abit
bg7 |
Approx Price: $150 CDN ($90
US) |
MFG Link: |
Abit
BG7 |
Processor |
Intel Pentium4 |
Northbridge |
Intel i845G |
Southbridge |
Intel ICH4 |
Supported FSB |
100/133 MHz |
Form Factor |
ATX |
DIMM Slots |
Three PC1600/2100/2700 |
Max Memory |
2 GB |
Integrated Video |
Yes |
Shared Video Memory |
1,8MB |
IDE |
2 Ultra/100 |
AGP |
4x AGP, 1.5V Lock |
PCI |
5 32bit PCI's |
ISA |
None |
CNR/AMR/ACR |
None |
LAN |
10/100 Realtek 8100B |
Audio |
Realtek ALC650 AC'97 |
USB |
6 USB 2.0 |
Power Supply |
Pentium 4 |
Misc |
2 Serial, 1 Parallel,
WoL, | |
Abit's
BG7 is based on the i845G chipset and so it performed slightly better than other
i845E based boards in most of the benchmarks. In terms of features the BG7 is a
bit lacking however; supporting just on board 10/100 LAN and 5.1 audio (software
codec). Most other motherboards in this roundup have IDE RAID, but that isn't
the case here which is a real shame.
As with
the very popular BD7II-RAID, the Abit BG7 is a small motherboard, measuring only
half a centimeter wider then a GeForce4 Ti4600 is long. This small sized ATX
motherboard shouldn't have a single problem fitting into even the most cramped
desktop cases. The motherboard comes with on board Intel Extreme Graphics, and
for those of us who actually like to play games, a 4x AGP (1.5V lock) slot is
ready and waiting for a more powerful videocard. With five PCI's, you should
have ample room for expansion in the future.
The BIOS
on the BG7 makes use of Abit's SoftMenu III and so it comes with all the tweaks
we've come to love as overclockers and performance users. FSB options are
adjustable in 1 MHz increments from 100-250 MHz and we have the ability to set
and lock AGP/PCI speeds. Vcore goes up to 15% above stock values, and DIMM
voltages goes as high as 2.8V.
The BG7
BIOS brings to the table a whole host of neat memory features such as a 3/4
memory divider, and a 4/5th memory divider as well. This is extremely useful
when overclocking as it can help provide more memory bandwidth to the
CPU.
From an
overclocking standpoint the Abit BG7 turned out to be the best overclocker of
the bunch, allowing us to hit a 166 MHz FSB. Sure it's only a little bit higher
than others but free performance is always good. =)
There's
nothing we really didn't like with the ABit BG7, except perhaps the placement of
the IDE connectors. The BG7 faces a similar issue that the Epox 4BEAV also
shares; those connectors come very close to the capacitors on the
Ti4600.