Over the past year, ASUS have built a solid graphical UEFI interface which, personally as a reviewer, covers almost everything I want in a BIOS. Rather than break something that works, ASUS have worked a little on the implementation for X79 to improve the functionality. The main change here is the shortcut menu, found by pressing F3. Rather than requiring the user to navigate through menus and deciding what is a deeper menu or not, the most frequently used options in the BIOS are listed and are now only a click away. As a long time BIOS user, I do not find much need for this – I am fairly adept at navigating through the BIOS via keyboard at speed. However, for just wanting to flash a new BIOS (I always prefer doing it in the BIOS itself), I found it quite useful.

However, the user starts off in EZ mode – a simple to use screen full of information that any user or admin would want. For a start, telling us what board we are using, the processor, detected memory and speeds, CPU temperatures, voltages, fan speeds and the boot order is something every vendor should show on the front screen. ASUS has implemented this spot on. From this page, a user will be able to tell if memory is not detected, select an overall ‘faster’ or ‘greener’ mode, or arrange the boot order.

Inside the advanced mode, we have a more vintage feel of the BIOS options. Almost all the options here are selectable in a variety of ways – mouse and submenu, keyboard and submenu, or in the case of values, keyboard and typing. As a keyboard/typist sort of BIOS user, I feel frustrated when in an attempt to go graphical a motherboard manufacturer will force you to sift through a list going from 0.8 V to 1.65 V in the memory in 0.0075 V increments. There are no such problems here in ASUS’ implementation.

AI Tweaker modes come in Auto, Normal or XMP, which allows the user to define BCLK frequencies to the nearest 0.1 MHz, the CPU Strap (1.00x, 1.25x, 1.66x or 2.50x), target CPU ratios for per core usage, and the memory strap. Sub menus provide DRAM timings, where ASUS provide a seemingly endless level of detail on what users can select for their memory, control over the DIGI+ power delivery (also available in the OS), and a variety of CPU performance settings. Voltage adjustment is available underneath this, where most voltages are simple value selections, but the CPU voltage is also available in offset mode.

By pressing F5, the BIOS will revert to Intel defaults on all these values, but by pressing F6, the BIOS will default to ASUS values, which offer a change in performance. Personally, the only change I was able to discern is that this turned per core turbo ratios off, and put the i7-3960X (6C/12T, 3.3 GHz, 3.9 GHz Turbo) into a full turbo mode on any core operation. Actually, whenever I changed any part of the BIOS, this occurred. By changing any DRAM or memory timings/ratios, or setting XMP, or changing the BCLK/multiplier, rather than the CPU go into a normal mode (39x/39x/37x/37x/36x/36x ratios on 1/2/3/4/5/6 core usage), it implemented the max turbo for any CPU usage. This put a little spanner in the works regarding our benchmark suite, which as I will mention on the test setup page, I adapted the operation to standard.

One feature I have been pushing motherboard manufacturers on for Sandy Bridge is that AHCI mode is enabled be default. So far, as much as I can tell, only ASUS on their high end products have done this. So with X79, this is the time to make the change – which ASUS have done on their Pro board, which is not their high end board. Hopefully, when looking at some of the other vendors’ implementations, they have done likewise.

Under the Monitor heading are the BIOS fan controls, which allow almost full control over the fans (the OS software is better adapted to this). All four chassis fan headers are controllable individually, and the two CPU fan headers act under the same control.

Overclocking on X79

The realm of overclocking has changed in recent months, especially in the hands of Intel. If we take the previous enthusiast platform, X58 and LGA 1366, a full array of BCLK and multiplier adjustments were available. Personally, I moved from that platform (and my trusty i7-920 D0) to P67 and Sandy Bridge, where due to the clock generator arrangement, I had access to the multiplier and perhaps +/- 2-5 MHz on the BCLK. In terms of the joy of overclocking, this was a bit of a let down – but Intel has (sort of) met in the middle with X79.

On a basic level, we have a standard clock generator pumping out 100 MHz. This is split several ways, most notably one way to the CPU and memory through a buffer chip, and one way to everything else. Using this buffer chip, we can select four gears/ratios: 1.00x, 1.25x, 1.66x and 2.50x. As a result, we can send 100 MHz, 125 MHz, 166 MHz and 250 MHz to the CPU/memory, while restricting everything else to 100 MHz. The basic 100 MHz, like P67/Z68, can be adjusted – usually by +/- 2-5 MHz as Sandy Bridge was able. On top of all this, we also have multiplier adjustment.

With this in mind, I can already tell you that the majority of overclocks from system builders will be on the 1.25x ratio. It provides a simple 25% overclock if the multipliers are not changed, and providing they are using Intel’s all-in-one liquid cooling as a minimum (or a high end air cooler), temperatures should not be an issue. No doubt we will see motherboards that implement this as a one-button option on the motherboard – ASUS’ auto overclock option does something similar. In order to push the memory, users may opt for the 1.25x ratio, and then decrease the multiplier to a reasonable temperature level.

In terms of the ASUS’ board performance, I first had a go at the auto OC options.

Auto OC

ASUS offers a ‘Fast’ and an ‘Extreme’ mode in their software options. ‘OC Tuner’ in the BIOS, and activating the TPU switch on board, both default to the Fast mode. In this fast mode, we see a jump to the 1.25x CPU ratio, and a slight increase in the BCLK with a multiplier adjustment. Instantly, this equates to a 34x multiplier with a 126.4 MHz BCLK, giving 4296 MHz, which hits 68ºC in Cinebench (20ºC ambient max).

In Extreme mode, ASUS uses a series of algorithms and stress tests to determine the maximum frequency. Usually, I am underwhelmed by this option in my previous reviews, providing no real insight into the depth of the CPU. Despite this, the Extreme mode did run tests, BSOD and eventually reach a final speed without any intervention. A simple 35x multiplier and 127.9 MHz BCLK (4476 MHz) is good enhancement over the Fast auto OC option. However, it may worry some people that the CPU registered an 88ºC temperature when stress tested.

Manual OC

In terms of manual adjustment, my main focus here was the multiplier. Booting at 45x, with auto voltages and the CPU fan/pump set at 100%, the board was stable. However, it was pulling 1.496 V at load, resulting in 90ºC under full OCCT stress – far too hot for my liking, and this is outside a case! But setting the voltage manually to 1.4 V, the board still booted happily at 45x, giving only 82ºC under stress. The board would boot at 46x, but was unstable at 47x.

At the 46x multiplier, at 1.4 V, with load line calibration at auto, the CPU would hit 82ºC under OCCT or Blender Stress, and only 73ºC for the 3DPM multithreaded (3DPM-MT) benchmark. At this speed (4.6 GHz, 6 cores, 12 threads), our 3DPM-MT gave a score of 1145.66, up from 914.76 at stock.

Memory

Of note with this BIOS (0709), is that when I populated the memory slots with 4x4GB DDR3, the board would default to the nearest JEDEC speed timings of the kit to 1600 MHz – in this case, my G.Skill kit has a JEDEC of 1676 MHz at 11-11-11, so the board defaulted to 1600 11-11-11. When I selected 1866 MHz memory, it shifted to 9-9-9, disregarding JEDEC vales.

The XMP profile was easy enough to enable with the XMP mode. For more performance, I pushed the board on to the 2400 MHz strap, which booted at auto values of 10-11-10 2T, and was completely stable. Moving towards the 2666 MHz strap caused failed boots. The nearest strap while on the 1.25x ratio was only at 2333 MHz, suggesting that 2400 MHz on the 1.00x strap is a safe memory overclock.

ASUS P9X79 Pro - Overview and Visual Inspection Board Features, In The Box, Software
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  • mailman65er - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    No SSD Caching (no intel RST)?
    Just get a Synapse Cache SSD - the included Dataplex cache software outperforms Intel caching anyway... No problem.
  • jmelgaard - Tuesday, November 15, 2011 - link

    Pft... Who needs SSD caching anyways?!?...

    I have more than enough space on my 3x240GB Vertex 3 + 2x120GB Vertex 2 + 80GB Intel X25-M r2.

    :P...
  • ASUSTechMKT - Wednesday, November 16, 2011 - link

    LOL you are lucky man. Keep in mind though you do get to maintain Trim in SSD Caching but while not in raid.
  • kvanje - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    Tom's just showed in a test that Skyrim becomes CPU-bound at a certain point, so that might make a good addition to your benchmarks in this case.
  • ts1973 - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    Why no comparison with another X16-X16 Intel platform, most notably the X58-990X combo ? Gaming tests and value for possible upgrade are not very convincing this way.
  • futurepastnow - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    Will Sandy Bridge -EP Xeon processors work in X79 desktop motherboards?
  • ASUSTechMKT - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    Our P9X79 WS is qualified to support Xeon series CPUs. Other baords may potentially offer microcode support but will not be officially validated for use with Xeon CPUs.
  • ven - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    still relying on heat sinks,heat pipes and fans I expected some change from the board manufactures for this platform at least from you Asus,Disappointed......... Please move Forward & show us the glimpse of the future cooling technologies .

    And also why intel has downgraded from QPI to DMI ,yes of course PCIe lanes are moved to Processor but for this is such a high end & pricy platform QPI should have opted.

    Great work Asus Iam fan of your color theme and UEFI implementation.Board looks great. At present proud owner of Maximus iv Gene-Z, Iam waiting for some mATX boards
  • ASUSTechMKT - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    We are always looking into other aspects in regards to cooling / dissipation technologies. Thanks for the feedback depending on certain factors more advanced technologies can considerably increase cost or time to produce ( Such as when we used CeraM!X on our TUF series motherboard. Regardless we look for other aspects to improve upon such as more advanced and efficient VRM designs with more options on temperature and current handling or loading.

    Thanks for the great feedback it is appreciated and watch out soon on the MATX front!
  • alpha754293 - Monday, November 14, 2011 - link

    If populating all 8 DIMMS is going to drop it down to DDR3-1333 speeds, that means that you can just BUY DDR3-1333 8 GB DIMMs for as little as $75 a pop (and that's ECC Registered server RAM too!). That means for a system with 64 GB, you're only look at $600, which is almost $300 less than the top-of-the-line (currently, at launch) SNB-E processor you can buy.

    "There are issues to the memory that a lot of people will consider – does anyone ever need 64 GB of memory? Even if it were populated with relatively cheaper 4 GB sticks, does anyone ever need 32 GB of memory?"

    With memory being relatively cheap these days, would most people "need" it? No, you're right, probably not.

    But if I can get a 32 GB super fast RAM drive, that extra $300 might be worth it. If you have a game or two that's ridiculously large and takes a fair bit of time to load, the RAM drive would be well served. Or if you start/restart large apps (like Photoshop CS5) often; again, the RAM drive could come in handy.

    And when you can have that much memory for less than the cost of the processor, it's worth considering -- IF you can use it.

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