Board Features

ASUS P8P67 Pro
Market Segment Performance
CPU Interface LGA 1155
CPU Support i3/i5/i7 Sandy Bridge
Chipset P67
Base Clock Frequency 100 MHz, 80 MHz to 300 MHz in 0.1 MHz intervals
DDR3 Memory Speed 1333 MHz by default, 800-2133 MHz supported
Core Voltage Auto, 0.800V to 1.990V in 0.005V intervals
CPU Clock Multiplier Dependant on CPU
DRAM Voltage Auto, 1.20V to 2.20V in 0.00625V intervals
DRAM Command Rate Auto, 1N to 3N
Memory Slots Four 240-pin DDR3 DIMM slots in dual-channel
Regular unbuffered DD3 memory
Up to 32GB total supported
Expansion Slots 3 x PCI Express 2.0 x16 slots (PCIe 1 and 2 operate at x16 in single mode or x8/x8 in dual; PCIe 3 operates in x4 mode)
2 x PCI Express 2.0 x1 slots
2 x PCI slots
Supports ATI Crossfire
Supports NVIDIA SLI
Onboard SATA/RAID 2 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s ports (gray) supporting RAID 0, 1, 5 and 10
4 x SATA 3.0 Gb/s ports (blue) supporting RAID 0, 1, 5 and 10
2 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s ports (navy blue) from Marvell 9120 (No RAID)
2 x eSATA 3.0 Gb/s ports (1 x Power eSATA) from JMicron JMB362
Onboard 4 x SATA 3 Gb/s w/ RAID
4 x SATA 6 Gb/s (2 w/ RAID)
1 x USB 3.0/2.0 connector supports additional 2 USB ports (19-pin)
3 x USB 2.0/1/1 connectors support additional 6 USB ports
1 x IEEE1394a connector
Front panel audio connector
1 x S/PDIF Out Header
System Panel(Q-Connector)
1 x MemOK! Button
1 x EPU switch
1 x TPU switch
Onboard LAN Intel® 82579 Gigabit Ethernet
Onboard Audio Realtek® ALC892 8-Channel HD Audio
Power Connectors 24-pin EATX Power connector 8-pin EATX 12V Power connector
Fan Headers 1 x CPU Fan connector (4-pin)
2 x Chassis Fan connectors (1 x 4-pin; 1 x 3-pin)
1 x Power Fan connector (3-pin)
I/O Panel 1 x PS/2 Mouse port (green)
1 x PS/2 Keyboard port (purple)
1 x Coaxial S/PDIF Out port
1 x Optical S/PDIF Out port
1 x Bluetooth module
2 x eSATA ports (1 x Power eSATA)
1 x IEEE1394a port
1 x LAN (RJ45) ports
2 x USB 3.0/2.0 ports (blue)
6 x USB 2.0/1.1 ports
8-channel Audio I/O ports
UEFI Revision 1053 (Release UEFI)

In the Box

  • I/O shield
  • USB 3.0 rear bracket
  • SLI 2-slot bridge
  • 4 x right-angled SATA connectors

The USB 3.0 rear bracket connects in the board to the USB 3.0 header, and stretches across the GPUs and intended for the bracket position between the PCIe slots. The cord is just long enough for this, but this kit will not reach to other bracket positions if you already require that PCI slot between the PCIe slots and both PCIe x16 slots for GPUs.

Software

ASUS Ai Suite II

ASUS have wrapped all their OS features into one overall program, called Ai Suite II. Through this program, you can overclock, auto tune, enable/disable EPU, control the VRMs, control the fans, and update the UEFI. In my experience, it works rather well.

Ai Suite II initially comes up as a toolbar, and selecting one of the buttons creates a popup menu, from which you select the feature you want to use. This is a roundabout way of doing it; I would have preferred a tabbed system personally. The first screen is the TurboV EVO module, the heart of the TPU. On the fly BCLK, voltages, and CPU ratios are applicable here. Increasing various parameters results in them turning yellow, to see that they are all changed, and on clicking apply, all modifications are made. The only downside of this overclocking mode is in the inability to modify the RAM sub-timings on the fly.

The auto-tuning section is a one-button click. The program then restarts the computer, loads into the OS a couple of times, and stability tests the system. I like this feature – the i5-2500K went from 33x multiplier at 100 BCLK to 43x at 103.5 BCLK, giving a total overclock at 4.55 GHz. Every time I used it, it caused at least one blue screen, but as long as I left to its own devices, it provided a suitable overclock. I managed to get a better 24/7 overclock, which I describe in the overclock section, which means the auto-tuning could be considered a little conservative.

The EPU control panel gives the user greater control over the EPU, in terms of power saving. Alongside the fan controller, the user can adjust the level of power saving in terms of VCore, chipset voltages, HDD spin downs, etc. for when the computer isn’t doing anything too strenuous.

This software also allows complete temperature control of two of the fan headers. As shown below, we can describe the fan power curve against temperature in its entirety, or at preset levels provided by ASUS.

The BT GO! software allows Bluetooth connection with your smartphone (Android, Apple, Windows Mobile, Symbian). If you can download the BT Turbo Remote software from the respective marketplace, you can also overclock via your smartphone – despite being able to connect to BT GO! (and having very little options apart from music control), I was unable to download the BT Turbo Remote software from the Android marketplace. I am currently running a HTC Hero smartphone using a custom ROM to enable Android 2.2 functions. At the time of publication, this program was not available to me on the marketplace.

ASUS P8P67 Pro: Visual Inspection ASUS P8P67 Pro: UEFI, Overclocking
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  • strikeback03 - Friday, January 21, 2011 - link

    What board was that? As I have hardly seen any P965 boards which had BIOS updates to support Penryn, let alone older chipsets.

    I'd imagine the short answer is that it helps Intel's bottom line, and until AMD can produce stuff that competes in performance as well as price Intel will continue to gouge for the chipsets. Also Nvidia charges to SLI certify boards, which is probably why the board makers don't include it in cheaper boards.
  • Hrel - Friday, January 21, 2011 - link

    Asus P5NE-SLI built on the Nvidia 650i SLI chipset.
  • medi01 - Sunday, January 23, 2011 - link

    Makes me wonder, how much do they pay for the chipset.
    I recall buying AMD motherboards supporting the latest CPUs for 50-70$.
  • Hrel - Thursday, January 20, 2011 - link

    I agree with your conclusion whole heartedly. AsRock has really had their game together this past year or so and they don't seem to be slowing down at all. I used to be a strictly Asus guy but AsRock is looking like it'll be the heart to my next build.
  • airgreek - Thursday, January 20, 2011 - link

    you do know that Asrock is owned by Asus right? I have been in the PC game a LONG time back when Abit was the mobo to own. I only consider three brands for mobo's now (from experience) and those are MSI, Gigabyte, and EVGA. EVGA has INCREDIBLE customer service, while Gigabyte uses solid material to build their boards. MSI is not far behind
  • Peanutsrevenge - Thursday, January 20, 2011 - link

    I agree completely, I LOVE EVGA stuff, it's just not usually suitable for what my customers want, so I don't get to play with their stuff often :(
  • lpjz290 - Friday, January 21, 2011 - link

    even though ASrock is a ASUS subsidiary, they are now also considered a competitor ever since they were listed on the taiwan stock exchange. now that they have produced a board that can perform very close to ASUS P8P67 PRO at a considerably lower price, i'd say these two companies could very well be fighting against each other more often in future (which is gd for ASUS as a whole anyway).
  • Hrel - Friday, January 21, 2011 - link

    they broke off from Asus, actually.
  • Heloc - Sunday, January 23, 2011 - link

    AS of June 2010 ASUS is no longer the majority owner of ASRock but they spun off by issuing shares to ASUS shareholders so both companies have the same board of directors.

    There is more separation than there was but still than separation than in a simple spin-off.
  • mckirkus - Thursday, January 20, 2011 - link

    If you're doing any surround sound gaming you'll probably want the UD4. It enables Dolby Digital Live which means you can run one optical cable to a receiver and get real surround sound with games without having to resort to a bunch of analog cables. I was about to get a $100 sound card but the UD4 makes that unnecessary.

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