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Sharky Extreme :


Latest News


- Microsoft Rolls out the SideWinder X6 Keyboard and X5 Mouse
- Razer Fires up the Megalodon Headset and its Maelstrom Audio Engine
- OCZ Upgrades their Core Solid-State Drive Line to V2
- CoolIT Unleashes the Dual Drive Bay VGA Cooler for the Radeon HD 4870 X2
- Mushkin Launches a New Line of HP3-10666 DDR3 Low-Latency Modules
News Archives

Features

- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Microsoft's Dan Odell
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with ATI's Terry Makedon
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Seagate's Joni Clark
- Half-Life 2 Review
- DOOM 3 Review

Buyer's Guides

- July High-end Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- May Value Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- March Extreme Gaming PC Buyer's Guide

HARDWARE

  • CPUs

    - AMD Phenom X4 9950 BE & 9350e Review

  • Motherboards

    - AMD 790GX Chipset Review
    - Gigabyte GA-MA790FX-DS5 Motherboard Review
    - AMD 780G Chipset Review

  • Video Cards

    - PNY XLR8 GeForce 9800 GX2 1GB Review




  • A lot has been made of the performance of the VIA Apollo chipset lately. In fact it would seem that their AGP implementation is a little lacking in the performance department. In some cases, at very high resolutions, some significant frame rate differences can be seen. However, this is much less serious in resolutions of 1024x768 and below. While this is still a detriment to gameplay, chances are VIA will fix many of these problems with a driver update before too long.

    In most synthetic benchmarks, this motherboard performs as well as any of its BX counterparts, but in certain games (especially in the 1600x1200 resolution range), it lags behind a little. This may be reason enough not to want one of these boards, but with their ability to overclock to speeds never before achievable, these lags may wind up being trivial in the long run.

    With over 30 different FSB settings, the AOpen board is one of the most complete overclockers we have tested. Not only does it allow all these different clock settings, but it is capable of doing it all in the BIOS, without having to fiddle with jumper settings. This has all been done before on a BX platform, however, the advantage comes with the new PCI and AGP dividers.

    Earlier in the year when we reviewed the AX6BC Pro we talked about booting with a 153MHz frontside bus speed. At the time, this could only be done with a PCI video card and was not a viable overclocking option. Now, thanks to the AX63Pro's selectable AGP divider option of 2, AGP cards are able to run safely at a speed of 76.5Mhz when the system bus is screaming along at 153MHz, which is only about 10MHz above the AGP card's stock speed level of 66MHz.

    Coupled with some of our favorite EMS Technologies PC133 HSDRAM modules, the AOpen AX63Pro is an overclocker's dream. With the capability of easily doing 133MHz and keeping all of the components within spec, this board will allow for some serious overclocking of native 100MHz FSB CPUs





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