ECS A85F2-A Golden In The Box

So far in our FM2 coverage, as the price of the motherboards has been sub-$150, the boxes tend to be a little light.  No-one is willing to parade a board in a ton of extra USB 3.0 so no USB 3.0 brackets are put in place, neither is a drive for WiFi apart from a few select models.  Given the fact that ECS shift a large amount of product compared to Zotac, EVGA and to a certain extent Biostar, I would assume that what they can put in box would be an organised procurement of stuff that could go into every box.

What we get is:

Rear IO Panel Shield
User Manual
Driver CD
Seven SATA cables

As kind of expected, while ECS does not go beyond a bunch of SATA cables, we get plenty of them.  Seven cables covers all the onboard SATA ports which is great if a user wants to go down the storage route.

ECS A85F2-A Golden Overclocking

Experience with ECS A85F2-A Golden

Given the memory issues that have plagued my testing of this motherboard, I was not expecting much in terms of CPU overclocking.  There are no automatic overclocking presets, and the OS software deals with BCLK/FSB only, meaning we are to dive straight into the BIOS.  Even when using the options there, basic tests that would pass on all other boards fail to pass here.  The voltage range itself is a little odd, being from 1.495 V to 1.975 V in 0.020 V increments.  Normally for FM2 we start at a 44x multiplier at 1.400 volts and go from there.

Methodology:

Our standard overclocking methodology is as follows.  We select the automatic overclock options and test for stability with PovRay and OCCT to simulate high-end workloads.  These stability tests aim to catch any immediate causes for memory or CPU errors.

For manual overclocks, based on the information gathered from previous testing, starts off at a nominal voltage and CPU multiplier, and the multiplier is increased until the stability tests are failed.  The CPU voltage is increased gradually until the stability tests are passed, and the process repeated until the motherboard reduces the multiplier automatically (due to safety protocol) or the CPU temperature reaches a stupidly high level (100ºC+). Our test bed is not in a case, which should push overclocks higher with fresher (cooler) air.

Manual Overclock:

Using the BIOS, we took a similar approach to overclocking as with the other A85X motherboards tested with this processor.  We start at 1.4 volts on the CPU in the BIOS and a CPU multiplier of 44x for all cores.  Here are the results:

All other settings were left at default apart from CPU Multiplier and CPU Voltage.  As shown, performance on the ECS is rather poor, requiring 1.575 V for 4.4 GHz to pass 5 minutes of OCCT.  While a five minute test is not a complete and thorough stability test in every sense of the word (is a system that crashes after 50 days at full load ‘stable’?), it provides a reference point with out other reviews for comparison and is a mid point for review time limitations.

ECS A85F2-A Golden Software Test Setup, Power Consumption, POST Time
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  • ForeverAlone - Sunday, January 13, 2013 - link

    Why so much power and so many slots/plugs on such an underpowered chipset?

    You'll never need to crossfire/SLI graphics cards with a CPU as weak as the A10-5800K.
  • Oscarcharliezulu - Sunday, January 13, 2013 - link

    This has got to be the most poorly penned review I've read in a while. I reads mostly like a cut and paste jumble. You repeat yourself constantly. The grammar makes my brain hurt. Your assumptions about what "golden" represents is just space filler. For a moment I thought I was reading a bad auto-translate. Lastly, admitting you look around the web at other opinions and I now am not sure if this review is your opinion or some kind of reference to what other people have said. Please do over. D-.
  • IanCutress - Sunday, January 13, 2013 - link

    I do admit that sometimes my British idiosyncrasies come through more on some reviews than others, but it's not something I should apologize for. It did get a thorough triple check before going live, as do all my reviews. If there is something that completely boggles the mind, please feel free to email me for clarification.

    Regarding space filler, my review is meant to cater for a large percentage of the potential readership, and thus explaining design philosophy to those not accustomed to it is part of the package.

    As for looking at other reviews and such, I would be a poor academic researcher if I did not find reference and justification for the results and final opinions of the board. To go in blind would be completely remiss, especially if I come across a fringe issue, or fail to come across a significant issue because I do not specifically test for it. I am a strong advocate in researching a topic before discussing it, especially in such a public facing publication such as AnandTech.

    Ian
  • JonnyDough - Sunday, January 13, 2013 - link

    This is actually one of the sharpest boards I have ever seen. As for the gold coated rear ports, I'm not sure if those are necessary, but if the price is right I wouldn't be complaining. Very ooglable! :)
  • lordcheeto - Monday, January 14, 2013 - link

    You should review the Biostar Hi-Fi A85W. That's what I have, and it looks good and performs good. Not sure how it stacks up against the boards you have tested, but I think it will do well.

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...
  • sudz - Monday, January 14, 2013 - link

    (though on a board this side I would prefer at least five).

    This size?
  • Rick83 - Monday, January 14, 2013 - link

    out of the box?

    Back in the Athlon days, main board makers were using this trick to gain a few points in benchmarks, but thankfully it gradually disappeared again.
    Now many different main boards hit the market, that overclock CPUs out of the box. This is not acceptable in my book, as I want all components in my system to play fair with one another, and adhere to the well known specs.

    This kind of fudging around for a few percent of performance in some computation benchmarks, that don't even reflect real world gains, should be harshly judged.

    After reading this, I stopped reading the rest of the review.

    One other note. As you write scientific articles, why do you not preface your articles with an abstract? I think this would increase reading efficiency. If the main strong and weak points, as well as the verdict can be resumed on the front page, then a lot of time reading non-essential information can be used otherwise.
  • CeriseCogburn - Monday, January 14, 2013 - link

    ECS is plenty big, and has a lot of good boards toward the cheaper end at all levels.

    The problem here is AMD and it's crap. The overclock page is embarrassing.

    Another unstable piece of amd centered junk.
  • dgingeri - Monday, January 14, 2013 - link

    Sorry, after my past experiences, no matter how nice you find this board and no matter how inexpensive it is, I am not ever going to buy ECS hardware. I had a motherboard that was bad out of the box, returned it for warranty replacement, got 3 used ones in a row, including one with the socket lever broken, that were also non-functional over the course of 3 months, and then declared the board was no longer under warranty because it was beyond 90 days. (This was way back in the socket 5 days.) I swore off them then and have never bought another one, in nearly 20 years.

    Not gonna happen. I won't trust them again.
  • ggathagan - Monday, January 14, 2013 - link

    Not particularly a fan of ECS, but I think 20 years is long enough to hold a grudge.
    It would be a surprise if 80% of the ECS employees in 1991 are still working there.
    :)

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