Motherboard Questions and Doubts
Posted: 2006-09-07 04:04am
I know a fair bit about hardware myself, but that knowledge pales in comparison to what some people here know, so I figured I'd ask their opinion on something. I've been taking a pretty thorough look at the specs of several motherboards for my new system, and I've started to have some doubts about the Abit AB9 Pro (which I've ordered). It's not a bad board per se, but I compared it to the Asus P5B Deluxe WiFi edition and now I'm not sure which one I should get.
I'm generally not interested in overclocking or especially playing around with the component voltages because I have no idea what I'd be doing. So that's not much of a consideration. If I ever did decide to OC, it'd be modest tinkering with the FSB and multipliers preferably so that the voltages and whatnot could remain default.
What concerns me more is the AB9's lack of a second PCIe X16 slot and it has one more basic PCI slot as well, as well as somewhat better placement of the FDD and IDE buses (if not for my case, the IDE bus would be in a much worse place on the AB9). Then there's the fact that the AB9 Pro has the SATA connections from three different manufacturers, which immediately raises the prospect of driver hell, plus the IDE bus is from one of the secondary manufacturers. The Asus board has only two, and 6 of the 7 internal SATA connections are the default ones as well as the IDE. The sound systems are different on them (Asus uses Soundmax while the Abit one is Realtek 7.1 HD Audio) but I have no clue which one is better.
Then there's the nice thing about the Asus board that it has the option of having WLAN from the get-go if I ever want to switch to that. Right now I need 10 meters of cable just to connect the computer to the cable modem, which has another four meter cable between it and the actual wall socket (goes around my hectare-sized living room to the opposite corner). Not a big thing as such, but I could probably convince my parents to give their WLAN capable cable modem to me and take my cable connections only version, since their distance from case to wall socket is about 1 meter.
One more things is that the GPU I'm getting (7900GT) is also from Asus, so with all the optimization stuff that the Asus board has for the graphics card side, it would probably work very well because they're made by the same company.
So, tell me what you think. The Asus board costs €45 more, but I decided that that is no consideration if the board has better expandability in addition to the wireless and all the other options it has. This system is supposed to last several years with essentially no changes too. I'd really appreciate your input.
Edi
I'm generally not interested in overclocking or especially playing around with the component voltages because I have no idea what I'd be doing. So that's not much of a consideration. If I ever did decide to OC, it'd be modest tinkering with the FSB and multipliers preferably so that the voltages and whatnot could remain default.
What concerns me more is the AB9's lack of a second PCIe X16 slot and it has one more basic PCI slot as well, as well as somewhat better placement of the FDD and IDE buses (if not for my case, the IDE bus would be in a much worse place on the AB9). Then there's the fact that the AB9 Pro has the SATA connections from three different manufacturers, which immediately raises the prospect of driver hell, plus the IDE bus is from one of the secondary manufacturers. The Asus board has only two, and 6 of the 7 internal SATA connections are the default ones as well as the IDE. The sound systems are different on them (Asus uses Soundmax while the Abit one is Realtek 7.1 HD Audio) but I have no clue which one is better.
Then there's the nice thing about the Asus board that it has the option of having WLAN from the get-go if I ever want to switch to that. Right now I need 10 meters of cable just to connect the computer to the cable modem, which has another four meter cable between it and the actual wall socket (goes around my hectare-sized living room to the opposite corner). Not a big thing as such, but I could probably convince my parents to give their WLAN capable cable modem to me and take my cable connections only version, since their distance from case to wall socket is about 1 meter.
One more things is that the GPU I'm getting (7900GT) is also from Asus, so with all the optimization stuff that the Asus board has for the graphics card side, it would probably work very well because they're made by the same company.
So, tell me what you think. The Asus board costs €45 more, but I decided that that is no consideration if the board has better expandability in addition to the wireless and all the other options it has. This system is supposed to last several years with essentially no changes too. I'd really appreciate your input.
Edi