MSI 990FXA-GD80 In The Box

For a 990FX board, MSI has put thought and effort into what we get in the box here.  For $195, it is good to see this much in the box!  As the USB 3.0 port is at a right angle, the USB 3.0 bracket supplied has the option of going to the back of the case or in the front by removing the bracket.  In terms of what we get:

IO Shield
Driver CD
User Guides
Three flexible SLI connectors
Six SATA cables (locking, right angled)
Two Molex to SATA power cables
USB 3.0 bracket

Image courtesy of Newegg

Board Features

MSI 990FXA-GD80
Price Link to Newegg
Size ATX
CPU Interface AM3+
CPU Support AMD FX/Phenom II/Athlon II/Sempron
Chipset AMD 990FX
Base Clock Frequency 200.02 MHz
Core Voltage Auto, Range Dependant on CPU
CPU Clock Multiplier Auto, 4x to 32.5x
DRAM Voltage Auto, 1.199 V to 2.460 V
DRAM Command Rate Auto, 1T or 2T
Memory Slots Four DDR3 DIMM slots supporting up to 32 GB
Up to Dual Channel
Support for DDR3, 800-2133 MHz,
Expansion Slots 3 x PCIe Gen2 x16 (x16/x16 or x16/x8/x8)
2 x PCIe Gen2 x4
2 x PCIe Gen2 x1
1 x PCI
Onboard SATA/RAID 6 x SATA 6 Gbps, Support for RAID 0, 1, 5, 10
Onboard 6 x SATA 6 Gbps (SB950)
5 x Fan Headers
1 x Front Panel Header
1 x S/PDIF Output Header
2 x USB 2.0 Headers
1 x USB 3.0 Headers
1 x IEEE1394 Header
1 x Serial Port Header
1 x Clear CMOS Header
Power/Reset Buttons
1 x OC Genie Button
1 x TPM Module Header
Onboard LAN Realtek 8111E
Onboard Audio Realtek ALC892
Power Connectors 1 x 24-pin ATX connector
1 x 8-pin 12V connector
Fan Headers 1 x CPU Fan Header
4 x SYS Fan Headers
IO Panel 2 x Keyboard/Mouse PS2 Port
1 x Optical SPDIF Output
1 x Coaxial SPDIF Output
1 x Gigabit Ethernet
2 x USB 3.0
4 x USB 2.0
2 x eSATA / USB 2.0 Combo Ports
1 x Clear CMOS Button
Audio Outputs
BIOS Version B80
Warranty Period 3 Years

Amazingly the MSI board is the only one which hits the 200 MHz base frequency spot on.  The other boards hover at 200.7 MHz (or 201.3 MHz) due to the way the frequency is determined.  As a result, you would expect the performance to be a little worse on the MSI, unfortunately.  For features, there is not anything out of the ordinary here compared to the other 990FX products apart from the odd fan header arrangement.  We also have another Realtek NIC/Audio combination, as well as a three year warranty.

Software

Rather than attempt an all-in-one solution for their software, MSI are using the ‘bombard’ approach, as the majority of their software features come under different installations and names.  The major one is Control Center:

Control Center is the face of overclocking, voltages and the limited fan controls.  With this software you can apply OC Genie, unlock cores in your processor, or turn the LEDs on the motherboard off if they bother you.

Another important element in the MSI arsenal is Live Update 5, a piece of software I rather like.  Live Update 5 will analyze your system in terms of BIOS, drivers and utilities and double check with the MSI servers if you have the latest versions.  If you do not, then the system will ask if you want to download the necessary files.  While it sounds like a good system, there is one major drawback – it does not tell you how big the files are!  It also likes to download whole packages, and waiting for a 130 MB audio driver update does not sound like fun.  However, it is useful for BIOS updates.

Also available from MSI is Network Genie, an application designed to prioritize certain types of network traffic over others, and Teaming Genie, which combines network ports into single transmissions (however users will need to add network cards to use this functionality).

MSI 990FXA-GD80 – BIOS and Overclocking Biostar TA990FXE – Overview and Visual Inspection
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  • Mathieu Bourgie - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    Here's hoping*
  • john21108 - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    I read the review and didn't see the FX-6200 getting walked over. The benches were all pretty close; the FX, X4, and the X6 all trading blows. At worse, the FX-6200 performed similar to the X4 980; at best, it would barely beat the X6 1100T.

    The FX looked good to me considering the X6 1100T is going for $240+ on eBay. If building new, is same performance worth an extra $70? Is it an upgrade to an X4 BE or X6, no.
  • estarkey7 - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    I am disappointed in this article for a number of reasons, most of all that the preface of this article had very little to do with the content at all. You start off by stating:

    "...despite the fact that Windows 7 (and Windows 8, natively) is now receiving updates so the operating system can understand the processor architecture a little better, and hopefully boost performance. This gives a second wind to those owning (or thinking of owning) a Bulldozer based processor, and in turn, a 900-series motherboard."

    With that being a defining point of this article, where are before and afters? I and everybody else on here already know what Anand did (hell, we read this site multiple times a day!). Why should I give this platform a second look?. Your preface led me to believe that I would see benches of these motherboards before and after firmware revisions or more importantly firmware revisions and Win 7 vs. Win 8 preview.

    It doesn't even make sense to run a full set of benches against motherboards with the same processor at stock speeds, as the differences will surely show in their overclocking potential and feature sets.

    Do you even realize that after reading this article that every single reader of Anandtech.com learned absolutely, positively nothing about Bulldozer vs. Thurban vs. Intelxxx that they didn't already know before they wasted 15 minutes of their time?

    Why not just delete it, and we'll forget you ever wrote it...
  • IanCutress - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    The purpose of the review was to look at the motherboards and the differences between them, not the absolute performance of the processors. Hence why this review is listed under the motherboard section rather than the CPU section, and the paragraph you quoted ended with the phrase, with appropriate pauses to create emphasis on, 'a 900-series motherboard'. The initial paragraph created purpose and the fact that there is reason to perhaps own one of these motherboards, generating the context and situation to which they are currently in.

    Anyway, as a regular reader of Anandtech, surely you recognise me as the motherboard reviewer for the past year or more? :)

    Ian
  • estarkey7 - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Ian,

    I let my recent bulldozer system build get the best of me!

    I retract my statement. I believe my attack on you was not reasonable and served no purpose. Although I do disagree with some of the phrasing in the intro paragraph, my post was not warranted and I sincerely apologize.

    Keep up the good work.

    Ed
  • Dekkatek - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    I don't know if anyone else noticed this, but there is a galler pic of the ASUS Crosshair board with a 4 video card setup and the 4th card is not physically connected to the motherboard!

    http://www.anandtech.com/Gallery/Album/1843#13
  • IanCutress - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Haha nice catch :) Most of those images are from ASUS' media kit for the board - I think I must have looked at it and thought they were using the ROG Xpander for four-way. Looking at the Xpander page now, it was only ever compatible on the R3E and R3F.

    Ian
  • Makaveli - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    When did you need a $1000 extreme edition cpu to be an enthusiast.

    I'm not really sure what point you are trying to make.

    A i7 920 a 2500k or 2600k are all enthusiast cpu that cost less than $400. And all outperform AMD current line up.

    It like you are trying to be like AMD before they launched BD comparing it the 990x and saying look out processor is better and doesn't cost $1000 don't make me laugh.

    If you are gonna troll you better start doing a better job.
  • cocoviper - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    $1000? Try any CPU over $240.

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/4955/the-bulldozer-r...

    http://leapvine.com/p/1237/Intel%20Core%20i7-2600%...

    CPU price ranges tend to range between $50 and $1000 in the retail market. AMD's fastest solution captures the lowest 25% of this market, leaving 3/4 of the price range, and the range with the best margins, to Intel. We all want AMD to be competitive again like they were in the late 90s/early 2000s but they simply aren't.

    AMD has also officially stated they have no intention to compete in the performance / enthusiast segment. Per Anand:

    "As AMD's client strategy is predominantly built around APUs, the only high-end desktop parts we'll see from AMD are low-end server CPUs. Socket-AM3+ has a future for one more generation and we'll likely see other single-socket, high-end platforms for the desktop. The days of AMD chasing Intel for the high-end desktop market are done though. That war is officially over."

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/5503/understanding-a...
  • BaronMatrix - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Why doesn't anyone use the recommended GPU? If I buy an 8150, it will at least get a 6970 but probably a 7970.

    No wonder I left this "review site" stuff alone. I can't learn anything except that people think there are 50 CPU makers and AMD is the worst.

    Good luck with that.

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