Synthetic Graphics Performance

The 3DMark series of benchmarks developed and provided by Futuremark are among the most widely used tools for benchmark reporting and comparisons. Although the benchmarks are very useful for providing apples to apples comparisons across a broad array of GPU and CPU configurations they are not a substitute for actual application and gaming benchmarks. In this sense we consider the 3DMark benchmarks to be purely synthetic in nature but still valuable for providing consistent measurements of performance.

General Graphics Performance

General Graphics Performance

General System Performance

In our first tests, each P965 platform score is so close that there is no real winner here. In the more memory and CPU sensitive 3DMark03 benchmark we see the same trend with the P965 boards scoring extremely close with the Gigabyte board leading in both benchmarks. We really did not expect to see any real differences but we do know the P965 is very competitive with the 975X in our synthetic benchmarks. Our only real disappointment is the performance of the ASUS P5NSLI board as generally the NVIDIA chipsets shine in the 3DMark scores. We attribute the scores to the fact that the board is based in the budget sector and is tuned for stability and overall system performance rather than games/graphics. As we recognized in our preview of this board, it was very sensitive to memory speed and timings with DDR2-800 being a minimum requirement before the board would perform well. We expect the upcoming 680i to change the results in this test.

General System Performance

Considering our 3DMark results we really did not expect a difference in this benchmark but we found one. The Intel based ASUS boards walked off and left the other boards in a cloud of dust. We typically find some variations in this benchmark due to Hard Disk performance with the NVIDIA chipsets consistently scoring about 9% better than the Intel chipsets. In this case the overall difference was around 4% in the HDD tests where the P965 based boards were performing better than the 975X board. Our 570SLI board did not score well in the multitasking tests where the ASUS P965 boards shined.

After reviewing the individual results we noticed all of the scores between the P965 boards were essentially the same until we reached the final test which consists of multitasking three different applications. The ASUS P965 boards and to some extent the 975X board scored up to 58% better in the File Encryption and HDD Virus section of the test. The File Compression number was around 16% better. We ended up running this particular test on each board several times with different memory and hard drive configurations with the same result. We continued to play detective and once all possible causes were researched we decided to create our own multitasking script to determine if ASUS had tuned their BIOS for this test or if they really had better multitasking performance. The results are on the next page.

Test Systems: Benchmark Setup General System Performance
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  • JarredWalton - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    Oh, trust me, Gary tested with a LOT of RAM types and manufacturers. However, for the *benchmarks* he settled on one specific set of DIMMs. I think he's trying to put together some information on how the various boards worked with other RAM (see above comment from Gary). Cheers!
  • stmok - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    LOL...I think its more like: "What the hell were the Abit engineers thinking?!"



    Based on your experiences, do you know if the Analog Devices AD1988A HD Audio Codec works in Linux? I wouldn't mind going for the ASUS P5B-E at the end of the year.

    And finally, is the rev 1.02G mobo available now? Or in a few months time?
  • Gary Key - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    quote:

    Based on your experiences, do you know if the Analog Devices AD1988A HD Audio Codec works in Linux? I wouldn't mind going for the ASUS P5B-E at the end of the year.


    The 1.09 ADI AD1988A drivers worked fine in SUSE 10.1. Realtek has better support at this time but ADI seems to be catching up. Believe it or not, but we booted every board with SUSE 10.1 just to make sure they went to the desktop. We might even do a once in a while look at Linux down the road.
  • xsilver - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    what is the range of overclocking possible with pc6400 ram?
    without dividers? with dividers?
  • Gary Key - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    Good question, depends on the PC2-6400 RAM. We are working on something right now to answer your question with a few different modules.
  • xsilver - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    probably something standard like corsair VS or something priced very similar if there is better performance elsewhere
  • xsilver - Sunday, October 22, 2006 - link

    also I would assume that 1gig vs. 2gig makes no difference but if it does, it would be good to know.
  • Madellga - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    Excellent review Gary. I also look forward for the round 2 and also for a 975/ATI/Nvidia reviews.

    Please try to mention the Vmch used for the overclocking results, as this says a lot about the motherboads also.
  • Gary Key - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    I am setting up a overclocking settings table and will try to show some additional results with different memory types that we used in testing. I have no idea when this will be finished. ;-)
  • Ryan Norton - Saturday, October 21, 2006 - link

    This article is terrific-- now I just need to read the high-end part and I can finally put together a Core 2 Duo system.

    Will the DS4 be included in the high-end guide? I don't want a DQ-6 because the copper backplate under the processor socket would prevent installation of a Scythe Ninja heatsink.

    Are the AHCI issues going to stay the way they are, with needing to load the drivers from a floppy disk during Windows install, or are there any P965 boards that don't require "an engineering degree and a day off" as you guys said?

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