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Review: Foxconn Bloodrage X58: the overclockers' dream

by Tarinder Sandhu on 22 December 2008, 03:00 3.85

Tags: Bloodrage X58, Foxconn (TPE:2317)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaqi2

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System setup and notes


Motherboard Foxconn Bloodrage X58 Intel DS58X0 Smackover X58
Price
Chipset Intel X58 + ICH10R
CPU Intel Core i7 920 Engineering Sample (2.67GHz, 1MB L2 cache, LGA1366)
Actual CPU frequency 2660.1MHz 2667.1MHz
BIOS revision P03 (11/06/2008) SOX5810J.86A.2786.EB.EXE (12/11/2008)
Memory 6GB (3 x 2GB) Crucial DDR3-1,066 CL7 
Memory timings and speed 7-7-7-20 1T @ DDR3-1,066
Graphics card Force3D Radeon HD 4870 512MB
Graphics driver Catalyst 8.12
Chipset driver Intel Inf 9.1.0.1007 + Intel Matrix Storage Manager 8.6.0.1007
Disk drive(s) Seagate 500GB SATAII (ST3500320AS)
Operating system Windows Vista Business x64 SP1

 

Tests

Benchmarks

ScienceMark 2.0 memory latency
SiSoft SANDRA 2009 SP1b (15.65)
HEXUS.PiFast to 10M places
wPrime 1024M test
HEXUS DivX 6.8.3 encode + enhanced multithreading
CINEBENCH R10 64-bit
WinRAR 3.80 compression of 1.2GB file

HD Tach 3.0.4.0 - SATA average read speed
HD Tach 3.0.4.0 - SATA burst speed
HD Tach 3.0.4.0 - USB average read speed
HD Tach 3.0.4.0 - FireWire average read speed

Enemy Territory: Quake Wars, v1.5 - 1,024x768 low-detail settings and 1,680x1,050 high-detail
Far Cry 2, v1.01, long ranch demo, 1,024x768 high-quality settings

 

Testing notes

We're comparing the Foxconn Bloodrage's performance against the retail interpretation of the X58 chipset from Intel, in the form of the DS58XO, or Smackover, as it's more commonly known in enthusiast circles. It's a cut-price X58, if £215 can be thought of as cheap, and it lacks many of the value-adding features found on the Bloodrage, but an X58 is still an X58, right.

The choice of £230 Core i7 920 is deliberate, because even though we have 965 Extreme Editions in the labs, we wonder how many people can afford a £800 processor on top of a £300 motherboard. Keeping it somewhat real is the almost-as-potent 2.67GHz part.

6GB of memory is provided by Crucial, and it runs at 7-7-7-20-1T on both boards.

Please note that the Foxconn Bloodrage slightly underclocks the 920 CPU, which runs some 7MHz slower than on the Intel X58.

Lastly, the test board passed our basic stability test, which involves running Prime95 on all eight cores whilst playing the Enemy Territory benchmark, for a total of six hours.

Issues

We noted that the updated BIOS highlighted speed of 6.4GT/s for a Core i7 920, which should be limited to 4.8GT/s. Clearing the BIOS solved this issue. Foxconn is aware of this issue.

More pressingly, whilst the board worked just fine with memory set to DDR3-1,066MHz, changing the speed, via the multitude of ratios, had no effect when setting a multiplier above the native 8x. Setting it to x6 worked just fine. This, though, is a problem inherent in our use of an engineering-sample Core i7 920 CPU, and retesting with a retail processor allowed the necessary adjustment. We'll be changing over to full-retail CPUs forthwith.