Quake III Arena is a First Person Shooter (FPS)
that revolutionized gaming as we know it. Using multiple light sources and
having graphics textures that can fill videocards, even after 3 years it's still
able to bring a cutting edge system to its knees.
Quake III Arena Fastest demo001 (SYSTEM) |
|
Motherboard (FSB) |
FPS |
Ranking |
1. |
648 MAX - 133/400 |
332.1 |
|
2. |
648 MAX - 143/400 |
345.3 |
|
Quake III Arena Fastest nv15demo (CPU STRESS) |
|
Motherboard (FSB) |
FPS |
Ranking |
1. |
648 MAX - 133/400 |
93.6 |
|
2. |
648 MAX - 143/400 |
96.7 |
|
At 133
MHz FSB performance of the board is good, and slightly overclocking the system
brings a nice performance boost.
Conclusion:
It
seems that SiS has a real potential winner
with their 648 chipset and with MSI's implementation to create the MSI 648 MAX-F, you have a pretty powerful motherboard.
With VIA and Intel still battling things out in court
over the legality of the P4X chipset, it's nice to see a real alternative to
Intel's i845 DDR chipsets. The SiS 648 has a ton of potential, performance is
very good and it'll only get better with subsequent driver updates. With
Intel's dual DDR chipset coming out very soon, things are about to get even more complicated on the Pentium 4-DDR front.
The MSI 648 MAX-F has a ton of features; Gigabit
LAN, 5.1 audio, six USB ports (two of which are USB2.0), six PCI
slots, 8x AGP compatibility, three PC3200/DDR400 compatible DIMM slots and even
optional Bluetooth compatibility. There isn't much more you could ask for.
Yes, onboard IDE RAID would have been a nice addition too, but with
six PCI's you could also buy a PCI based one and plug it into your
expansion slots, or go for the gold and get on board with a Serial
ATA
adaptor card.
This doesn't mean that everything with the board was picture perfect
in my opinion - that one little capacitor right by the clip
which holds the video card in place got on my nerves
quite quickly, but complaining about things like that really doesn't serve much purpose.
As a side note, the performance differences between PC2700 and
PC3200 memory on this board was just about nil... Other then
available memory bandwidth, the motherboard just didn't seem to perform any better. Weird.
Anyhow, keeping those two points in mind, the MSI
648 MAX-F is still a good motherboard that will only get better as it ages.
I'd really like to see more manufacturers jump on the SiS 648 bandwagon, the performance is
there, and the reliability we've seen during out brief testing period make it look like this is a good chipset to go for.
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