Final Words

There is a scene in the movie Amadeus, Best Picture of 1984, where Emperor Joseph II is talking with the composer Mozart after seeing his first Mozart opera. He assures Mozart it is a brilliant piece, but there are just "too many notes".

Why does this matter in our review of the DFI CFX3200-DR? Much like Mozart's opera this motherboard has more options than we have ever seen. Unfortunately there are so very many options that even experienced overclockers will be intimidated by the sheer range of controls available on this board. As with Mozart's opera that does not indicate the DFI CFX3200 is a bad board; it just means you have to be willing to work very hard to get the best from this DFI board. We never thought we would be complaining about too many tweaking options on any motherboard, but this DFI does make us wonder how many end users will actually devote the time to master 32 levels of drive strength, and DQS skew levels of +/- 0 to 255 in 511 levels.

The DFI CFX3200 is otherwise a brilliant ATI RD580 design. While it is very expensive, you do get value for your dollar. Every component on the board is first rate and the highest practical grade available. This attention to detail is typical of recent DFI boards and it's one of the reason enthusiasts love DFI boards. We do think DFI engineers would do well to devote more time to a BIOS that will work right out of the box for more end users. We have received many complaints from buyers of past DFI boards that they were just too hard to master. Those complaints will likely grow into a loud chorus with the CFX3200. It is always difficult to find the proper balance between ease of use and the range of controls available to the end user. The DFI is after all an enthusiast board and enthusiasts demand maximum levels of control. The CFX3200, as it is now configured, is just a bit too much.

In Amadeus, Mozart wryly asked Emperor Joseph II which notes he would have him remove - a question the Emperor never answered. We would answer a similar question by saying that DFI doesn't need to remove any adjustments or tweaks at all. It does, however, need a refined and simplified menu with many options hidden and auto controls that work with almost any memory that might be used on the board. From those auto levels enthusiasts who want to would then be able to delve deeper. We know some enthusiasts out there will find a use for almost every control on the DFI. The problem is you shouldn't be required to master drive strength levels and levels of skewing just to use and overclock the CFX3200 - unless you choose to.

DFI does listen to buyers. They included capable Firewire options this round and they replaced last generation's SB450 with the more capable ULi M1575 Southbridge. We suggest DFI dump their Silicon Image 3114 supply and put a more up-to-date controller on these top-end boards. No enthusiast we know is waiting breathlessly for a 3114 controller on a $240 motherboard. They are, however, breathlessly waiting for DFI's AM2 and Conroe motherboards.

The CFX3200 is a much better board than the RDX200. The RDX200 was a very good first effort, but DFI has learned a great deal about ATI chipsets and done some great things with the ATI RD580 chipset. With a better organized BIOS, more universal auto settings, and a rethink of the 3114 option this motherboard would be just about perfect. If you're already set to build a completely new system using socket AM2 and DDR2 memory, you'll want to wait a few more weeks, but as a final top-end CrossFire 939 board the CFX3200-DR is a great choice.

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  • Stele - Wednesday, May 10, 2006 - link

    IMHO the main disadvantage of using the Sil3114 instead of a newer SATA controller like the 3132 is not so much the 1.5Gbps transfer rate, but the fact that it's PCI-based and hence badly bottlenecked once you fill all four channels. 1.5Gbps is a theoretical maximum and HDDs today are nowhere near that limit - in fact we left ATA-133 without even breaking the ATA-100 limit. Since each SATA HDD gets a dedicated 1.5Gbps channel, arrays won't saturate the SATA interface either - rather, they would saturate the slow PCI interface as previously mentioned. Furthermore, the other significant feature of SATA II - NCQ - is of virtually zero relevance to most users, unless one is using the board in a corporate server; not impossible, but not likely either. Therefore, to harp on a figure that has generally been more a marketing tool (as was ATA-133) than a real necessity says little of the real issues at hand.

    In return, using the Sil3114 means using a tried and tested product whose characteristics are very well known by now. Board engineers would know how best to design around it - what special requirements (signal integrity, trace lengths, coupling etc), if any, need to be factored in, how the controller performs and behaves and so on. Furthermore, the 3114 provides 4 SATA ports for maximum expansion capability - there is no 4-port version of the 3132 as you alluded to in the review - not yet anyway. You may well be right about having a truckload of 3114s to get rid off, so that's likely a factor too. Perhaps when the 3132 gains a 4-port counterpart (and DFI finishes off 3114 inventory) then we may see newer stuff to come. :)

    On another side note, yes there would probably be many people who would appreciate the insane options in BIOS, but I do agree that they should make the UI more user-friendly, e.g. by having Automatic as a choice and/or by placing advanced options in sub-menus to distinguish them from the main options. That would satisfy enthusiasts of all levels, from the mad hatters down to the ones who are just starting out. :)

    Generally a review well done! :)
  • Stele - Wednesday, May 10, 2006 - link

    quote:

    ... there is no 4-port version of the 3132...


    Perhaps that statement should be clarified/qualified a little - there is no 4-port version of the 3132 (i.e. PCIe + SATA II + 3.0Gbps) in a single controller IC. The 3132 supports, and hence is expected to be used with, SATA port multipliers - primarily the SII 3726, which can support up to 5 drives. In future, DFI could use a 3132 with one SATA channel routed to an external connector (as in the Asus A8N32-SLI) while the other channel could be connected to a 3726 to provide an additional 4 or even 5 internal HDD channels.

    However, this would create two problems - the need for another IC (the board is already very cramped as it is!) and, as already discussed, the need to gain sufficient experience with the new ICs in the lab before they can be confidently implemented and designed around. Cost and time-to-market factors may also have played a role in DFI's choice.
  • proamerica - Monday, May 8, 2006 - link

    This is a poor quality review. The reviewer complains too much about variables that actually improve performance when handled by the right person. The overclocking potential of this board is beyond all other 939 boards I have owned, including the A8R32-MVP... People all over the place are reporting the highest overclocks ever achieved for memory and CPUs. You have to know what you are doing I'm afraid, and yes it requires using all the settings in the BIOS. That is the caveat of buying this board, its hard to use, and it takes time to figure it out, but once you do its worth it. I stably OC'ed my X2 3800 to 2940Mhz, and I currently run it 24/7 at 2700Mhz. Is 2940Mhz the highest OC I have ever gotten with this processor? Yes, stably, by far the highest. One of the greatest aspects of this board is that it will overclock really high but it doesn't take a lot of voltage to get things stable.

    Why does the review say: "but this DFI does make us wonder how many end users will actually devote the time to master 32 levels of drive strength, and DQS skew levels of +/- 0 to 255 in 511 levels." Lets see, an extremely expensive motherboard from a company known for making the most tweakable boards around... And you wonder if end-users are going to bother? Yeah they're going to bother. If they don't, they should have purchased something else.

    Bottom line, this board beats the A8R32-MVP hands down, its just harder to use than the Asus.
  • Wesley Fink - Tuesday, May 9, 2006 - link

    The review pointed out what you clearly found. It's a difficult board to master, but the options and performance can be outstanding. Some want to take the time to master it, others would prefer a board that is easier to overclock. The real poiunt is the DFI CFX3200 still needs work. The BIOS does NOT need to be so difficult to master, and it wouldn't be if more intelligent choices were made for auto settings.

    The CFX3200 is not a bad board, it is just a very difficult board to use and master - even for an experienced enthusiast.
  • Zoomer - Wednesday, May 10, 2006 - link

    As mentioned by someone else, the auto (default) settings are nicely choosen - for BH5 memory.

    Perhaps it would be wise to point that out somewhere, or provide an option of memory: BH5/Normal/Valueram/Manual
  • ozzimark - Monday, May 8, 2006 - link

    "Running four double-sided 512MB or 1GB DIMMs is much more demanding than running two DS DIMMs, and like almost every board we have tested the Command Rate needed to drop to 2T with 4 DS DIMMs."

    using a high dram drive strength should allow for stable opteration at 1T with 4 double rank sticks in.. :)
  • bigtoe36 - Monday, May 8, 2006 - link

    From the Tweak guide on the bleedinedge forum.

    "Max async latency - options 7 thru 10 are all you should need, 7 for agressive tight timings 10 for high fsb overclocks. This option HAS TO BE SET MANUALLY

    Read Preamble - 4.5 thru 6 is all you need worry about, 4.5 for BH5 etc and 6 for high fsb overclocks. i usually use 5.5 and 6. Again HAS TO BE SET MANUALLY"

    http://www.bleedinedge.com/forum/showthread.php?t=...">http://www.bleedinedge.com/forum/showthread.php?t=... for the full guide.

    Wesley you have the options posted on page 4 the wrong way round, its easy to do as I often get them confused.

    Tony
  • ozzimark - Monday, May 8, 2006 - link

    with dfi boards, it's long been my experience that manually setting MAL/RP is a VERY BAD thing.
  • bigtoe36 - Monday, May 8, 2006 - link

    Normally that would be the case but DFI were setting 4.5 and 5 as hidden defaults. Now if you are running Bh5 you will have no problems, but most everything else would have issues.

    Thats why i quoted in my guide and on MANY forums you have to set these manually to get the best from the board.
  • mbhame - Monday, May 8, 2006 - link

    Where's the USB/Firewire CPU Utilization and I/O? Where's IDE performance?
    Throughput is not indicative of real-world performance for any user I know.

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