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Review: DFI NB80-EA Granite Bay

by Tarinder Sandhu on 29 November 2002, 00:00

Tags: DFI (TPE:2397)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaop

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System setup and notes

Here's a quick rundown of the test system should you wish to compare benchmark results with your own.
  • Intel Pentium4 2800MHz S478 Northwood CPU
  • DFI NB80-EA 'Granite Bay' motherboard run in single and dual-DDR modes
  • MSI E7205 'Granite Bay' GNB-MAX motherboard run in official DDR266 mode in both dual-DDR mode
  • ABIT IT7-MAX2 v2.0 i845PE run in official DDR333 mode
  • Gigabyte 8IHXP i850E motherboard run with PC1066 memory
  • MSI SiS648 MAX motherboard run in DDR333 mode
  • SOYO P4X400 DRAGON run in DDR333 mode
  • ABIT IT7-MAX i845E motherboard run in official DDR266 mode.

Common components

  • ATi Radeon 9700 Pro (324/320)
  • 256MB Corsair XMS3200 C2 run at 2-5-2-2 for all motherboards
  • 256MB Mushkin PC3200 used for dual-DDR operation on the MSI Granite Bay motherboard.
  • 61.5GB IBM 120GXP Hard Drive.
  • Liteon 16x DVD
  • Samcheer 420w PSU
  • Samsung 181T TFT monitor
  • Thermaltake S478 cooler
  • Alpha 8942 with 26cfm YSTech fan

Software

  • Windows XP Professional Build 2600.xpclient.010817-1148
  • Intel chipset drivers
  • Intel application accelerator drivers (4.10.1210)
  • SiS 1.12 AGP drivers
  • VIA 4-in-1s, 4.43
  • Plutonium XP 8.1 Radeon Drivers (based on ATI CATALYST build 6166)
  • SiSoft SANDRA SP1
  • Pifast v41
  • LAME MP3 encoding using U2's Pop album at 192 kb/s
  • Virtual Dub 1.4.10 DVD encoding, DivX 4.12 CODEC
  • OcUK SETI benchmark
  • 3DMark 2001SE
  • UT2003 Demo
  • Comanche 4 benchmark
  • Serious Sam 2 Demo
  • Quake 3 v1.30

Notes

7 chipsets with 8 sets of benchmarks) should make this a fairly comprehensive roundup of the Pentium 4's current motherboard options. Each chipset is being run at its official specifications. All benchmarks were carried out at 1024x768x32 unless otherwise stated. Benchmarks were run 3 times and the highest and lowest results were discarded. Although the dual-DDR benchmarks include 512MB of RAM, and all the others use 256MB, testing the Granite Bay motherboards in single-DDR mode with either 256M or 512MB showed no statistical significant variation between results.

Overclocking

With a fixed PCI/AGP option and a little voltage adjustment, overclocking was always going to be more fruitful than on the MSI Granite Bay motherboard. With the 10% option selected, we managed to push our test 2.8GHz to 152FSB with decent stability; this was with the most stringent RAM timings used. I have no reason to suspect that the Granite Bay-based motherboards won't 'clock as well as any other Intel chipset, especially with the all-important locked dividers. Obviously, your mileage will vary considerably.

Stability

With the E7205 being a workstation-based motherboard, and Intel's rigorous testing and validation policy, stability, as expected, was excellent. Leaving it looping 3DMark overnight, it was still going strong the next morning. Running 2 different branded modules of PC3200 RAM didn't phase it either. If stability and performance are your main requirements, I feel as if the E7205 will suit you well.