Multitasking-

The vast majority of our benchmarks are single task events that utilize anywhere from 23MB up to 1.4GB of memory space during the course of the benchmark. Obviously, this is not enough to fully stress test our 6GB or 8GB memory configurations. We devised a benchmark that would simulate a typical home workstation and consume as much of the 6GB/8GB as possible without crashing the machine.

We start by opening two instances of Internet Explorer 8.0 each with six tabs opened to flash intensive websites followed by Adobe Reader 9.1 with a rather large PDF document open, and iTunes 8 blaring the music selection of the day loudly. We then open two instances of Lightwave 3D 9.6 with our standard animation, Cinema 4D R11 with the benchmark scene, Microsoft Excel and Word 2007 with large documents, and finally Photoshop CS4 x64 with our test image.



Before we start the benchmark process, our idle state memory usage is 4.05GB.



We wait two minutes for system activities to idle and then start playing Pinball Wizard via iTunes, start the render scene process in Cinema 4D R11, start a resize of our Photoshop image, and finally the render frame benchmark in Lightwave 3D. Our maximum memory usage during the benchmark is 5.62GB with 100% CPU utilization across all four or eight threads.

Application Performance - MultiTask Test - Lightwave 3D

Application Performance - MultiTask Test - Cinema 4D

Application Performance - MultiTask Test - Total Time
Power Consumption 3D Rendering
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  • MadMan007 - Monday, October 12, 2009 - link

    er *video performance test. Whatever, not the place I'd expect to read about motherboard features or stuff that I'd epect to find in, ya know, regular motherboard reviews.
  • vlado08 - Sunday, October 11, 2009 - link

    Gary, give us the POST time ot the boards. Not the OS load time but the POST time. And Sata to be in AHCI mode.
  • Sunburn74 - Saturday, October 10, 2009 - link

    This really was a great review. You tell the end user pretty much everything he needs to know. I love how you tested S3 resume. Its very frustrating to buy a board said to have great overclocking and find that you can only overclock 300mhz before S3 sleep goes haywire. If this board can be pushed to 190blck before S3 goes awry that is amazingly good. Gigabyte boards give you about 600mhz of head room before they start failing in that regard. I don't know about you, but I don't like having to to weigh the value of keeping a 4ghz processor vs being able to have a computer that sleeps.

    Also what gives with the floppy and the ide ports? Who still uses floppies?

    Great review. I'll definitely keep this board in sight for when I build my p55 rig.
  • lopri - Sunday, October 11, 2009 - link

    Gary now writes practically critic-proof reviews.
  • Zaitsev - Saturday, October 10, 2009 - link

    Who still uses floppies? I still use floppies. I was pretty perturbed when I realized my P55 Asus board didn't have floppy support. Call me old school, but its compatible and works when you need sata drivers.
  • MadMan007 - Sunday, October 11, 2009 - link

    Well I can see how floppy is deprecated unless you need drivers for XP (old now, although WHS needs a floppy for F6 drivers) or an alternative OS (not sure about the latter) but I'm with you on IDE. If they're going to have a JMicron controller on the board might as well include the IDE connector, it probably adds almost nothing more to the cost.

    There are particular instances where having an IDE optical drive is beneficial. I set up my SATA drives as AHCI and some bootable ISOs do not play well with AHCI (or RAID) setting. I do have a SATA optical but having an IDE optical for booting such ISOs without having to mess around in the BIOS is nice and it guarantees compatability. I guess you could use a SATA optical on the JMicron set to IDE but I had the IDE drive so...

    I think it's funny that someone would 'look down on' a board for having an IDE connector..wtf? It's not hurting anything being there, just ignore it.
  • Makaveli - Sunday, October 11, 2009 - link

    Who still uses Floopies I do!! I won't do a bios flash on my motherboard from windows or flashing a videocard bios!!!

    However there are these really great devices called USB thumb drives which you can make bootable and guess what goodbye floppy!!

    The only valid reason to keep using them is if your board doesn't allow booting from USB!

    Welcome to 2009!
  • stmok - Sunday, October 11, 2009 - link

    Floppy disk for SATA drivers?

    Can't you slipstream them in a customised Windows install CD via nLite/vLite? (I've only seen it done to a WinXP install CD.)
  • MadMan007 - Sunday, October 11, 2009 - link

    Good luck running nLite or vLite without an OS installed! ;) That's what second computers are for but still...
  • tony montana - Saturday, October 10, 2009 - link

    I old school too. The same on IDE. why I have to spend some bucks on a new DVD burner for 4 or 5 burns a year?

    This board has at least these ports at the right place for me, not on the bottom like others.

    thanks for review, is one of the two mobos I have in mind to purchase and I have seen some tips I haven´t see in others reviews

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