msi ms-6524
-p4 |
Approx Price: $75USD |
MFG: Link |
MSI
MS-6524 |
Northbridge |
SiS 650 |
Southbridge |
SiS 961 |
Supported FSB |
100 MHz |
Form Factor |
Micro ATX |
DIMM Slots |
Two PC100/PC133 |
Max Memory |
2 GB |
Integrated video |
Yes, SiS650 |
Shared Video memory |
8MB |
IDE |
2 Ultra/100 |
AGP |
4x AGP |
PCI |
3 32bit PCI's |
ISA |
None |
CNR/AMR/ACR |
1 CNR |
LAN |
10/100 Realtek 8100L |
Audio |
Realtek ALC201A AC'97 |
USB |
2 USB 1.1 |
Power Supply |
Pentium 4 |
Misc |
2 Serial, 1 Parallel, WoL,
WoM | |
The MSI 6524 is almost exactly the same
in terms of layout as the MSI 6533 motherboard; both are based on the SiS 650
chipset. The difference lies in the fact that the MSI 6524 uses SDRAM rather
then DDR.
There are
also no heatsinks on the MOSFET's to keep them cool and during testing they did
get hot to the touch - the system remained stable however. Actually the 6524 was
more stable then the 6533, it didn't crash once during testing.
The small
passive chipset heatsink on the SiS650 got very warm during our testing, it
would have been nice to see some sort of active cooling on top of it. We
understand that this is a low cost motherboard, but we also would have liked to
see the accompanying Serial and USB brackets so we could take advantage of the
headers.
Of course
being the only Pentium 4 board based on SDRAM it also has slightly slower
performance as well. The upswing to this is that SDRAM is readily available in
most existing computers, and for a very low cost. It's also interesting to see
that the 6524 was more stable then the 6533, the 6524 didn't crash once during
testing.