System setup and notes
Here's a quick rundown of the test system should you wish to compare benchmark results with your own.- ASUS P5GD2 Premium Intel i915P motherboard (BIOS 1004)
- ASUS P5AD2 Premium Intel i925X motherboard (BIOS 1004)
- ASUS A8V Deluxe S939 VIA K8T800 Pro motherboard
Other components
Software
- Windows XP Professional
ASUS implements a technology called Hyper Path 2 for both motherboards. Essentially, it attempts to mimic and better Intel's Performance Acceleration Technology feature that's only supposed to exist within the MCH (Memory Controller Hub) of i925X chipsets. ASUS has done this before, most recently with its P4P800 i865-based motherboards. The results in that case showed ASUS' implementation was actually a touch better than Intel's. Hyper Path 2 or PAT reduces the latency that exists between processor requests and memory accesses. With that in mind and both boards benefitting equally from this performance enhancement, we expect to see little or no benchmark deviation.
Both boards ran the Pentium 4 560 processor at 3640.3MHz, or 202.24MHz FSB, and memory was set to 533MHz FSB. Both were extremely stable when flashed to the latest BIOS. We'll be comparing their performance with an AMD Athlon 64 Model 3800+ / VIA K8T800 Pro combination. AMD's still resolutely sticking with DDR-I memory, so we were able to run much tighter latencies.
3640.3MHz - Intel Pentium 4 560 / ASUS P5GD2 Premium (Intel i915P - 4-4-4-10 @ 533MHz)
3640.3MHz - Intel Pentium 4 560 / ASUS P5AD2 Premium (Intel i925X - 4-4-4-10 @ 533MHz)
2400.9MHz - AMD Athlon 64 Model 3800+ /ASUS A8V Deluxe (VIA K8T800 Pro - 2-3-2-6 @ 400MHz)

Both boards are storage, audio and networking monsters.
Overclocking
By specifically stating PCI Express frequencies, the BIOS appears to offer a bus-locking feature. However, during testing with PCI Express GeForce 6800 GT, I found that video would simply switch off at anything above 240MHz FSB. Indeed, both boards POSTed comfortably at 250MHz FSB, but would then lock almost immediately afterwards. The evidence suggest an out-of-spec PCI Express bus. We hope later BIOS revisions may alleviate this unfortunate problem.