Biostar TA990FXE 

Coming in at the cheapest 990FX board of this roundup, we have AnandTech’s first Biostar board in almost a year and a half.  To me, as an enthusiast, when I hear the name ‘Biostar’, certain adjectives come to mind – the most prominent of which is ‘inexpensive’.  As a home system builder and enthusiast, I have come across Biostar offerings when looking at motherboards online, and they are usually quite cheap.  At those prices, I always think there is a catch – either the design may not be the best, or perhaps the warranty or support could be a dodo.  I plan to cover more of Biostar's boards in the future, so from here on out I plan to put all the prejudice aside and concentrate on what matters – does it do what it says on the tin, would home users want it, and is it worth the money?

Overview

$130 is not a lot for a motherboard in the 990FX space.  It comes in at the cheapest board in this multi-board review, and judging on an overview of the results and features, people might be inclined to agree. 

The PCIe layout, for example, is not well thought out - the manual contradicts the layout of the board by stating that the full-length PCIe slots 1 and 3 are the primary GPU outputs, but in reality, dual GPUs should be placed in full-length PCIe slots 1 and 2.  SATA ports are split between the main ones and eSATA, leaving five internal SATA ports rather than using another controller.  The LAN port is non-standard as most other manufacturers use a Realtek solution, here we have the Atheros AR8151, even with Realtek ALC892 audio on board.

For the most part, performance wise, the board is down in terms of pure computation, repeatedly coming in the bottom half of most of our CPU based tests - in particular, it comes bottom of our DPC Latency tests by quite a long way.  However it makes a resurgence in the GPU tests, coming near the top in almost every GPU test on both AMD and NVIDIA, single card or dual card.  Overclocking was reasonable and straightforward, with a variety of auto overclock settings, although the board refused to push the CPU base frequency to the level of the other boards in this review.

The package may not include much, but the software is easy to use for overclocking, and the BIOS update utility automatically pulls the latest BIOS from online and updates the system.  Users will be partially confused though by what Biostar calls 'GPU', or Green Power Utility, designed to lower the power of the system.  This sort of acronym is not good.  The BIOS was easy to work with and befits the style of the board, though there are a few things that could have been moved to slightly easier places to find.

At this price, compared to the other products in the review, I expected this board to not perform well or even reasonably ok in comparison.  It may not have the top of the line features like the others, or the applicable software or updates, but for a board that you just need to put a processor in, it works wonderfully.

Visual Inspection

Red and white is the order of the day with the Biostar TA990FXE, on top of a black PCB with a multi-colored headers at the bottom of the board.  Personally I think it does not work that well - there needs to be an element of complimentary blending, and that includes the PCB and headers.  However the heatsink design looks relatively well constructed, with a lot of surface area and we again see the two heatsinks connected via a heatpipe.  In contrast, the chipset heatsink is quite poor, being very small and bland.  Either minimal effort was put in, or having a plain heatsink cuts down on the bill of materials.

There looks to be plenty of space around the socket for air coolers, however fan headers are few and far between.  I do not think I have ever seen less than four or five on a full sized ATX board before, but Biostar take the (coveted) title by only having three.  The 4-pin CPU fan header is located above the socket, a 3-pin system header is found to the bottom left of the socket almost in the center of the board, and the final 3-pin is at the bottom of the board.  To be honest, this amount of fan headers is absolutely woeful.  It does not instil confidence in their fan software, or the quality of the fan controllers.

Working through the board down the right hand side, Biostar has taken an oddball approach by separating the six SATA 6 Gbps ports from the chipset into two sets of two, then one straight up out of the board.  That is five, and the sixth is no-where to be seen.  You might consider it as an eSATA in the IO panel, but that is technically listed as 3 Gbps, which begs the question why it was downclocked.  Biostar are paying for the chipset, so it seems a little wasteful to restrict the consumers’ use of all of it when there is plenty of space on the board.

What is good to see on this board though is a two-digit debug LED and a set of power and reset buttons.  This gives us a perfect excuse to question Gigabyte who does not have them on a motherboard that is $50 more expensive.  Back to the Biostar, and they have crammed enough on the bottom of the board such that the USB 2.0 headers are at 90 degrees to other manufacturers representations.  Alongside the USB 2.0 headers, we also have a USB 3.0 header, a COM header, and front panel audio.

The PCIe layout is another oddball bit of design that stinks of laziness.  In order, we have a 4-pin molex connector, an x16, x1, x16, x4, PCI, PCI.  The 4-pin molex is there usually to provide more power to the PCIe slots, though it is in a really awkward place, as users will have to route over the CPU cooler or over GPUs to put something in it.  The whole layout as well has me scratching my head – if I want a dual GPU setup, then there is no space between the cards, which makes my top card run very hot.  Do we really need access to two PCI slots and no PCIe x1 when running dual GPUs?  I wonder who came up with that layout – sure it is easier in terms of routing traces around the board, but it is bad from just a functionality point of view when you have space to spare.

The back panel is sparse, which again is probably attributable to the price.  Alongside a pair of PS/2 ports, we get dual S/PDIF outputs, two USB 2.0 in black, two USB 2.0 in red, IEEE1394, an eSATA, two USB 3.0 in blue, Atheros AR8151 gigabit Ethernet, and audio outputs via a Realtek ALC892.  More questions arise – we know that Realtek sell an audio/NIC combo at a low price, so why ditch that and get in the Atheros?  Is it cheaper?  What does that mean to the consumer?  Hopefully I will get to the bottom of it.   

MSI 990FXA-GD80 – In The Box, Board Features, Software Biostar TA990FXE – BIOS and Overclocking
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  • IanCutress - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Unfortunately we don't have an infinite amount of kit to review with. We're individual reviewers here, not all working in a big office. Obviously we can't all request top end kit from manufacturers either. Plus for every time we do use new high end kit, we also get comments about testing something 'more realistic' to most users. In that circumstance, we can't win and please everyone, but we do try and be as consistent as possible.

    Ian
  • phocean - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    I bought the Sabertooth a few weeks ago... and it throws an annoying buzzing sound in the speakers, especially when a USB port is used (in other words, all the time).
    It is the sign of an isolation issue between chipsets and shows poor design and testing from Asus.
    Needless to say that the support was of no help (and no willing to help).
    So don't buy it, unless you don't plug any speaker in it.
  • richaron - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    Mine doesn't have this problem. You either got an unlucky board, or your psu is funky.
  • extide - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Seem to me like you were probably using a bit too much voltage for the BD. I would assume that is why you had so many issues with thermal runaway. 1.4-1.45ish would probably be a better place to stay with an air cooler :)
  • extide - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    EDIT: Nevermind I forgot you are using the AMD kit watercooler, which is better than straight air cooling but I'd think it would take more of a fully custom built water setup to run 1.5v vCore.
  • Hrel - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    I was going to build a new computer based on Ivy Bridge this Fall, I'm still running a Core 2 Duo E8400. But I've decided I'm not building myself a new computer until the motherboard has USB 3.0 and ONLY USB 3.0. A LOT of them, EVERYWHERE!

    I just built a guy a Z68 based computer with an i7 2700K but I had to order a VERY hard to find adapter card to plug in the USB 3.0 based memory card reader and the USB 3.0 on the front of the Fractal Design case. Because the Asus motherboard has ZERO USB 3.0 headers on it. It never even occurred to me that was a possibility. Not only has USB 3.0 been out for years now, but it was released WAY over-due. WTF is the hold up. Make the switch. USB 2.0 is for the 2000's decade, it's 2012. I am done with USB 2.0. I shouldn't have to buy an add-in card for BRAND NEW motherboard to support basic accesories, like a memory card reader and front usb port.

    This is related to this article because I think if AMD was actually competitive with Intel AT ALL, like they were with Athlon XP/64/64 X2, then Intel would step up their game all around. Or maybe I wouldn't even have to buy Intel because they constantly make shit decisions like this, and changing the motherboard socket constantly, and charging 300 dollars for a quad core with HT. Their shit is endless and I really don't want to buy their products but AMD is simply not an option; if I wanted something that slow I'd just put a quad core Penryn based CPU in my current rig and save a bunch of money.
  • ggathagan - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    There are only two Asus Z68 boards that don't have the USB 3 header, but somehow it's *Intel's* fault that Asus didn't use a USB 3 header on the board you bought?
    Huh...
    Maybe you should have been a little more attentive when board shopping.
  • IanCutress - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    Hi Hrel,

    I actually like USB 2.0 on my boards. If you have solely USB 3.0 and use them all, there's a big chance of a bottleneck in the bus somewhere. Also, I install a fresh operating system on every board I test via USB as it is a lot quicker than CD. Unfortunately during the install program, it doesn't process anything through the USB 3.0 ports - mouse, keyboard, or even the USB stick with the OS on. So I ideally like to have three USB 2.0 ports for that purpose. It's more a fault of Windows7 than the chipset, but otherwise if a board only has two USB 2.0 ports, I have to disconnect the mouse and use the keyboard and USB install drive only. Saying that, I have a board in that is solely USB 3.0, so it's going to be fun to install an OS on that... :/

    Ian
  • fic2 - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    I have a Dell keyboard that has 2 USB ports on it. That would solve your problem with a 2 x USB 2 mb. I currently have the mouse daisy chained off the keyboard.
  • B - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Your article should note that sound blaster provides a software overlay, but under that aluminum skin overlay lies a Realtek chip. I was fooled by this marketing and very disappointed after configuring this motherboard and discovering this fact. You don't get soudblasters hardware acceleration or the crystalizer. You should note this in any article about the asus line with x-fi2. Had I known I would have done things differently.

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