bryanW1995
Lifer
- May 22, 2007
- 11,144
- 32
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leave gary alone. If we don't post here any more and/or bother him he might give us a surprise tomorrow!
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
leave gary alone. If we don't post here any more and/or bother him he might give us a surprise tomorrow!
You aren't Tony from OCZ's alter ego by any chance? :evil:Originally posted by: Gary Key
I think most people put way to much emphasis on maximum FSB rates for boards. The P35 chipset operates best between 430FSB~490FSB with the 1066 strap, anything above that is going the other direction due to the chipset and memory latencies having to be dialed back greatly in order for the board/CPU to clock up. Heck, running the 975X chipset at the 800 strap around 330FSB will provide better results on a clock per clock basis than most boards out there. The 680i has a range from 400~420 on most boards that is the optimum FSB rate, anything higher is a waste to some degree on those boards. I advocate buying CPUs with higher multipliers and running them in the sweet spot on a board to maximize latencies and CPU speed. It also makes like easy on the board not to mention voltage, power supply, cooling, and memory requirements. :beer:
QFT. I agree 100% and have been saying the same thing.Originally posted by: Gary Key
I think most people put way to much emphasis on maximum FSB rates for boards. The P35 chipset operates best between 430FSB~490FSB with the 1066 strap, anything above that is going the other direction due to the chipset and memory latencies having to be dialed back greatly in order for the board/CPU to clock up. Heck, running the 975X chipset at the 800 strap around 330FSB will provide better results on a clock per clock basis than most boards out there. The 680i has a range from 400~420 on most boards that is the optimum FSB rate, anything higher is a waste to some degree on those boards. I advocate buying CPUs with higher multipliers and running them in the sweet spot on a board to maximize latencies and CPU speed. It also makes like easy on the board not to mention voltage, power supply, cooling, and memory requirements. :beer:
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
leave gary alone. If we don't post here any more and/or bother him he might give us a surprise tomorrow!
Originally posted by: buddhatb
When should we expect this P35 roundup to be completed and posted on the site?
Gary,
Can you briefly comment on why the DS3P is rated higher than the DS3R? Is it simply a matter of the added features, or is there something else at play? Also, if you were to buy a board, would you spend the extra $30 (above the DS3P) for the IP35 Pro? Thanks.
Thanks Gary!Originally posted by: Gary Key
Gary,
Can you briefly comment on why the DS3P is rated higher than the DS3R? Is it simply a matter of the added features, or is there something else at play? Also, if you were to buy a board, would you spend the extra $30 (above the DS3P) for the IP35 Pro? Thanks.
Features/Quad Core Overclocking and at the time the price difference was only about $15, of course that has changed now so I would tend to lean towards the R version currently. abit just dropped the IP35-E down to the $72 range so that board is moving quickly up to the top of the heap unless you are into heavy overclocking. Everyone is using the same chipset, the same core BIOS code, same core drivers, and generally have the same layouts, so your money is being spent on the features being provided by the supplier, whether that is hardware, quality of components, or BIOS tuning expertise and support. If you do not plan on heavy overclocking, any of the sub $100 P35 boards are great for 90% of the user base. IMHO...
Originally posted by: Gary Key
Originally posted by: buddhatb
When should we expect this P35 roundup to be completed and posted on the site?
It is scheduled on the 20th, I will probably pull a couple of the boards out for individual first looks before then..
Originally posted by: tedward
Originally posted by: Gary Key
Originally posted by: buddhatb
When should we expect this P35 roundup to be completed and posted on the site?
It is scheduled on the 20th, I will probably pull a couple of the boards out for individual first looks before then..
...of August? (Where is it???)
Originally posted by: tedward
...of August? (Where is it???)
You P35 guys need to learn some patience, we've been waiting over 5 months and he's delayed part of ours in favour of you and Intel..... :laugh:Our Editorial Calendar underwent a couple of changes today due to article changes for tomorrow and Wednesday. The first uATX board overview goes up on 8/23 in the afternoon or that night for Friday the 24th, the next part is up on 8/29 followed by another one on 8/31. Somewhere in the middle of all that is the first of two P35 articles and the start of the GPU/IGP image comparisons.
Originally posted by: Kakumba
Not trying to be mean, I understand how busy Gary must be, but does anyone think we will see this before X38 is widely available?
Yeah, seems recent mass MB reviews have become so complicated (or delayed by 'pay for view' articles) that by the time they actually appear they are largely irrelevantOriginally posted by: Staples
I am starting to think that the longer this gets delayed, the more new products are being thrown into the lineup. Who knows, we might see an x38 in there too. I was waiting for this forever and finally got tired ....