Basic Features: Asus P5WD2-E Premium

Specification Asus P5WD2-E Premium
CPU Interface LGA775-based Pentium 4, Pentium 4 XE, Celeron D, and Pentium D processors
Chipset Intel 975X - MCH
ICH7R - ICH
Pentium D Support (Dual-Core) 820D, 830D, 840D, 840EE,
920D, 930D, 940D, 950D, 955EE
Front Side Bus 1066 / 800 / 533 MHz
Front Side Bus Speeds 100 - 450 MHz (in 1 MHz increments)
Memory Speeds Auto, DDR-2 400, 533, 667, 800, 711, 889, and 1067MHz
PCI Bus Speeds Auto, To CPU, 33.33MHz
PCI Express Bus Speeds Auto, 90 MHz to 150 MHz (in 1 MHz increments)
Dynamic Overclocking AI Overclocking - Auto, Manual, AI NOS, Overclock Profiles up to 30%
Hyper Path 3- Auto, Enabled, Disabled
PEG Link Mode
Core Voltage Auto, 1.2000V to 1.7000V (in 0.0125V increments)
DRAM Voltage Auto, 1.80V, 1.90V, 1.95V, 2.00V, 2.05V, 2.10V, 2.15V, 2.20V, 2.25V, 2.30V, 2.35V, 2.40V
MCH Chipset Voltage Auto, 1.50V, 1.55V, 1.60V, 1.65V
ICH Chipset Voltage Auto, 1.05V, 1.20V
FSB Termination Voltage Auto, 1.20V, 1.30V, 1.40V, 1.50V
Memory Slots (4) x DIMM, max. 8GB, DDR2 667/533/400, non-ECC, ECC, un-buffered memory
Expansion Slots (2) x PCI-E x16
(1) x PCI-E x1
(1) x PCI-E x4 (universal slot)
(3) x PCI 2.3
Onboard SATA Intel ICH7R:
(4) x SATA II
Marvell 88SE6141:
(4) x SATA II
Onboard IDE Intel ICH7R:
(1) x UltraDMA 100/66/33
Marvell 88SE6141:
(1) x UltraDMA 100/66/33
SATA/IDE RAID Intel ICH7R:
(4) x SATA II
RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, RAID 10, and Intel Matrix Storage technology

Onboard USB 2.0/IEEE-1394 (8) USB2.0 ports
(2) IEEE 1394a FireWire Ports by TI TSB43AB22A
Onboard LAN Marvell 88E8053 Dual PCI-E x1 Gb LAN
Onboard Audio RealTek ALC882M, 8-channel + 2-channel multi-streaming capable HD Audio Codec featuring Dolby Master Studio technology
Power Connectors 24-pin ATX
4-pin 12V Plug
8-pin EATX 12V
Back Panel I/O Ports 1 x PS/2 Keyboard
1 x PS/2 Mouse
1 x Parallel
1 x Audio I/O Panel
1 x Optical S/PDIF Out Port
1 x Coaxial S/PDIF Out Port
1 x External SATA II Port
2 x RJ45
4 x USB
Other Features AI Net2
Asus NOS
Asus Ai Booster Utility
CPU Lock Free
Stack Cool 2
SATA-On-The-Go external connector
BIOS AMI 0114 (11/25/05) & AMI 0206 (12/22/05)

The Asus P5WD2-E is a member of the AiLife product family and as such is a fully featured flagship board targeted towards the Intel enthusiast. The board ships with an extensive accessory package along with several dynamic overclocking features such as AI NOS (Non-delay dynamic Overclocking System), AI Overclocking (intelligent CPU frequency tuner with preset profiles), ASUS PEG Link (automatic performance tuning for single/dual graphics cards), ASUS HyperPath 3 (bios setting to reduce memory latency), Asus C.P.R. (CPU Parameter Recall), and the ASUS Ai Booster Utility Precision Tweaker software that allows control over certain system settings within Windows. The board also features the Stack Cool 2 design to dissipate heat to the opposite side of the motherboard and a fanless heat dissipation system. Update- Asus has informed us the Marvell 88SE6141 RAID functions are not supported on this board with the current bios.

Index ASUS P5WD2-E: Features
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  • kilkennycat - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    If the board is not 100% compatible, both physically and electrically with the upcoming Conroe family of processors, I suggest that everybody take a pass. It would be just another case of Intel screwing us again with fast-track (deliberately-?)planned obsolescence ---- just as they did on the LGA775 family when the earlier boards and chipsets were (er...) "found" not to be compatible with their dual-core offerings ---which of course nicely inflates demand for Intel chipsets. And again where Yonah has exactly the same pin-count as the Pentium-M, but deliberately physically incompatible such that even the latest Pentium-M motherboards will not work with Yonah. After all, Intel needs to recoup its recent $350million investment in expanding its chip-set fabrication capability and as fast as possible. Would not like to disappoint the stockholders.

    Also a corollary question --- is the 975X chip-set itself fully compatible with Conroe, or is it going to have a short and unhappy life like the 915/925 chipset ??

    Gotta really admire Intel in the past couple of years. While their processor engineering lost its way, their marketing gurus have become geniuses at finding all sorts of neat ways of lubricating the screw and keeping the cash rolling in.
  • danidentity - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    Besides price, what is the advantage of this board over the P5WDG2-WS? Is the P5WD2-E a better overclocker than the P5WDG2-WS? Would you recommend the P5WD2-E over the P5WDG2-WS, price aside?
  • Gary Key - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    quote:

    Besides price, what is the advantage of this board over the P5WDG2-WS? Is the P5WD2-E a better overclocker than the P5WDG2-WS? Would you recommend the P5WD2-E over the P5WDG2-WS, price aside?


    The P5WD2-E is targeted towards the overclocking market and for mainstream use as it should come to market about $35~$50 less than the P5WDG2-WS. The other advantage it holds is the additional PCI-E slots and one additional PCI slot if you need them, otherwise the PCI-X slots on the G2-WS will certainly hold an advantage for the workstation crowd.

    I personally think the G2-WS is a better board at this point in the release cycle mainly due to a more mature bios and the 8-phase power solution. However, we have several more 975X boards to review and will hold final judgement until that testing is completed.
  • mostlyprudent - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    In the initial 955EE review, there was a claim that the high heat levels might be related to the Intel supplied motherboard. Was there any difference with this ASUS board?
  • Gary Key - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    quote:

    In the initial 955EE review, there was a claim that the high heat levels might be related to the Intel supplied motherboard. Was there any difference with this ASUS board?


    We did not notice the same thermal issues the first set of the Intel D975XBX boards had with the 955EE. In fact, our replacement D975XBX solved the initial thermal issues we noticed. However, the 955EE still runs very warm, we noticed 49c at idle and up to 68c under load on the Asus board with either the Gigabyte G-Power or Thermaltake Big Typhoon coolers. The provided Intel heatsink (840EE) ran at 55c idle and up to 73c under load but we understand this might not be the heatsink shipped in the retail kit. We are trying to procure one at this time to test it.
  • Marlin1975 - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    You say there is a problem with the 882 chips? Can you run the same test on boards that used the same south bridge with a Cmedia sound chip. I know a lot of boards used the c-media at first and am whondering if this is maybe a south bridge problem or just another sign of the low quality items/drivers that realtek seems to make.

    Never been a realtek fan. Weather it be their low quality sound chips or their drivers.
  • Gary Key - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    The 882 family of codecs is very good for an on-board solution. I believe there is still a lot of work to be done in the drivers. However, the improvements made between the R1.20 release up to the R1.29 release have been significant. We actually could watch our BF2 benchmark come to a stop during the aircraft flyovers up until the R1.27 release. There is still some stuttering and frame rates drop into the teens but overall the CPU hit rate is around 9% compared to a 67% CPU hit in drivers up to R1.26. The overall sound quality has improved in games like Serious Sam II and F.E.A.R. also. We have not tested a 975X board with the CMedia solution but have just finished testing one with the Sigmatel solution (next article).
  • ProviaFan - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    The review states that with two ATI cards inserted, the other PCI-E slots are not usable. Is this due to a real hardware limitation, or is it only because the ATI cards' coolers are too big? An example of a usage scenario that prompted this question: could I put a graphics card in one 16x slot running at 8x, an 8x PCI-E SCSI adapter in the other physical 16x slot, and then perhaps a 1x card in one of the remaining slots?
  • Gary Key - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    quote:

    The review states that with two ATI cards inserted, the other PCI-E slots are not usable. Is this due to a real hardware limitation, or is it only because the ATI cards' coolers are too big?


    The slots are physically not available due to the two slot cooling solutions used on the cards. This would hold true for the 6800 Ultra or 7800GTX 512mb edition cards.

    Your scenario about the slot assignments would work.
  • coldpower27 - Monday, January 16, 2006 - link

    Interesting on the voltage for the CPU though having only 1.200V as the bottom limit seems a little bit limiting from my persepctive, good gaming performance though as it typically runs only 2nd to the Intel Nforce 4 SLI.

    I also agree that 8 Phase Power would be nice, maybe in a future revision that is made to support Intel's NGMA processors.

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