MSI P35 Neo2-FR Specifications

MSI P35 Neo2-FR
Market Segment Budget Performance - $88.99 after Rebate
CPU Interface Socket T (Socket 775)
CPU Support LGA775-based Pentium 4, Celeron D, Pentium D, Pentium EE, Core 2 Duo, Core 2 Extreme, Core 2 Quad
Chipset Intel P35 MCH and Intel ICH9R
Bus Speeds Auto, 133 ~ 600 in 1MHz increments
DDR2 Memory Speed Auto,1:1, 1:1.2, 1:2, 1:1.25, 1:1.6, 1:1.5
PCIe Speeds Auto, 100MHz~200MHz in 1MHz Increments
CPU Voltage Auto, Base CPU - +0.7875V in 0.0125V increments
SB Voltage 1.05V, 1.15V
SB I/O Voltage 1.50V ~1.80V in .05V increments
CPU Clock Multiplier Auto, 6x-50x in 1X increments if CPU is unlocked, downwards unlocked, Core 2 Duo/Quad/Extreme
DDR2 DRAM Voltage Auto, 1.80V ~ 2.60V in .05V or .10V increments
DRAM Timing Control Enabled SPD, Disabled, 9 DRAM Timing Options
NB Voltage Auto, 1.250V ~ 1.650V in .025V increments
VTT Voltage Auto, 1.175V ~ 1.550V in .025V increments
Memory Slots Four 240-pin DDR2 DIMM Slots
Dual-Channel Configuration
Regular Unbuffered Memory to 8GB Total
Expansion Slots 2 - PCIe X16 (1x16, 1x4 electrical for CrossFire or Multi-GPU)
2 - PCIe x1
2 - PCI Slot 2.2
Onboard SATA/RAID 4 SATA 3Gbps Ports - ICH9R
(RAID 0,1, 10, 5)
2 eSATA 3Gbps Port - ICH9R
1 SATA 3Gbps Port - Marvell 88SE6111
Onboard IDE 1 ATA133/100/66 Port (2 drives) - Marvell 88SE6111
Onboard USB 2.0/IEEE-1394 12 USB 2.0 Ports - 6 I/O Panel - 6 via Headers
2 Firewire 400 Ports by VIA VT6308 - Requires FIR board
Onboard LAN Realtek RTL8111B PCIe Gigabit Ethernet controller
Onboard Audio Realtek ALC888T - 8-channel HD audio codec
Power Connectors ATX 24-pin, 8-pin EATX 12V, 4-pin Molex connector
I/O Panel 1 x PS/2 Keyboard
1 x PS/2 Mouse
2 x eSATA
1 x IEEE 1394a - Requires FIR board
1 x Audio Panel
1 x RJ45
6x USB 2.0/1.1
BIOS Revision v1.6
Board Revision v1.0

MSI designed the P35 Neo2-FR for the enthusiast user on a budget. The BIOS options available are extensive for a board in this price category and place an emphasis on overclocking. MSI provides the standard laundry list of board options such as the Marvell 88SE6111 for eSATA and IDE support, optional IEEE 1394 support from VIA on the FIR board, decent onboard audio support from the Realtek ALC888T, 12 USB ports, Intel Matrix RAID, and Gigabit LAN support from the ubiquitous Realtek RTL8111B chipset.

The board offers a very good mix of expansion slots. Utilizing a CrossFire setup will create the physical loss of a PCI and PCI Express slot with dual-slot cards, but we still recommend utilizing the 975X or X38 chipsets for CrossFire operation. We ran a few early tests with a QX9650 Yorkfield CPU and the board operated fine. MSI has not finished fully tuning the BIOS for Yorkfield, but they should in the near future. Speaking of the BIOS, its design has not changed from the P35 Platinum, nor have the options - something we dearly wish that MSI would address in their next product release. It's not that bad, but the layout could be better and additional auto settings would be welcome in the memory timing section.

MSI includes several Windows utility programs, with Dual Core Center and Live Update being the two major applications. Just like the majority of utility programs from most manufacturers, they are somewhat interesting to look at for a few minutes, but we quickly removed them from our system to utilize third party programs for tuning and measurements. We also had a problem updating our BIOS from 1.3 to 1.6 with the Live Update program. The BIOS update completed normally and our system rebooted as planned. However, it would not POST correctly after several on/off episodes. Thinking the board might be dead, we decided to try a couple of options before contacting MSI. We switched out our processor to the E2160 and the board booted fine. We set the BIOS to defaults, shutdown, inserted the Q6600, and it started right back up.

Attempting to replicate the problem, we tried the Live Update procedure on an MSI P35 Platinum board when upgrading from the engineering BIOS to an early public release. We did not have a problem there, but we did when upgrading to the latest BIOS. This time, we set the FSB jumpers on the board to 200 and it went straight through the POST routine. The only thing we can think of is that the FSB rates are not being set correctly after the flash routine. However, we did not have a single problem flashing with the DOS utility.

Board Layout and Features Test Setup
Comments Locked

35 Comments

View All Comments

  • drebo - Friday, December 7, 2007 - link

    I'll forgive your ignorant comment since you obviously do not work in retail computer sales. People aren't interested in buying adapters and add-on cards that they don't feel they should need because "their old computer had it." In a managed IT environment, yes, you can just give everyone converters and it works fine, but your average joe who walks into a computer shop with a 10-year-old dead computer and an ancient Epson parallel printer isn't ever going to understand why his old connections are going by the way-side.

    So, yes, legacy support in the retail market is important, even for most small business users. Not a day doesn't go by when I get a call or someone comes in needing a parallel card or serial card because the off-the-shelf computer they bought doesn't come with one. Most people don't need 16 USB ports, but I'll bet a good number do need a parallel port.
  • AssBall - Saturday, December 8, 2007 - link

    "I'll forgive your ignorant comment since you obviously do not work in retail computer sales."


    Right... because a good retail computer salesperson would sell someone who is inexperienced enough to not RTFM a 10$ adapter instead of reccomending a better and higher profit margin 10 year newer replacement product for 150$ with built in factory support$

    Salesman indeed...
  • kmmatney - Thursday, December 6, 2007 - link

    Serial mice? Come-on! I used serial mice back in the day, but there is absolutely no need to get a USB mouse - I just bought a spare optical mouse for $3 at Microcenter - works great. You can get a USB-RS232 adapter for around $15 as well. Or you can buy a PCI add-on card, with RS232 and Parallel ports, for around the same price. I'd way rather have the extra USB and e-Sata ports instead of the legacy crap.

    I do a lot of RS-232 and RS-485 programming, and my main computer is a laptop, so I've been using USB-Serial converters for some time now.
  • theslug - Thursday, December 6, 2007 - link

    They sell these:

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Sub...">http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLi...iption=u...
  • OndrejSc - Thursday, December 6, 2007 - link

    Cheer up! It does exist. :-)
    http://global.msi.com.tw/index.php?func=proddesc&a...">http://global.msi.com.tw/index.php?func...=1342&am...
  • drebo - Thursday, December 6, 2007 - link

    Hmmm, good news. I wonder when we'll have availability and what the pricing will be like.
  • LoneWolf15 - Thursday, December 6, 2007 - link

    "MSI also offers the Creative Lab's X-Fi audio codecs on their high-end boards as a nod to the gaming community."

    No...MSI puts the X-Fi XtremeAudio chip on the boards, which is a tweaked Audigy SE chip (note: the Audigy SE isn't even a true Audigy chip), not a true X-Fi. No hardware EAX or DirectSound3D acceleration, and the drivers, like the X-Fi XtremeAudio card, are completely different than the rest of the X-Fi line. So, serious gamers STILL need to buy a sound card.

    I really like MSI and use their boards a lot, but this audio solution is really only slightly better than what is used on other boards --and those who don't like Creative might argue that the drivers actually make it worse. If MSI had used the real X-Fi chip, I'd be very impressed.
  • ultimatex - Thursday, December 6, 2007 - link

    are u retarted ? serious gamers need to buy a seperate sound card? A real serious games would not be worrying about some sound options but more about performace of the board. I smell some Asus Gybabyte fan boys here on these forums.

    as long as boards have 5.1 sound U dont need no special features that dont do anything specialy for games. Serious games wear headphones.

    these NERDS here are sounding like if a serious gamer has to have a sound card . Well ill tell u from a X-Cal P Css Player here. A videocard and Fps is the most important thing for a Hardcore gamer..

  • Etern205 - Friday, December 7, 2007 - link

    Your the retarded one.

    If he's right and that the onboard X-FI does not have hardware accelerated audio, what it means it it uses the cpu to process the audio singal which leads to reduce FPS. Gamers needs to know where their enemies are and that's where the EAX comes in. Onboard will have EAX as well as mutli-channel speaker support (ie 5.1 surround sound) but without a higher version of EAX (ie EAX 5.0) all your hearing are just sounds coming at you with no sense of direction.

    So if you got a 5.1 speaker setup but with a crappy onboard Audio or onboard X-FI with crappy EAX support then it won't help you as much as a dedicated sound card.

  • dazy - Tuesday, December 11, 2007 - link

    Thanks for pointing out his utter ignorance before I had to, lol.

    [quote=ultimatex]serious gamers need to buy a seperate sound card?
    as long as boards have 5.1 sound U dont need no special features that dont do anything specialy for games. Serious games wear headphones.
    A videocard and Fps is the most important thing for a Hardcore gamer..[/quote]
    The sheer number of stupid statements for a "gamer" in his post is outstanding. Maybe he thinks we are talking about his XBOX360? ;-)

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now