The Motherboards

As we mentioned before, both AOpen and DFI are currently shipping Pentium M desktop micro ATX motherboards based on Intel's 855GME chipset.

AOpen

The AOpen GMEm-LFS is a micro ATX board based on the 855GME chipset, with integrated graphics support as provided by the chipset.


AOpen outfitted the board with dual GigE ports, both of which are placed on the back I/O panel above the four USB 2.0 ports.

The board only requires a 20-pin ATX power connector and a 4-pin +12V auxiliary connector like older Pentium 4 motherboards, although you can use a newer 24-pin PSU if you'd like.

Since AOpen uses ICH4-M, only parallel ATA is supported, so AOpen outfitted the board with a Promise SATA RAID controller to drive the two SATA ports on the board. AOpen also placed an Agere FireWire 400 controller on the board; however, they didn't supply the bracket to actually take advantage of the two ports supported by the controller.

The BIOS setup of the GMEm-LFS is pretty straightforward, although we definitely appreciated the layout of the overclocking options. The only complaint we had was that memory dividers weren't explicitly listed, which requires some math on the user's part to make sure that they're selecting the right memory speed when overclocking. The only voltage adjustments present on the board are for Vcore, which unfortunately tops out at 1.340V.


We had pretty decent overclocking success with the AOpen board and our Pentium M 755 (2.0GHz). Running it at 133MHz (533MHz FSB) x 18 at the maximum core voltage of 1.340V proved to be quite stable in all of our benchmarks. We could get the Pentium M to POST at 2.53GHz, but it wasn't stable enough to run our benchmarks.

Unfortunately, the biggest problem with overclocking the AOpen (as well as the DFI) board was that you could hardly overclock the memory bus. Regardless of what type of DDR400 memory we used, the highest that we could get the memory bus to run (stable) was 355MHz using the 4:3 memory divider.

Given how bandwidth-starved the Pentium M is, we were hoping for better overclocking success in the memory department, but were met with disappointment. The problem appears to be related to the 855GME chipset, as the DFI board suffered the same fate as the AOpen board.

So, while there's headroom in the CPUs (even our 1.7GHz Pentium Ms had no problems running above 2.0GHz), it seems like the chipsets/motherboards will limit the extent to which you can overclock.

The AOpen GMEm-LFS currently sells for $230.

Floating Point Performance DFI 855GME-MGF
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  • Jeff7181 - Monday, February 7, 2005 - link

    Give the Dothan a speed bump and some dual channel DDR400 and stay out of it's way...
  • MDme - Monday, February 7, 2005 - link

    well, now we FINALLY have a comprehensive review of the P-M, it's strengths and weaknesses. While the P-M is good. the A64 is still better.
  • Netopia - Monday, February 7, 2005 - link

    Yeah, I was about to say the same as #3.

    Why did you go to the trouble to list what the AthlonXP system would have in it and then not actually test or reference it anywhere in the article?

    I still have a bunch of AXP machines and regularly help others upgrade using XP-M's, so it would be interesting to see these at least included in reviews for a while.
  • CrystalBay - Monday, February 7, 2005 - link

    Hi, I noticed in the testbed an AXP3200/NF2U400 but there are no charts with this setup.
  • Beenthere - Monday, February 7, 2005 - link

    It's a pipe dream for those who wish Intel had their act together. It's already confirmed M don't scale well and is not effective for HD computing. It's performance is really some place between Sempron and A64 but certainly not a suitable competitor to A64 nor FX. Just another Hail Mary for a defunct Intel.
  • coldpower27 - Monday, February 7, 2005 - link

    Hmm, an interesting review on the Pentium M to say the least. Though are 2-2-2-10 timings for the Pentium M the best for this architecture???
  • 0ldman79 - Wednesday, January 26, 2022 - link

    It's interesting coming back and reading this after it's all settled, Core 2 seemed to be an evolution of the Pentium M line.

    Intel did hang the Netburst architecture up, though they added a lot of Netburst's integer design to Core 2 while designing Nehalem. AMD apparently believed that Intel was going to stick with Netburst and designed the FX line, while Intel went back to their earlier designs and lowered the clock speed, massively increased the IPC and parallelism and out-Phenom'ed the Phenom with Nehalem.

    Back then Intel believed that Dennard scaling would continue and they'd have 10GHz chips, turns out wider and slower is better.

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