Specifications - ASUS Striker II Formula

ASUS R.O.G. Striker II Formula
Market Segment Gamer /Performance
CPU Interface Socket T (LGA-775)
CPU Support LGA775-based Core2 Duo, Core2 Extreme, or Core2 Quad recommended, including next-generation 45nm compatibility (06/05B/05A processors)
Chipset NVIDIA nForce 780i SLI
CPU Clock Multiplier 6x ~ 11x, downward adjustable for Core2, upward to 31x for Extreme, half-multiplier support for 45nm processors
FSB Speeds Auto, 533-2000 (divide by 4) in 1 MHz Increments
System Bus Speeds 1333/1066/800 MHz
DDR2 Memory Dividers Sync Mode, 2:1, 5:4, 3:2, 1:1 and Multiple Async Dividers
FSB Strap Automatic TRD adjustments based upon FSB speeds
PCIe Speeds Auto, 100MHz ~ 200MHz in 1Mhz increments
PCI Speeds Locked at 33.33MHz
DRAM Voltage Auto, 1.80V ~ 3.40V in 0.02V increments, 1.80V standard
DRAM Timing Control Auto, Manual - DRAM Timing Options (tCL, tRCD, tRP, tRAS, tRFC + 7 subtiming settings)
DRAM Command Rate Auto, 1T, 2T
Core Voltage Auto, 1.10000 to 1.81250 in 0.00625V increments
CPU PLL Voltage Auto, 1.50 ~ 3.00v in 0.02V increments, 1.50V standard
FSB Termination Voltage Auto, 1.20V to 1.70V in 0.02V increments, 1.20V standard
North Bridge Voltage Auto, 1.20V ~ 3.00V in 0.02V increments, 1.20v standard
South Bridge Voltage Auto, 1.50V ~ 1.85V in 0.05V increments, 1.50V standard
1.2V HT Voltage Auto, 1.20V ~ 1.95V in 0.05V increments, 1.50V standard
Bridge Core Voltage Auto, 1.20V ~ 1.55V in 0.05V increments, 1.20V standard
Loadline Calibration Enabled, Disabled
CPU Voltage Reference Auto, Default ,+10mv ~ +160mv in 10 mv steps. -05mv ~ -315mv in 0.05mv steps
NB Voltage Reference Auto, Default ,+10mv ~ +160mv in 10 mv steps. -05mv ~ -315mv in 0.05mv steps
Memory Slots Four 240-pin DDR2 DIMM Slots
Dual-Channel Configuration
Regular Unbuffered, non-ECC DDR2 Memory to 8GB Total
Expansion Slots 2 - PCIe 2.0 x16, SLI support
1 - PCIe (16x) x1, 1 PCIe X1 Slot for Supreme FX II Audio Card
2 - PCI Slot 2.2
Onboard SATA RAID 6 SATA 3Gbps Ports
Onboard IDE (PATA) 1 x UltraDMA 133/100/66/33
Onboard USB 2.0/IEEE-1394 10 USB 2.0 Ports - 6 On Rear I/O Panel - 4 Onboard Connectors
2 IEEE-1394(a) Ports - (1) I/O Panel, (1) via Header
Onboard LAN (with Teaming) Dual Gigabit LAN
Supreme FX II Audio Card ADI 1988B - 8-channel HD Audio CODEC
Power Connectors ATX 24-pin, 8-pin ATX 12V
I/O Panel 1 x PS/2 Keyboard
2 x SPDIF - (1) Optical Out, (1) Coaxial Out
1 x IEEE-1394a
2 x RJ-45 (LAN)
6 x USB 2.0/1.1
1 Clear CMOS Switch
Fan Headers 8 - (1) CPU, (1) Power, (3) Chassis, (3) Optional/Misc.
Fan Control CPU and Chassis Fan Control via BIOS/Extreme Tweaker, PC Probe II monitoring
Thermal Sensor Headers 3 Onboard Thermal Sensor Headers for Temperature Monitoring
BIOS Revision 1001, 1101

Over a year ago, the NVIDIA 680i reference board gave the Striker Extreme 680i a run for its money. This time, ASUS has refined the power delivery circuitry to key areas of the Striker II Formula motherboard (memory and chipset power), giving it an apparent technical edge.

At present, online pricing of the Striker II places the board around the $300 mark, while the EVGA 780i A1 boards are priced at $259 direct from the EVGA site or around $230 at other online vendors. We have tested both boards in the labs and initial comparisons do show a marked difference in component and engineering choices between boards. The ASUS motherboard uses better components all around (something you would expect at the price). The question is whether these changes will justify the additional expenditure to the consumer.

Ultimately, we feel that the choices are going to come down to a couple of things. While the NVIDIA reference boards generally have the upper hand for BIOS base-code fixes (these eventually filter down into the non-reference boards), the rest will be determined by how hard you intend to push each board for overclocking and if you get a return for the extra ~$70 that the Striker II costs over its EVGA counterpart.

Making a decisive judgment call on overall overclocking potential is not easy though. The NVIDIA chipsets have shown remarkable variance in overclocking headroom from board to board in the past. A disparity as large as 25MHz FSB between boards of the same model is not unheard of between brands. In order to keep this variance to a minimum, ASUS screens the SPP units for their R.O.G. boards to ensure the best chipsets are utilized.

At first glance, we would say that comparing dual-core overclocking with up to 4GB of memory is like splitting hairs, as both boards would appear to have sufficient engineering to cope with these kinds of loads. The big question will be over the much-publicized Penryn overclocking ability that hounded the NVIDIA 680i chipset motherboards. The change that threw 680i-based boards off guard was centered on lower processor reference voltage levels (known as GTL) for the 45nm Intel CPUs. The 65nm CPUs require a reference voltage in the range of 67% of VTT, while the 45nm process requires around 63-64% of VTT (termination voltage) to achieve stability. Changes like these require a component level rework on boards that lack EPROMs and/or the required divider networks onboard that can be switched via BIOS coding to offer fine voltage changes to GTL reference voltage levels.

A larger cache size for the 45nm processors (especially the quad-core processors) also places more of a capacitive load upon the chipset, requiring additional signaling drive, again something that just can't be added via a BIOS workaround if the hardware is not adequate. This is why the early 680i boards are not stable with the 45nm processors or even the 1333MHz FSB 65nm units. Essentially, we are still working with the same Northbridge (680i) with improved GTL reference value adjustments to give higher stable FSB speeds with Penryn processors.

We would like to think that 400FSB with a 45nm quad-core processor will keep NVIDIA's solution competitive with the overclocking ability of the Intel chipset based boards. Our primary aim to test this today is to strap a 4GB and 8GB memory load to a QX9650 processor and see how well the board will work for stressful loops of PCMark Vantage and games like Crysis.

These tests will be repeated on the EVGA 780i board over the coming week, with a full report and cross comparison of both boards. We had hoped to have the EVGA results today, but our board failed before we could complete our torturous overclocking routines. It appears we had a weak SPP as the board gradually failed to overclock our quad-core processor, and at the bitter end it refused to even run at stock speeds. We sent the board off for a quick burial, but not before a 21 water gun salute.

Board Layout and Features Testbed Setup
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  • joex444 - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    "1500QFSB (350MHz)" 2nd to last page, last paragraph.

    Do you mean 1400QFSB or (375MHz)?
  • Rajinder Gill - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    Sorry, 1400 is what it should read - corrected now..

    Thanks
    Raja
  • Beenthere - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    Asus continues to produce half-baked CRAP for motherboards. They have been doing this for the past five years and people still buy their defective crap. When are consumers going to learn that a company will sell crap until people stop buying it and demand properly functioning products? People who are foolish enough to buy these defective products deserve exactly what they get.
  • Margalus - Thursday, March 20, 2008 - link

    sounds like someoone is bitter because they didn't buy an Asus board and thinks nobody else should have a decent motherboard because of that. Asus makes very good, stable motherboards.. Better than most. I don't know a single person that has had a problem with Asus. I am currently using this Striker Formula because I wanted sli and an e8400. The thing is typical Asus. Quality from the ground up, and not a single problem with it, as usual.
  • takumsawsherman - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    There's no point to this board anyway. $340 and you still don't get Firewire800? Even if it does work properly and doesn't fail prematurely, it's overpriced for any benefit you could possibly derive from using such a board.
  • skinflickBOB - Thursday, March 20, 2008 - link

    If there were REAL demand for Firewire 800 on a board like this, it would probably be here. If it's such a big concern, have you thought about writing the big guns direct? I doubt anyone other than an old fart like me is really listening. Looking back at the review section (god it's been a long time since I last did), all I see is this comment about Firewire 800. Such a burning desire for an 'extra' should surely be chased down to where it matters.. But then, you would never buy a board for $300, so what's the issue?. I don't go down to the nearest Lamborghini garage and complain about the Murciélago using a 6.5 litre engine or being a low ride or whatever, cos I ain't buying the SOB. If it's such a big deal, buy yourself one of those budget 650i boards and spend the rest on a top notch Firewire card. there you go - job done.. Is that hard or something to think of?

    booyakasha..


  • Bazoo - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    As a previous owner (and unhappy one) of striker extreme, I would say that's a total waste of money. I heard lot's of reports of 650 and 750 based motherboards being much better overclockers and still capable of sli for much less money. It seems the little brothers are not that buggy like the 680/780 and would be interesting if anandtech dwelve in to that. In any event, only time would restore (or not...) my confidence in nvidia chipsets, even the 790 one (could be a joy in the sky) but... I would take a wait and see attitude. Then again, with intel changing socket in 9 months, I rather will sticky with my trust and fas p35 mb.
  • Lord 666 - Wednesday, March 19, 2008 - link

    While I agree with you on the defective piece as the only MB that has ever died on me is an ASUS, you are a little off base with your pointless rant.

    Only with the 790's is the price getting a little out of hand, but MB's aren't that expensive so you can just buy another one.

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