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Five Intel's P35 Express boards compared - TechAmok
Five Intel's P35 Express boards compared - [hardware] 11:38 AM EDT - Jun,26 2007 - post a comment 
The chaps over at
TechReport rounded up five Intel's P35 Express mobos - the Abit IP35 Pro,
Asus P5K and P5K3 Deluxe, Gigabyte GA-P35-DQ6, and MSI P35 Platinum to a
punishing gauntlet of tests in Windows Vista x64 to determine which boards
measure up, which fall short, and whether one stands out as the pick of the
litter. Here's a taster:
MSI's P35 Platinum is probably our least favorite of the bunch. The
board is priced well at under $180 online, but the BIOS definitely needs some
work to resolve memory setting problems and a lack of support for the Core 2
Duo's C1E Enhanced Halt State. We're also not crazy about losing two of the
ICH9R's Serial ATA ports to eSATA. However, the Platinum easily has the most
impressive chipset cooler of the lot, and its performance was quite good, so a
BIOS update could make this board considerably more attractive down the road.
We've only had a couple of weeks with the P35 Platinum, but Asus' P5Ks
have been running in our labs for much longer. They've grown on me, in
particular because they offer a nice array of integrated peripherals, including
802.11g Wi-Fi. Those extras go a long way toward justifying the price premium
you'll pay for the boards. The P5K Deluxe costs around $225 online while the
P5K3 Deluxe is selling for closer to $250. Asus has turned out a solid BIOS
for each board, as well, and their performance is competitive with the others.
Unfortunately, the P5K3 Deluxe is saddled with DDR3 memory that costs
significantly more than DDR2 without any real performance or power consumption
benefits. That leaves the P5K Deluxe as a viable option, but it consumes
close to 40W more power than the competition at idle, and around 30W more under
load. Such a significant wattage gap is curious, to say the least, and makes it
difficult to recommend the P5K Deluxe for a power-efficient Core 2 build.
So we're left with Abit's IP35 Pro and Gigabyte's GA-P35-DQ6. The former
costs just $175 online, making it a bargain compared to some of the other boards
we've looked at today. Even at that lower price, you get the best fan speed
control and hardware monitoring options of the lot. However, Abit has cut
corners, and the IP35's lack of PCIe-based Gigabit Ethernet definitely hurts
this board's appeal. This board's Firewire performance isn't that hot, either,
but those are more minor issues that are easily balanced by the board's great
layout and low price. If I had to buy one board out of the five we've looked
at today with my own money, it would probably be the IP35 Pro, and that earns it
a share of our Editor's Choice award.
Wow, what the heck is with that power consumtion on those Asus boards? (see pictures). Lost Circuits speculated that high power consumption on Asus's Quad FX mobo was from poorly designed voltage regulation and maybe that's also the case here? |
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