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975X Motherboard Recommendation?

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  • 23-03-2007 10:54pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 3,411 ✭✭✭


    I'm upgrading to Core Duo and PCIe and hence need a new motherboard. The
    main choice is between 975X vs nVidia SLI, and I'm thinking of opting for
    975X - while I'd love to have the option of adding another graphics card at
    some point, I'm a bit wary of nVidia SLI boards, having read about their
    instability, problems with SATA data loss, and having already had a nForce
    (A7N8X-Deluxe) board that was a bit flaky (give me the ability to play a
    game without crashing every half-hour, over a few more FPS. any day).

    In order of importance, I'm looking for a a motherboard, for under ?150
    (£110), which:


    * ATX size
    * Supports Core 2 Duo and Core Extreme processors
    * Supports SATA II (aka 3.0) drives
    * Supports at least 4GB memory, possible 8GB
    * Known for stability
    * 3 PCI slots - enough for audio card, extra USB port card, and wifi card
    * At least 1 Firewire + at least 6 USB2 ports


    Nice to haves, not that important:


    * Onboard Wireless-G wifi
    * Onboard audio
    * Overclocking potential (but not at expense of stability)


    If anyone has a favourite which matches that list, would appreciate a
    recommendation,


    Thanks,


    P.


Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 3,969 ✭✭✭christophicus


    As far as I know the 965's are better for overclocking.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,757 ✭✭✭8T8


    Dual GPU support on Intel motherboards is only available via ATI's GPU's so keep that in mind.

    Only NVIDIA motherboards support SLI.

    I understand your wariness haven been party to all sorts of quirks on NV motherboards as well.

    The 975X support dual x8 slots whereas the 965 have a x16/4 balance but this is not very well supported in ATI's drivers only Direct3D API is for x16/4 mode.

    I'd have a look at the MSI 975X PowerUp version as it supports all the Core 2 Duo class CPU's and is fairly well stacked with features though it does not meet all of your requirements and finding a board that does may not be possible (review).


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,411 ✭✭✭oceanclub


    Well, as mentioned I've little or no interesting in overclocking. Sure, if I could do it in 5 minutes with no extra cooling and no impact on warranties stability for visible results, of course. :)

    Thanks for the link, it looks promising. Only 2 PCI slots is disappointing though; if it had more USB ports or onboard WiFi, that wouldn't be a problem, but with the additional of an audio card and WiFi, that's both slots gone already.

    Cheers,

    P.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 37 d_advocatus


    oceanclub wrote:
    Sure, if I could do it in 5 minutes with no extra cooling and no impact on warranties stability for visible results, of course. :)

    You can! You can push up the FSB on a C2D to 300MHz and it'll be stable, cool and faster.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,757 ✭✭✭8T8


    oceanclub wrote:
    Well, as mentioned I've little or no interesting in overclocking. Sure, if I could do it in 5 minutes with no extra cooling and no impact on warranties stability for visible results, of course. :)

    Thanks for the link, it looks promising. Only 2 PCI slots is disappointing though; if it had more USB ports or onboard WiFi, that wouldn't be a problem, but with the additional of an audio card and WiFi, that's both slots gone already.

    Cheers,

    P.

    You could always just use a USB hub and a USB WiFi card there really shouldn't be any major difference.

    This Asus 975X board has 3 PCI slots but if using dual GPU one PCI slot will be unusable due to it's proximity to the PCI-e slot.


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