATi Rage Fury MAXX (AGP)
ATi Rage Fury MAXX (AGP)

Almost identical to the other Rage Fury MAXX except for the slight difference in the PCB. Find the PCB date (52th week of 1999) on both cards and you'll see the difference. > Read more