| ECS G33T-M2 Motherboard Review | |
| By Gabriel Torres on July 31, 2007 | Page 2 of 13 |
Introduction (Cont'd)
It has 12 USB 2.0 ports (four soldered on the motherboard) and no Firewire ports (the manual says the Firewire is optional and there is a space on the motherboard for soldering a Firewire controller). On the audio section this motherboard has eight channels provided by the chipset together with a Realtek ALC883 codec. While this codec provides a good output quality (95 dB signal-to-noise ratio and 192 KHz sampling rate), it does not provide a good input quality for today’s standards (85 dB signal-to-noise ratio and 96 KHz sampling rate). Thus this motherboard isn’t recommended for professionally capturing and editing analog audio. For this kind of application look for a motherboard with at least 95 dB SNR on its input. On the other hand, this motherboard provides full 7.1 analog audio jacks on the rear panel, feature not found on all mainstream motherboards, especially the ones with on-board video. So you can easily hook an analog 5.1 or 7.1 set of speakers to this motherboard. But this motherboard does not have any on-board SPDIF connector, which is a pity. The motherboard has a SPDIF out header, but the board doesn’t come with any SPDIF bracket to use it. On Figure 2 you can see the connectors present on the motherboard rear panel: PS/2 mouse, PS/2 keyboard, serial port, VGA, four USB 2.0 ports, Gigabit Ethernet port and analog audio inputs and outputs. There is no parallel port on this motherboard, not even thru an I/O bracket.
ECS is finally using good capacitors on their motherboards. On G33T-M2 ECS used solid aluminum capacitors on the voltage regulator circuit. There are three capacitors there that are not solid but are from a Japanese manufacturer, Toshin Kogyo (TK). Even though the capacitors used on the other sections of this motherboard are from Taiwanese vendors – OST and G-Luxon – we wish to congratulate ECS, as they are finally on the right track. Of course we think all capacitors could be either Japanese or solid and they could also have used ferrite coils instead of iron coils, but this would be asking too much.
On Figure 4 you can see everything that comes with the motherboard, which isn’t much.
Before going to our performance tests, let’s recap the main features of the reviewed board. | |
| Originally at http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/472/2 | Pages (13): 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 » ... Last » |
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