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Believe it or not, there are high performance motherboards out there for Intel's latest and greatest CPUs which don't have an Intel chipset at their heart. Top of that list is the nVidia nForce 680i.
89% Rating:
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The nVIDIA nForce 680i Chipset
MSI has taken an interesting
approach with its P6N Diamond by utilizing both the nForce 680i and 590i
chipsets on one motherboard. The main reasoning is PCI Express lanes, and the
very necessary 1333MHz FSB which was brought to market in the 680i core logic.
As far as features go, the nVIDIA nForce 680i SLI is
only a small upgrade over the nForce 590i chipset. In fact the only new feature
it incorporates is a higher FSB, 1333 MHz specifically. The nForce 680i SLI
chipset is also supposed to be an overclocking monster, follow the jump to the
next page of this review for the final word on that..
As you might expect, the nVidia nForce 680i SLI is split
into the traditional Northbridge/Southbridge configuration. As with earlier
nForce chipsets, the nForce 680i MCP Southbridge handles most of the
work.
The nForce 680i SLI supports a 533/800/1066/1333 MHz FSB
connection to the processor, so it's compatible with Intel's next generation
quad core processors. Between the nForce 590i and nForce 680i MCP is a 2GHz
HyperTransport connection.
The nForce 680i SLI Northbridge supports the regular
JEDEC standard DDR2-800 memory, as well as DDR2-1200 SLI-Ready RAM (aka EPP).
The nVIDIA nForce 590i Southbridge supports a secondary
PCI Express x16 slot for another videocard, a PCI Express x8 connector, four PCI
Express x1 slots, five regular 32 bit PCI slots, dual Gigabit MACs with nVIDIA's
DualNet technology, a 7.1 channel High Definition Intel Azalia audio controller,
six Serial ATA II slots and one IDE channel which supports two devices. On the
MSI P6N Diamond, when Quad SLI is enabled all four PCI Express x16 slots get
eight PCI Express lanes each.
Of course, it is up to the individual motherboard maker
to decide how and which of these features are actually implemented. For the most
part the nForce 590 SLI MCP and nForce 680i MCP are identical.
nVidia nForce 600 Series Feature
Breakdown |
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nVidia nForce 680i
SLI |
CPU |
Socket 775 |
nVida SLI Support |
Yes, (2 x16) |
nVidia FirstPacket |
Yes |
nVidia DualNet |
Yes |
|
Native Gigabit Ethernet |
2 |
|
Teaming |
Yes |
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TCP/IP Acceleration |
Yes |
nVidia MediaShield Storage |
Yes |
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SATA/IDE HDD |
6/2 |
|
SATA Speed |
3Gb/s |
|
RAID |
0, 1, 0+1, 5 |
nVidia nTune Utility |
Yes |
PCI Express Lanes |
48 lanes |
USB Ports |
10 |
PCI Slots |
5 |
Audio |
High Definition Audio
(Azalia) | |
nForce 680i SLI Assorted
Technologies
nVIDIA's
integrated audio solution supports Intel's High Definition Audio Azalia
standard. With Serial ATA going the way it is, there is only one IDE channels
integrated. To balance out storage requirements, the number of Serial ATA II
(3Gbps) ports has been set at six. Continuing on the hard drive front, nVIDIA's
Serial ATA II channels adhere to the Serial ATA 2.0 spec and support RAID mode
0, 1, 0+1 and 5.
nVIDIA DualNet technology basically gives the user
greater control over network processes. All high end nVIDIA chipsets by default
support two Gigabit connections. Users can combine the two connections for more
bandwidth, and there is hardware TCP/IP Acceleration which lowers CPU
utilization. Another very cool feature is nVIDIA's FirstPacket Technology which
allows you to prioritize network traffic. So for example, if you are a gamer
that tends to do multiple things while you're online, you can prioritize your
game traffic so that ping times are not affected by the other processes going on
in the background.
On the memory front, the nVidia 680i SLI
chipset supports Enhanced Performance Profiles or EPP which was
introduced in the previous generation. This is an open memory standard put forth
by Corsair and nVIDIA which takes over where JEDEC's SPD leaves off. As the
Enhanced Performance Profiles description implies, it adds performance profiles
to the memory SPD in addition to the conservative compatibility settings already
programmed in.
EPP compliant memory is dubbed
"SLI Ready" memory on nVidia platforms and allows the system to dynamically
tighten up memory timings and increase voltages for better performance with no
fuss. Whether you're a novice or experienced computer user, the benefits of EPP are
immediate.
Finally, nVIDIA's nForce 680i SLI supports nTune
which is arguably the best
enthusiast software available. It allows users to control their systems and realistically
with nTune, there is no longer a need to go into the BIOS to adjust
settings. You can do everything from within Windows XP or Vista! Speaking of tuning, PCSTATS overclocking tests are next!
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