AMD 64 Mainboards ... nVidia or VIA?
- Iceman
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AMD 64 Mainboards ... nVidia or VIA?
At present, ASUS is offering two Socket 939 mainboards for AMD 64 ...
The A8N-SLI Deluxe
and
The A8V Deluxe
I have been a fan of the nVidia chipset ever since I bought my A7N8X-Dx a while back and I remember having problems with VIA boards before that.
Apparently they both have the same FSB bandwidth (2000 MT/s) so ... disregarding the other features ... What are your thoughts on the nVidia chipset versus the VIA chipset? Has VIA improved their reliability? Any other thoughts?
Thx in adv,
Icey
The A8N-SLI Deluxe
and
The A8V Deluxe
I have been a fan of the nVidia chipset ever since I bought my A7N8X-Dx a while back and I remember having problems with VIA boards before that.
Apparently they both have the same FSB bandwidth (2000 MT/s) so ... disregarding the other features ... What are your thoughts on the nVidia chipset versus the VIA chipset? Has VIA improved their reliability? Any other thoughts?
Thx in adv,
Icey
- Mr. Perfect
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The Nforce 4 board should be faster then the Via board, though I'd have a hard time buying an SLI board at a premium(or do you really want to throw down $600+ for a pair of 6800 GTs?). No Nforce 4 Ultra boards?
I'm not particularly convinced with the whole "one now, one latter" upgrade path, since by the time you need another card, new cards should be out that would probably be faster then two old cards in SLI.
I'm not particularly convinced with the whole "one now, one latter" upgrade path, since by the time you need another card, new cards should be out that would probably be faster then two old cards in SLI.
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Perhaps, new cards will be out and will be faster. However, think about this; the new cards will cost up to $600, assuming they are about twice as fast as a single card in this generation, say you get one now, and then when you get another one later it will nearly double the performance for less then half the price of one of those new cards and come with 90% of the performance. The only real advantage to getting a $600 dollar card at that point would be for features not in previous generations or for lower power requirements.Mr. Perfect wrote:The Nforce 4 board should be faster then the Via board, though I'd have a hard time buying an SLI board at a premium(or do you really want to throw down $600+ for a pair of 6800 GTs?). No Nforce 4 Ultra boards?
I'm not particularly convinced with the whole "one now, one latter" upgrade path, since by the time you need another card, new cards should be out that would probably be faster then two old cards in SLI.
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Man, I can't shed any light on either of those boards. But the one to get it would seen is that asus or the one I just ordered today that overclockers are creaming about
here
here
Oof man, stay away from MSI, I've had nothing but problems with them.
This is a darn good board. And is the board you want if you want a relatively high-end board that will last you a long time but are not ready for the pci-x yet, its got all the bells and whistles...
And of course, my #1 recommendation with all new major equipment is to make sure you have a good size Battery Backup unit with Automatic Voltage Regulation. An APC 800va is usually enough, I run a 1500, and it powers everything *and* my laser printer, and doesn't even sweat.
This is a darn good board. And is the board you want if you want a relatively high-end board that will last you a long time but are not ready for the pci-x yet, its got all the bells and whistles...
And of course, my #1 recommendation with all new major equipment is to make sure you have a good size Battery Backup unit with Automatic Voltage Regulation. An APC 800va is usually enough, I run a 1500, and it powers everything *and* my laser printer, and doesn't even sweat.