When we
looked at the Gigabyte's GA-8TRS300M motherboard we noted that the Radeon 9100
IGP was not much of an overclocker... so the bar isn't raised particularly high
for the Asus P4R400-V DLX. Starting at 200 MHz we slowly raised the FSB a
few MHz at a time, and surprisingly we were able to go all the way up to 216 MHz
FSB without changing the voltages!
Unfortunately we ran into a few problems getting past that
barrier, raising the voltages even at stock speeds caused the board to not load
Windows... I'm not sure what the problem is, but if you're into overclocking
this certainly isn't the chipset to work with.
The Asus BIOS
The Asus BIOS is a bit different from what we're use to,
but all the tweaks you expect are there. The P4R800-V DLX supports TV-Output
capabilities so we can select different video modes as well. Pretty
cool.
There are a lot of options in the Frequency/Voltage
Control, enough for the everyday overclocker. FSB can be adjusted from 200-266
MHz in 1 MHz increments, there are the 1:1, 5:4, 3:2 memory dividers, CPU
voltage goes as high as 2.05V, the
Northbridge to 1.6V, DDR to 2.8V and AGP to 1.6V. There's also a performance
mode selection but we were not able to run anything higher than 'auto.'
|
PCStats Test System Specs: |
processor : |
intel pentium 4 3.0c |
clock
speed: |
15 x 200 mhz = 3.0 ghz 15 x 213 mhz = 3.2 ghz |
motherboards: |
dfi lanparty 875b (i875p) albatron px865pe pro ii (i865pe) gigabyte 8ipe1000 pro2-w (i865pe) gigabyte 8s655tx ultra (sis 655tx) asus p4r800-v dlx (radeon 9100 igp) |
videocard: |
ati radeon 9800 pro |
memory: |
2x 256mb corsair
twinx3200ll |
hard
drive : |
40gb western
digital special ed. |
cdrom: |
nec 52x cd -rom |
powersupply: |
vantec 470w stealth
psu |
software setup |
windowsxp build 2600 via 4in1 4.49 catalyst
4.2 |
workstation benchmarks |
sysmark 2004 business winstone 2002 content creation 2002 winbench 99 sisoft
sandra 2004 super pi pcmark2002 3dmark2001se aquamark3 comanche 4 x2: the threat ut2003 | |