Initial Thoughts

That is all we have for you at this time as the final retail release is rumored to be sometime in March with review samples arriving right beforehand. Users will need to gauge if they think spending an additional $100~$150 on the Classified is justified over excellent boards from ASUS, Gigabyte, DFI, and even EVGA in the $300 price range. This board will provide slightly higher QPI frequency abilities when overclocking with air- or water-based cooling solutions. It also has the ability to handle high capacitive loads (slots loaded completely) with ease. So far, the NF200 bridge chip has not been an adverse liability on graphics performance. Yes, there is a slight latency penalty, but it is not noticeable in most conditions.

For the ever demanding benchmarking community, you'll need to find a CPU that can take advantage of the 600W peak power this board can deliver. 8-thread CPU tests over 5GHz CPU speeds draw in excess of 400W peaks on this platform. Thus far, it's been hard to divide the various X58 boards in our labs into certain overclocking categories because there are very few "pre-screened" processors available from Intel that allow both high QPI and core speeds under chilled conditions. Our various retail processors do not fall into this category, although we have a couple of excellent processors for air- or water-cooling. However, they are not the same when run at subzero temperatures as some of the processors in the hands of the more fanatical benchmarking personnel found at various forums.

Below 4.5GHz, most of the X58 motherboards available are usually not a limiting factor. Perhaps we'll have to wait until the release of the upcoming D0 processor stepping before we can really start to see a gap between i7 motherboard capabilities in the 4GHz~4.5GHz range. EVGA's own results with higher quality processors have the board running 8-thread CPU tests at over 5GHz with an SLI configuration, so the potential is certainly there on this board.

We have found the X58 Classified to be the easiest board to use for subzero cooling. All of the other boards we have (ASUS, Gigabyte, Foxconn, and DFI) seem to present us with earlier cold boot limits, memory limits, and/or power up limits, which combine to make benchmarking at subzero temperatures very tricky.

The Classified's slot layout will appeal to those that run multiple graphics cards and still need room for a RAID controller or sound card. Most of the users we have spoken with over the past few weeks are weighing these types of options. Testing to date has indicated a multitude of peripherals work fine on this early sample with the current BIOS, so one would hope that retail release continues or betters this state of affairs.

If money is no object, the X58 Classified and its overclocking features make this board the new king of the hill. There is nothing on the horizon quite like it or as robust in no-nonsense power delivery for high processor clocks (even in early production form). With a high launch price, estimated to be in the $400~$450 region, EVGA knows they cannot afford any slip ups and rightly so.

Shocking BIOS options
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  • CK804 - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    This motherboard costs $400-$450 and it comes with Realtek audio and LAN? Give me a break. I would at the very least expect a dedicated audio card for this price.
  • GaryJohnson - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    And if you load it up with 4x GPUs, I don't think you actually have a slot available for any other expansion cards. They really need to move to some kind of new, longer form factor for boards like this. Something like a 16" x 9.6" 'LATX' form factor.
  • JarredWalton - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    The only way you'll get 4x GPUs is via 2x GeForce GTX 295 or 2x Radeon HD 4870X2... in which case you would have several expansion slots remaining. But as our SLI/CF scaling articles have shown, outside of bragging rights in a few select titles there's little point in going beyond two-way GPU configurations.
  • legoman666 - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    2 8pin power connectors on the mobo? Why?
  • 1078feba - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    How about 600W of available power to the proc socket?
  • takumsawsherman - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    Clearly, this board appears to be for crazy people. You spend $400 and you still get old school Firewire 400? At that price, there should be no compromises. Firewire800, and also somebody's soul. Or something.
  • bigboxes - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    Is this all that you have to gripe about? Were you really going to purchase this board, but now suddenly you can't justify it due to this obvious oversight? :eyeroll: Seriously, I bought a 4-port firewire card in the past that sits in a box. Why? Cuz I never EVER used the thing. USB 2.0 will suffice until USB 3.0. Even Apple computers have more USB jacks than Firewire. If you want a function that hardly anyone uses than just buy an expansion card. I am certain the target for this mobo is not one that gives a rats about Firewire. They are gamers. They can always use e-SATA if they need faster transfer speeds in an external.
  • Exar3342 - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    This board is for people that spend $1000.00 on a cpu and have 3-4 GTX 285's, and have spent a ton on a cooling setup. I really doubt they will notice an extra $150.00 for the motherboard.
  • ToeCutter - Thursday, March 26, 2009 - link

    Exactly. I'm thinking of snagging one of these just for the simple color scheme that doesn't look like a bag of Starburst.

    How about just a jet black PCB and some monotone slots.

    Skip a sushi dinner and it's paid for....?
  • Nfarce - Friday, February 27, 2009 - link

    While that may be true, said people are becoming fewer and far between these days, and some of those who could afford such machines are probably scaling back their spending (the smart ones anyway). The days of people ordering $3,000+ worth of stuff and putting it on their credit cards and paying it off monthly are numbered. People need to learn to live within their means so we don't get in this huge economic global mess again.

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