Bus AGP  Bus AGP AGP-Bus Bus AGP Bus AGP (Puerto de gráficos acelerado)

Introduction to the AGP bus

The AGP bus (short for Accelerated Graphics Port) was released in May 1997 for Slot One chipsets, then was later released for Super 7 chips in order to manage graphical data flow, which had grown to large to be handled by a PCI bus. The AGP bus is directly linked to the processor's FSB (Front Side Bus) and uses the same frequency, for increased bandwidth.

The AGP interface was developed specifically to connect with the video card, by opening a direct memory access (DMA) channel to the graphics board, bypassing the input-output controller. Cards which employ this graphics bus theoretically require less on-board memory; because they can directly access graphical data (such as textures) stored in central memory, their cost is hypothetically lower.

Version 1.0 of the AGP bus, which used 3.3 V of power, had a 1X mode that could send 8 bytes every two cycles, and a 2x mode for transferring 8 bytes per cycle.

In 1998, AGP version 2.0 added AGP 4X, which could send 16 bytes per cycle. Version 2.0 of AGP was powered by 1.5 V, and AGP 2.0 "universal" connectors which could support either voltage were released.

AGP version 3.0, released in 2002, doubled the speed of AGP 2.0 with a new AGP 8x mode.

Characteristics of AGP

The AGP 1X port operates at 66 MHz, as opposed to 33 MHz for a PCI bus, giving it a top speed of 264 MB/s (vs. 132 MB/s, shared between all the cards, for PCI). This gives AGP better performance, especially when displaying complicated 3D scenes.

When AGP 4X was released, its speed went up to 1 GB/s. This generation of AGP used 25 W of power. The next generation was named AGP Pro and used 50W.

AGP Pro 8x offers speeds of 2 GB/s.

The transfer speeds for the various AGP standards are:

  • AGP 1X: 66.66 MHz x 1(coef.) x 32 bits /8 = 266.67 MB/s
  • AGP 2X: 66.66 MHz x 2(coef.) x 32 bits /8 = 533.33 MB/s
  • AGP 4X: 66.66 MHz x 4(coef.) x 32 bits /8 = 1.06 GB/s
  • AGP 8X: 66.66 MHz x 8(coef.) x 32 bits /8 = 2.11 GB/s



It should be noted that each of these AGP standards is backwards-compatible, meaning that AGP 4X or AGP 2X cards can be inserted into an AGP 8X slot.

AGP Connectors

Recent motherboards are built with a general AGP connector which can be identified by its brown colour. There are three types of connectors:

  • AGP 1.5 volt connector:

AGP 1.5 volt connector
  • AGP 3.3 volt connector:

AGP 3 volt connector
  • Universal AGP connector:

Universal AGP connector:

Summary

Here is a table summarising the technical specifications for each version and mode of AGP:

AGP Voltage Mode
AGP 1.03.3 V1x, 2x
AGP 2.01.5 V1x, 2x, 4x
AGP 2.0 universal1.5 V, 3.3 V1x, 2x, 4x
AGP 3.01.5 V4x, 8x

More information



Last update on Tuesday April 28, 2009 03:38:06 PM.This document entitled « AGP bus » from Kioskea (en.kioskea.net) is made available under the Creative Commons license. You can copy, modify copies of this page, under the conditions stipulated by the licence, as this note appears clearly.
Best answers for « AGP bus » in :
What is the AGP Show What is the AGP Intro The different AGP bus Intro In 1997, Intel designed a specialized interface and connector to escape dependency to the PCI bus, considered as too slow to meet the requirements of high-speed display as graphics cards...
PCI Express Bus (PCI-E) Show The PCI Express Bus The PCI Express bus (Peripheral Component Interconnect Express, written PCI-E or 3GIO for "Third Generation I/O"), is an interconnect bus that allows you to add expansion boards to a computer. The PCI Express bus was developed...
What is AGP and how does it work? Show What is AGP and how does it work? How does it work? Different AGP buses AGP is the short term for Accelerated Graphics Port and is concretely a point-to-point bus. The bus, compatible with IBM computers, is hence used as a Local Bus...
8X AGP graphics card - AGP 4X motherboard Show8X AGP graphics card - AGP 4X motherboard What about my purchase? AGP, established by Intel in the year 1996, has dominated the market for almost 10 years. It has made a continuous improvement both for motherboards and graphics...
Choosing the right CPU ShowChoosing the right cpu Intro AMD Processors HyperTransport technology AMD Compatibility constraints Choosing your AMD processor Intel Processors Front Side Bus (FSB) Intel Compatibility constraints Choosing your Intel...
Download SiS AGP(GART) Driver ShowThe LOCATED pilot AGP (GART) supports the following chipsets: SiSM650, SiSM760, SiSM741, SiS655FX, SiS655, SiS651, SiS650GX, SiS648MX, SiS648FX, SiS648, SiS645DX, SiS650GL, ...
What is a computer bus? ShowIntroduction to the concept of a bus A bus, in computing, is a set of physical connections (cables, printed circuits, etc.) which can be shared by multiple hardware components in order to communicate with one another. The purpose of buses is to...
FireWire Bus (iLink / IEEE 1394) ShowPresentation of FireWire Bus (IEEE 1394) The IEEE 1394 bus (name of the standard to which it makes reference) was developed at the end of 1995 in order to provide an interconnection system that allows data to circulate at a high speed and in real...
PCI Bus ShowThe PCI Bus The PCI bus (Peripheral Component Interconnect) was developed by Intel on 22 June 1992. Contrary to the VLB bus, it is not so much a traditional local bus but rather an intermediate bus located between the processor bus (NorthBridge)...