Final Words

In every benchmark at stock speeds, we found the Sapphire PURE Innovation board for AMD to be fully competitive with the best motherboards that we have tested for Athlon 64 Socket 939. As you saw in last week's preview of Crossfire Multi-GPU performance, it also appears that Crossfire will compete very effectively with NVIDIA SLI in the Dual-Graphics arena as well. So, what tips the scales toward the new ATI chipset boards or the nForce4 boards or ULi?

One area would be features. ATI's performance in IDE, SATA, and SATA2 (with the Sil3132) is exemplary. We have often seen new chipsets where storage performance is much worse than the current best. Considering the newest versions of the ATI Radeon Xpress X200 family with the SB450 South Bridge, this certainly does not appear to be the case. Storage performance is excellent compared to any of the leaders.

One glaring performance exception for the ATI SB450 is USB 2.0. We expected ATI USB performance to be on par with the competition by this point, but it still lags in sustained throughput. ATI tells us that the SB450 performance is comparable to competitors in burst mode and will be completely corrected in the SB600, but that south bridge is still months away. We doubt that most users will ever see a real difference in USB performance with the Sapphire PURE Innovation or the upcoming ATI Crossfire AMD, but if USB performance is critical to your use, you should look elsewhere. Either the nForce4, the ATI Radeon Xpress 200 north bridge with a ULi 1573 or 1575 siouth bridge, or a ULi chipset should perform fine in USB 2.0.

Offsetting USB, the ATI is the first AMD chipset to market with Azalia High-Definition audio. Azalia HD exhibited low overhead in all audio modes, and most important, the sound quality is stunning compared to the majority of audio codecs currently residing on AMD motherboards. If on-board audio performance matters to you, you should definitely audition an ATI HD board. It should be mentioned that both the ULi 1573 and the 1575 south bridges will also feature HD audio.

If you want to use your AGP card, then the upcoming ULi M1695/M1567 chipset is the only real choice for performance.

So, with pluses and minuses in several areas for each chipset, are there other factors that should influence your decision? If you are an enthusiast, then the answer is a resounding "YES". Sapphire and ATI have designed Grouper and Crossfire from the ground up as enthusiast boards. The Reference boards are the best and most stable that we have ever tested from an overclocker's perspective, and the production Sapphire PURE Innovation is just as overclockable and stable as the outstanding Reference Boards that we have seen. This design and component excellence has certainly made its way into this first Sapphire production board, and it should make its way into other upcoming production boards. Reference boards always heavily influence the product that makes it out the door, and in this case, that is outstanding news.

The Sapphire PURE Innovation reached the highest overclock at stock multiplier ever achieved with our standard 4000+ processor. We also easily reached a 302 frequency at lower multipliers at a 1T command Rate. The bottom line is that this production Sapphire board will turn the head of enthusiasts. The appearance is stand-out (a white motherboard) and the performance will not need to make apologies to any Athlon 64 board on the market. Other manufacturers who are known for making enthusiast boards have already committed to producing an ATI Crossfire board - AMD or Intel or both. Some may also produce a single-GPU board like this Sapphire PURE Innovation PI-A9RX480. Whatever they produce, it is clear that this time around the latest ATI Radeon Express 200 family chipsets will be seen on many top-end motherboards. If they are close to as good as this Sapphire ATI, it will be a good time to be an enthusiast.

We've waited a long time for a real competitor to NVIDIA that would keep prices in line as only real competition can. ATI announced aggressive pricing strategies with their new Crossfire chipsets and nF4 SLI prices are already slated to drop. With Crossfire and SLI both performing well, the buyer is the winner. It means that you will get the best performance possible at the best price possible from either ATI or NVIDIA. If you are also an enthusiast, you also have a new and unexpected board to add to your short shopping list for a top Athlon 64 board. The Sapphire PURE Innovation deserves your consideration as a top enthusiast board. ATI and Sapphire deserve praise for having the guts to bring this board to market.

Since Crossfire was designed to reach these same lofty levels of performance, you can also expect that some new and exciting choices will be coming in the Dual-GPU segment. But it is also interesting that the new top video cards like the NVIDIA 7800 GTX and upcoming ATI R520 perform extremely well as single cards, requiring impossibly expensive monitors for usable performance gains in dual-GPU mode. Those developments may well make boards like the Sapphire PURE Innovation even more attractive with the newest generation of video cards.

Audio Performance
Comments Locked

52 Comments

View All Comments

  • Avalon - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    This board sounds fantastic!
  • Hacp - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    Competative with similar Nforce4 boards(DFI LP) isn't enough. They need to beat the price by 5-10 dollars in order to regain the edge. I agree that the VTT options is awesome (for you BH-5 users), but in order to kill the current proven top Overclockers board, they need to be very competative with the DFI in terms of price.

    Also, I was wondering if they managed to fix the cold boot issue with these boards. If the cold boot issue is a non issue with these boards, and they are priced exactly the same as the DFI Lan Party boards, then it is a no brainer for BH-5/CH-5/UTT users as to which board to pick (unless they already are doing the 3.3 Rail Vdimm mod).

    Also, the 2nd page, He art in the first sentence needs to be fixed, and in the first page, it says AMD in the first paragraph when its supposed to say ATI.
  • afrost - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    I don't think so, a lot of people complain about problems with the DFI.....and it has a super loud fan on the chipset which is difficult to replace because the video card is right on top of it.

    I personally would never buy a DFI....different people obviously have different priorities

    If this board is rock solid stable like AT reported, then they will have a winner.
  • cryptonomicon - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    looks like a strong competitor, and here was a typo pg. 11
    "The Sapphire ATI chipset performs at least as fast as the best of nForcee4 chipset boards"
  • Mant - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    I think that was intentional. They're comparing the ATI to the "NForcee" by MVidia...like you can compare a Seiko watch to a BOLEX
  • RyanVM - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    In the first pic of the motherboard, it clearly has 8 SATA ports. However, the next page lists the specs with 6 SATA ports and the next picture seems to confirm that. Is there indeed an 8 SATA port version as well?
  • Wesley Fink - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    The pictures on page 4 were provided by Sapphire and are earlier prototypes. The actual production version we tested is pictured on page 5 and has 6 (not 8) SATA ports. We apologize for the confusion. There are indeed pads for 8 SATA ports on the production board, so there could be further developments.
  • ncage - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    What i like:
    Performance in general
    good audio quality (im wondering if it supports any of the eax extensions though which would be great if it did. Would elimante the need for a sound card.)

    What i don't like:
    bad USB2 performance. This would affect me big time. I have a pro consumer camera (8MP Olympus C-8080) and i usually transfer a bunch of images at a time from my camera to my computer so this is definitly a disapointment.

    I really like nvidia as a company. Their driver team has from the start been top notch. I think that is one of the things that led to their popularity. I generally have always gone with nvidia except in the 9800 pro days because you know why. I currently own a 6600gt which i love. Anyways the only thing that upset me that nvidia did was to take out soundstorm out of thier chipsets. I hope ATI bringing high end audio will force nvidia to reconsider. Nvidia knew that a lot of customers were asking for soundstorm back yet they still wouldn't put it back in. I just don't understand this.

    I hope thier are boards produced that don't have dual video card abilites because of price. I really don't want two video cards. I only occasional play games and im not going to spend 500-900 on two video cards. So we shall see how this plays out.
  • bob661 - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    The mobo manufacturers were griping about the price. Also, I believe the demand was too low. Yes I know lots of geeks liked it but we're a small percentage of the market.
  • BPB - Friday, July 29, 2005 - link

    "Today, we look more deeply at production version of the ATI Grouper that will be launched by Sapphire next week."
    So, when do we actually see these? If it's by end of Summer, great. If not, it may just be too late. I think most people who've waited for ATI to get this out have already gone to nVidia. I know my buddy has.

    Also, regarding Crossfire, can an AIW X800XT PCIe work with a plain old X800XT PICe?

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now