Hardware Secrets
Home | Camera | Case | CE | Cooling | CPU | Input | Memory | Mobile | Motherboard | Networking | Power | Storage | Video | Other
Content
Articles
First Look
Gabriel's Blog
News
Reviews
Tutorials
Main Menu
About Us
Awarded Products
Compare Prices
Datasheets
Dictionary
Download
Drivers
Forums
Links
Manufacturer Finder
Newsletter
On The Web
RSS Feed
Test Your Skills
Twitter
Newsletter
Subscribe today!
Search





Recommended Book
Upgrading and Repairing PCs (18th Edition)
Upgrading and Repairing PCs (18th Edition)
By Scott Mueller
Que
Price: $33.75

Home » Motherboard
SiS 672FX Reference Board Review
Author: Gabriel Torres
Type: Reviews Last Updated: July 31, 2007
Page: 1 of 11
$ Check REAL-TIME pricing for Intel BOXDG43NB LGA 775 G43 ATX Motherboard - Retail $
Newegg: $81.99 Dell Home: $99.99
Directron: $92.99 TigerDirect USA: $89.99

Introduction

SiS 672FX is a chipset with integrated graphics targeted to low-end socket 775 motherboards. We’ve got from SiS a reference board for this chipset and since motherboards based on the same chipset usually achieve similar performance, you can have a clue on what performance to expect from motherboards based on SiS 672FX.

A reference board is a motherboard manufactured by the chipset maker to make internal tests and also to ship to their partners (i.e. motherboard manufacturers) so they can create their own products based on the given chipset.

It is important to have in mind that not all features provided by the chipset are available on all models based on it. It is up to the motherboard manufacturer to choose which features they want on their models. For example, the reference board had two x1 PCI Express slots, two standard PCI slots and one CNR slot, but products based on SiS 672FX may come with less slots.

SiS 672FX
click to enlarge
Figure 1: SiS 672FX reference board.

SiS 672FX is a low-end chipset with several limitations. Its memory controller allows only single-channel mode, meaning that this chipset accesses the memory at half the speed other chipsets available for the socket 775 chipset can. It also only supports DDR2 memory up to DDR2-667, at least officially. On our tests we configured our memory modules at 800 MHz and they worked just fine. This chipset also only supports two memory sockets. Another limitation is that this chipset does not support the new 1,333 MHz FSB, but it accepts all 1,066 MHz-based socket 775 CPUs.

As mentioned SiS 672FX has integrated graphics (“on-board video”), based on the Mirage 3+ graphics engine, which is a truly DirectX 9.0 (Shader 2.0) engine. The graphics engine runs at 300 MHz. We asked SiS twice about the number of pixel shader engines and vertex shader engines this chipset has and they ignored these questions. On other reviewing websites we could see that SiS 672FX does not feature a vertex shader engine, this stage being processed by the system CPU, i.e. software-based vertex shader.

Even though SiS 672FX has integrated graphics, it supports one PCI Express x16 slot. Keep in mind that motherboard manufacturers in order to cut costs may offer SiS 672FX-based motherboards without this slot, but this limitation is of these particular motherboard models.

The south bridge chip defines other features that will be found on SiS 672FX-based motherboards. The reference board we got used a SiS 968 south bridge.

SiS 968 main features are:

  • One ATA-133 port;
  • Two SATA-300 ports, supporting RAID 0, 1 and JBOD;
  • Eight USB 2.0 ports;
  • Two PCI Express x1 slots;
  • Gigabit Ethernet;
  • High Definition Audio (eight channels, up to 192 KHz, 32 bits).

Keep in mind that the motherboard manufacturer may choose not to use all features provided by the south bridge chip.

Also, for the LAN port, the manufacturer needs to add a chip on the motherboard to make the interface with the physical layer. On SiS reference board this chip was SiS 196. To cut costs the motherboard manufacturer may use a Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps) chip.

As for the integrated audio, it is very important to keep in mind that the final specs will depend on the codec used, which is a small chip located on the motherboard. On the reference board SiS used a Realtek ALC883, which has a 95 dB signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and 192 KHz maximum sampling rate for its output and an 85 dB signal-to-noise ratio and 96 KHz maximum sampling rate for its input, both with 24-bit resolution. The output specs of this codec are fair for Average Joe, but the input specs are simple too low for today’s standards.

In summary, the final features of the motherboard depend a lot on the components the motherboard manufacturer chooses.

Let’s now take a look on its performance.

Pages (11): [1] 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 » ... Last »
Print Version | Send to Friend | | Bookmark Article | Comments (0)

Related Content
  • P35 Series from Gigabyte
  • ECS G33T-M2 Motherboard Review
  • Gigabyte EP45C-DS3R Motherboard
  • Gigabyte EP45-UD3L Motherboard
  • Gigabyte G31M-ES2C Motherboard

  • Recommended Deal
    Rampage II GENE Republic Intel LGA X58 DesktopASUS Rampage II GENE LGA 1366 Intel X58 Micro ATX Motherboard - Retail


    Newegg: $239.99 CompUSA: $249.99
    Amazon: $235.29 TigerDirect USA: $249.99

    RSSLatest News
    Thermaltake Launches PW880i Water Cooler
    July 3, 2009 - 1:27 PM PST
    NZXT Announces Sentry 2 Touchscreen Fan Controller
    July 2, 2009 - 2:25 PM PST
    Transcend Intros Thermal Sensor-Equipped DDR3 Memory
    July 1, 2009 - 11:40 AM PST
    Cooler Master Launches Universal Laptop Charger
    June 30, 2009 - 5:03 PM PST
    Active Media Products Launches “President Barack Obama” USB Flash Memory
    June 29, 2009 - 6:57 PM PST
    New SSD Drives from Corsair
    June 26, 2009 - 4:33 AM PST
    MSI Announces X-Slim X600 Notebook
    June 25, 2009 - 6:00 PM PST
    Zotac Releases GeForce GTX 275 with 1,792 MB GDDR3
    June 24, 2009 - 7:54 AM PST
    Kingston Launches DDR3-1600 HyperX T1 Memory Kit
    June 23, 2009 - 11:20 AM PST
    Walton Chaintech Announces eSATA/USB Flash Memory Series
    June 22, 2009 - 2:00 AM PST
    .:: More News ::.

    RSSLatest Content
    Power Supplies Re-Tested - Part 3
    Thermaltake Element G Case Review
    Corsair CX400W Power Supply Review
    Seventeam ST-750P-AF Power Supply Review
    Rocketfish 550 W Power Supply Review
    In Win X-Fighter Case Review
    Gigabyte G31M-ES2C Motherboard
    BFG ES-800 Power Supply Review
    And The Training Goes On...
    2 TB Hard Disk Drive Battle: Seagate Barracuda LP vs. Western Digital Caviar Green
    Power Supplies Re-Tested - Part 2
    Power Supplies Re-Tested - Part 1
    Hardware Secrets Power Supply Test Methodology
    What WePC Dreams Are Becoming Reality?
    All Phenom Models

    Our Most Popular Articles
    Maximum CPU Temperature
    988,937 views
    nVidia Chips Comparison Table
    617,352 views
    How to Find Out Your Motherboard Manufacturer and Model
    596,428 views
    AMD ATI Chips Comparison Table
    517,916 views
    Connecting Two PCs Using a USB-USB Cable
    513,030 views
    How To Correctly Apply Thermal Grease
    496,032 views
    ATI Radeon X1300 Pro Review
    467,268 views
    ATI Radeon X1600 XT Review
    458,258 views
    How To Perform a BIOS Upgrade
    343,270 views
    Sempron vs. Athlon XP
    320,185 views

    Latest Threads in Our Forums
    How to Create a Three-Speed Fan Control Without Spending a Dime
    by Olle P
    Thermaltake Launches PW880i Water Cooler
    by Olle P
    Wireless Router
    by Osirus
    PC versus dedicated NAS for network storage?
    by Osirus
    Latency
    by Osirus
    My wireless keeps dropping
    by Osirus
    Seventeam ST-750P-AF Power Supply Review
    by Olle P
    Area 51m 9750 temp assistence
    by tomahawk 1705
    Hardware Secrets Power Supply Test Methodology
    by jolphil
    Fujifilm FinePix A150
    by Hardware Secrets Team
    .:: Visit Our Forums ::.

    © 2004-9, Hardware Secrets, LLC. All rights reserved.
    Advertising | Legal Information | Privacy Policy
    All times are Pacific Standard Time (PST, GMT -08:00)