Final Words

This is the first motherboard I personally have used on that has a UEFI BIOS and I have to say it is a nice change from the traditional BIOS. Some may argue that the UEFI BIOS is still in its infancy and if this is the case, I think we are looking at something great in the future. From what I can see, the ASUS BIOS engineers have done a good job in producing something that is straightforward and easy to use. The CPU temperature reported in the shipping UEFI BIOS was the only issue I could find. However, as mentioned in the review, I updated the BIOS after all of my testing was done and the CPU temperature appeared to be more accurate.

Even though the P8P67 does not offer as many features as the more expensive models in this range, or even some of the optional extras in the box which other boards come with in the same price range, it does perform better than you may have initially thought. The dual GPU side of things is what lets this motherboard down. Due to the x16/x4 arrangement, rather than the x8/x8 we see on most other P67 boards, it really restricts the amount of data which the second GPU can receive. Therefore the user will not benefit from as much of an increase in frames, but there is scope for other utilities. The power consumption is also higher than other motherboards we have tested.

Overall, despite this board being available for a little while I would say this motherboard is a good contender in the P67 sub $160 price range, but some of the additional extras which come with the ASRock P67 Extreme4 for example may be enough to sway people towards that board instead.

 

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  • Blaster1618 - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    I am so tired of LGA-1155 being portrayed as an "Enthusiast Board"
    -Dual-channel memory.
    -Narrow PCI Bus.
    -Virtually fixed core clock.
    -and the stake to the heart....on board graphics.

    Wait...wait LGA-2011 and i7 3-series will spice up the M-board review business.
  • zero2dash - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    Troll much?

    Onboard graphics has no performance penalty on a 2600K (let alone a 2500K) so throw that piss poor reason out the window.

    Narrow PCI bus? Yes, because that's clearly dragging SB systems through the mud. So is the dual channel memory.

    Fixed core clock? Who gives a crap? Yeah, because a locked core clock with an unlocked multiplier is a worse option than an unlocked core clock and a limited amount of multiplier options.

    Have fun paying for those quad channel ram kits.
  • A5 - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    A) Memory bandwidth has very little discernible effect on non-benchmark applications. Modern CPUs are so good at cache management that there is almost 0 reason to chase memory bandwidth. Ironically, the 1156 CPUs probably need the bandwidth more (due to the onboard graphics) than the 2011 CPUs will.

    B) If you need more than two PCI-e x8 slots, then you're the kind of person who will drop the cash on LGA-2011 anyway. This is a legit knock against P67 and Z68, but it also only affects the hardcore enthusiasts, the top 1% of the top 1% who are running 3 or 4 GPUs.

    C) LGA-2011 is going to have fixed clocks too. With multipliers unlocked, this is kind of a moot point anyway.

    D) Considering P67 doesn't even allow you to use the onboard graphics, I don't see how this is a valid complaint.

    I think P67 is a perfectly acceptable "enthusiast" product, and honestly I'd be surprised if there is an LGA-2011 version of Ivy Bridge outside of the server space.
  • RussianSensation - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    You should leave him alone :)

    He is probably going to future-proof his LGA-2011 setup with 32GB (4x8GB) for $1200:
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...

    ....because 32GBs in Quad-Channel LGA2011 Pawwwwwwwns all!
  • Blaster1618 - Saturday, September 10, 2011 - link

    Not Hating... but I figured as soon as the Z series board was out, the H&P series boards would drop, rightfully so, in the bargain bin.

    I obvious to me that the 2nd generation i7 have an internal memory architecture limitation. (ie they were not designed for enthusiasts) Cut and paste old North Bridge architecture on the die. The bandwidth(bitwidth) of the internal communication 3rd generation chips is nearly twice the 2nd generation and it has 20 Gbit DMI 2.0.

    If you don't believe bandwidth matters, I have a bin full old 64 bit Geforce cards for sale. I play games on my X-box, My computers for Solid modeling and Finite element analysis and surfing pron.

    I was under the understanding the issues with the base clock adjust-ability were issues with the on board GPU's sensitivity to frequency. I am hoping the base clock on the I7 3820 will have 30-40% overclock like the LGA1366 or my old E6600.

    At <$300 the i7 3820 should be quite a deal ps my business picks up the $1,200 for the 32 GB of Corsair XMS.
  • RussianSensation - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    2500k - $220
    This board - $135

    vs. i7-990X

    http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/core-...

    Care to explain how a $355 mobo+cpu setup trades blows with an overclocked $999 i7 CPU on "enthusiast" LGA1366?

    I hope you enjoy your $300 LGA2011 Motherboard + $500-1000 CPU for 1 quarter until IVB launches and obsoletes LGA2011 for anyone but workstation users.
  • Etern205 - Friday, September 9, 2011 - link

    pfff....

    Yep, have fun waiting for that Ivy Bridge of yours....
    http://vr-zone.com/articles/the-upgrade-path-to-iv...
  • CharonPDX - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    If you've used any Intel Desktop Board in the past three years, you've used a UEFI-based configuration utility. It's just one designed to look like an old fashioned 'BIOS' screen. (P.S., technically it hasn't been a "BIOS" in a while, it's been a configuration utility.)
  • Concillian - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    So why is the P8P67 consuming 20 more watts at idle than the P8P67 Pro in it's review?

    Shouldn't the less featured board be using less power?
  • Mumrik - Thursday, September 8, 2011 - link

    I looked around for a relatively cheap motherboard with 8+ SATA ports for a 2500k and this board was by far the cheapest. Reading up in forums (especially at the [H] where Asus is active) and at Newegg I got the impression that there was an unusual amount of problems with the generation of Asus boards, so I chickened out and picked up an Asrock instead.

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