And now back to my regular half-hearted attempt to defend the undefendable, i.e. Abit ...
<<
Not speaking for Jonny, but the design of the KT7 with 3 phase power, overclocking support in the bios and active chipset cooling are all very positive >>
I have to agree with you there. Believe me, I've tended to avoid Abits because the the 1.01/1.1 syndrome, i.e. let's ship a million rev 1.0s to find out what doesn't work, then fix it, then fix it again. I've used Abits back to their 486 boards (which didn't even have their name on them) and they've worked pretty well for me. Admittedly I don't see hundreds and thousands of particular boards like jonny, which is why I value his viewpoint. And their problems with mice and keyboards which I believe go back to their
LX boards (the LX6) no less are inexcusable. But my KT7 has been more stable than some BX boards I've seen, and definitely better than the Tyan Trinity 400 I tried. And it's running a 115MHz bus with memory at Host+33MHz, CAS2, Turbo, 4-way interleave and all settings to the max with Apacer PC133 CAS3 RAM. SiSoft Sandra 2000 shows memory benchmarks of 562 CPU/653 FPU at 978MHz, so those BIOS settings are genuine. Decent RAM, yes, not not HSDRAM or anything exotic. But there aren't a whole lot of KT133s out there running at 115MHz stably, or at all for that matter, and this KT7 is, and it runs all day long without crashing.
<<
BUT ABITs idea of quality is 'Send us back our defective board and $25 and we'll send you another' >>
But, very unfortunately, Abit can get away with this. It is
reprehensible that Abit does this to resellers. I'd understand if they did this to end users, since the first line of warranty service should lie with the dealer. However, it's simply Economics 101. Abit boards are getting Editor's Choice awards all over the Internet, meaning they're one of the hottest boards around, meaning people want them. You're a dealer - do you say:
1) "They charge $25 per board for an RMA and 5% of the boards are bad, so we're not going to carry them and turn away a lot of customers",
2) "Per 100 boards it's going to cost us $125 in RMA costs plus, say, $200 in labor/overhead to process 5 RMAs per 100, so we'll carry them but mark them up an additional $5 per board to cover increased RMAs?", or
3) "If jonny in Tech support has so much time to spend on AnandTech and writing a weekly column, let's start carrying Abit and keep him busy with RMAs"
I'd guess from the number of places selling the KT7 that #2 is the popular choice.
<<
Quality doesn't cost, if they cared, they would analyze EVERY failure and accept ZERO defects as the only measure. >>
But again, unfortunately, quality
isn't everything. Look again at the KT7. I would tend to doubt that Abit's quality issues are having a major impact on Abit's sales, particularly of the KA7 and KT7, and I'd even dare say the upcoming VP6. From jonny's view, they are definitely valid issues; from an end user's point of view, there are other considerations:
1) Features - as an example, I
absolutely needed a KT133 board with an ISA slot. That left the Abit KT7 and the Epox KT-8XA (or whatever). Both had 6PCI/1ISA/0AMR configurations. The Abit has multiplier manipulation, SoftMenu, and a power circuit theoretically capable of handing unreleased Thunderbirds. Epox didn't. Epox has a relatively better reputation for quality. It wasn't much of a stretch to pick the Abit.
2) Design - I was swayed by an interview with a PR guy (yes, I know) from Abit. He said they had a 22-year old wiz kid designing their boards - his first was the KA7, second was the KT7, and his third is the VP6 dual Coppermine. Abit and the KA7 at least give you a shot at running, or more specifically, pushing a Slot A Thunderbird - many other mfgs simply say "not supported", and the VP6's preliminary benchmarks show it seriously kicking the Microstar 694D dual. With that track record, I'd take a chance on the KT7.
3) Possibility of getting a bad board - I'd simply return it to jonny and let
him RMA it to Abit

and send me a new one. Besides, if I didn't how would he make a living?
While, I repeat, I'm not a staunch "Abit kicks everyone else's ass" defender, you can't make a blanket statement and say that all of their stuff is crap, either. Especially not with PCChips around. Now there's crap. But that's another thread
