Originally posted by: Markfw900
NO regular PCI or PCI-X slots, only PCIe
Originally posted by: Markfw900
That ones a possibility, but OOS. How good on overclocking ? I want 4.6 like the 920 on the ASRock review on air.
Originally posted by: BTRY B 529th FA BN
Nothing wrong about the X58 extreme Asrock (besides having Asus as a parent company but look at PCP&C and OCZ in the PSU market)
Originally posted by: Shmee
I would also recommend the UD5 or classified, or especially the next version of the UD5. Also, you will need a very good chip to do 4.6, mine needs 1.39 Volts vcore for 4.2; not a a very good one. Still, 4.6 should be difficult with even the best chip on air. And I have pretty good air cooling.
I would agree to stay away from asus, boards I do like are the evga and gigabyte. I love my UD5, narowly chose it over the first evga board to come out, and I also have an evga 780i ftw. both companies seem good quality.
Originally posted by: Jumpem
Originally posted by: Shmee
I would also recommend the UD5 or classified, or especially the next version of the UD5. Also, you will need a very good chip to do 4.6, mine needs 1.39 Volts vcore for 4.2; not a a very good one. Still, 4.6 should be difficult with even the best chip on air. And I have pretty good air cooling.
I would agree to stay away from asus, boards I do like are the evga and gigabyte. I love my UD5, narowly chose it over the first evga board to come out, and I also have an evga 780i ftw. both companies seem good quality.
Why do you say this? I have always used Asus and had good luck?
What is different with the "next" version of the UD5?
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Why do I need a thick PCB ? And I already looked, hard to find a pcie card that is not x1 (can you say no bandwidth ?) A
Originally posted by: Keysplayr
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Speaking of very torn.... I have been drooling over all the new I7 and I5 cpu's, and being a mod, dying to try one... But with 12 computers, all working great, and just having spent $17,000 on a 3 week vacation to Europe, I can't seem to justify it.
Somebody convince me that I need it !
keys, get the 920
Yeah, it's going to be the 920. Question of the day is, which board. Gigabyte offerings are drying up for X58. There is a whole smattering of P55's from them ATM.
Aigo says the P6T has Turbo throttling issues. Is this also true for the V2? Or same probs?
eVGA is annoying me placing their 1366 sockets so close to the north edge of the board. And I'm not giving up my Thermaltake Armor. I love this case. Best I've ever owned.
Maybe I'll just pick up the 920 this weekend, so I'll at least have the CPU. And maybe wait a few and research the mobos a bit longer.
Originally posted by: MyLeftNut
Originally posted by: Keysplayr
Originally posted by: Markfw900
Speaking of very torn.... I have been drooling over all the new I7 and I5 cpu's, and being a mod, dying to try one... But with 12 computers, all working great, and just having spent $17,000 on a 3 week vacation to Europe, I can't seem to justify it.
Somebody convince me that I need it !
keys, get the 920
Yeah, it's going to be the 920. Question of the day is, which board. Gigabyte offerings are drying up for X58. There is a whole smattering of P55's from them ATM.
Aigo says the P6T has Turbo throttling issues. Is this also true for the V2? Or same probs?
eVGA is annoying me placing their 1366 sockets so close to the north edge of the board. And I'm not giving up my Thermaltake Armor. I love this case. Best I've ever owned.
Maybe I'll just pick up the 920 this weekend, so I'll at least have the CPU. And maybe wait a few and research the mobos a bit longer.
Does the EVGA socket placement really make it a problem for heatsink mounts on the thermaltake armor case? I'm looking at my kandalf (exact internal layout as armor) and it looks like there would be ample spacing if needed, provided that the hard drive cage immediately above is taken out.
Originally posted by: Markfw900
See, this is exactly why I am worried. a $300 motherboard from a great company (reputation wise) and 13% are bad reviews ????
Originally posted by: aigomorla
I agree with ya on ASUS of the old being awesome.
I seriously never had any problems with ASUS until i started loading my computers up on full load, constantly, or bench with high voltage.
Once i started using more of my computer, there boards just dont last. Unless its a workstation class, i honestly havent had an asus board hold up longer then 1yr while under constant load.
My first nightmare happened with the P5T series and it not liking crucial ram. Were talking crucial... not a third party company which has 6 syllables.
Both the P5E and P5T-Dlx hated 4GB Crucial Ballastix series ram. Which meant all 2GB micron D9's sticks were no no on this board. *wanted to pull my hair out*
Then i got my P6T. Oh boy... u know when they ignorance is bliss, its true. You don't know what your missing until you tried another brand.
Key's Mark, and Jump...
My Advice on boards for ya...
Mark, you need a thick pcb, so your only option is giggy. Especially the way u treat your rigs.
Or grab the ASUS P6T6 WS, ditch your PCI SCSI card, and grab a PCI-E version.
Jump and Key's:
If you absolutely need 12GB of DDR3, my first board of choice would be the eVGA X58 LE.
Why?
Cuz Shamano personally handles the bios updates for the board. That means if something pisses us off about the board, we nail him on the forums, and he pops up with a new bios, like he has been doing.
Second choice would be a Giggy Series if you still need 12GB of DDR3, however if 12GB is not important, id grab a Foxconn Bloodrage.
I had a pleasure of playing with one while i was upgrading my friends rig, and its nice. The board is Rock solid and stable.
Lastly, if i wanted to bend my budget a little, id grab the R2E, but id probably splurge the extra and grab a Classified.
Originally posted by: Bleser
I've been doing this kind of thing for 15 years now, and I've learned one thing from my expieriences: every time I buy a particular motherboard/chipset/CPU combo with the thought that I can drop in a future CPU, it ends up being a total waste of time.
Originally posted by: Gillbot
Aside from that, I thought the benefit of triple channel and i7 was better for gaming over dual channel and i5?
Originally posted by: aigomorla
Ive gone though 4 different boards for the i7, 6 cpu's, and 5 tri kits of ram, and even 3 psu's.
As well as a ton of GPU cards..
How many have you gone though this year?
Originally posted by: Zap
Just last week I was handed nine 975 CPUs to play around with.
