The Test

In recent times, choosing a motherboard cannot be completely determined by a Winstone score. Now, many boards come within one Winstone point of each other and therefore the need to benchmark boards against each other falls. Therefore you shouldn't base your decision entirely on the benchmarks you see here, but also on the technical features and advantages of this particular board, seeing as that will probably make the greatest difference in your overall experience.

Click Here to learn about AnandTech's Motherboard Testing Methodology.

Test Configuration

Processor(s):
Intel Pentium III 733EB
RAM:
1 x 128MB Corsair PC133 SDRAM
1 x 128MB Mushkin PC133 SDRAM
Hard Drive(s):
Western Digital Expert 418000 - UltraATA/66
Bus Master Drivers:
VIA 4-in-1 v4.20 Service Pack
Video Card(s):
NVIDIA GeForce 256 SDR
Video Drivers:
NVIDIA Detonator 3.76
Operation System(s):
Windows 98 SE
Motherboard Revision:
AOpen AX64Pro Revision 1.0

 

Windows 98 Performance

 
Sysmark 2000
Content Creation
Winstone 2000
Quake 3 Arena
640x480x16
AOpen AX64Pro - Pentium III 733EB
150
28.6
107.2
ASUS P3V4X - Pentium III 733EB
156
29.6
119.3
Tyan Trinity 400 - Pentium III 733EB
155
30.0
118.0
FIC KA-11 - Pentium III 733EB
148
28.7
102.0
Gigabyte GA-6VX-4X - Pentium III 733EB
156
30.0
120.1

 

The Final Decision

If the limitation of 4 PCI slots doesn't bother you, the AX64Pro is a very good VIA Apollo Pro 133A solution. If AOpen would take this design, add a PCI slot or two, put in some more FSB settings, and tweak the BIOS, they would clearly have the best VIA 133A board on the market. For now, we'll have to live with the "merely" very good AX64Pro.

The Bad How it Rates
Comments Locked

0 Comments

View All Comments

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now