| ECS NF650iSLIT-A Motherboard Review | |
| By Gabriel Torres on June 11, 2007 | Page 5 of 9 |
Overall Performance
The benchmarks are divided into two groups:
The software delivers specific results for each batch and also an overall performance result, all in a specific SYSmark2004 unit. We compared the reviewed board to ECS PN2 SLI2+ (nForce 680i), ASUS P5N-E SLI (nForce 650i), MSI P35 Platinum (Intel P35), MSI P35 Neo Combo (Intel P35), ASUS P5B (Intel P965), ASUS P5B Premium (Intel P965) and Intel D975XBX2 (Intel 975X). On the graphs present on this and on the following pages you will see the clock rate we configured our memories. Since we had DDR2-1066 memory modules installed, we ran our tests two times, first with our memories configured at 800 MHz and then configured at 1,066 MHz, whenever possible. Some motherboards (like the ones based on nForce 650i and Intel 975X chipsets), however, do not support DDR2-1066 and that is why you won’t find DDR2-1066 results for them. You can see the results on the charts below. ECS NF650iSLIT-A achieved an overall performance similar to ASUS P5B Premium (Intel P965), ASUS P5B (Intel P965), Intel D975XBX2 (Intel 975X), ECS PN2 SLI2+ and ASUS P5N-E SLI (nForce 650i). Only motherboards based on the new Intel P35 chipset were faster: MSI P35 Platinum was 3.27% faster and MSI P35 Neo Combo was 4.17% faster than the reviewed board. To make this comparison fair these numbers refer to the motherboards running with their memories at 800 MHz. On Internet Content Creation the same thing happened: only motherboards based on Intel P35 chipset were faster, with MSI P35 Platinum being 3.23% faster and MSI P35 Neo Combo being 3.46% faster. We are comparing the results with all memories running at 800 MHz. On Office Productivity ECS NF650iSLIT-A achieved a performance similar to ASUS P5B (Intel P965), Intel D975XBX2 (Intel 975X), ECS PN2 SLI2+ (nForce 680i) and ASUS P5N-E SLI (nForce 650i), with ASUS P5B Premium and MSI P35 Platinum (Intel P35) being 3.85% faster and MSI P35 Neo Combo (Intel P35) being 5.38% faster than the reviewed motherboard. | |
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