Final Words
Quite frankly, the AK73 ProA is a little bit disappointing. AOpen still did
a good job in migrating from the old KT133 to the new KT133A chipset, and the
quality of the board is still quite good. However, in terms of overclocking
the AK73 ProA just can’t live up to the advancements found in other KT133A motherboards.
For starters, AOpen should really consider putting the multiplier settings
in the BIOS. Keeping the dipswitches on the board is fine, but implementing
the settings in the BIOS at the same time, ala the ASUS A7V133, would have made
overclocking a much more pleasant job. Further, the inclusion of 1MHz increments
for the FSB would be quite useful as well.
Last of all, the stability of the motherboard is not quite as good as what
we’ve come to expect from AOpen or from the KT133A market in general. With
all the other KT133A motherboards performing rock solid in the tests, it’s hard
to justify the AK73 ProA’s spot in the market.
How it Rates
AnandTech Motherboard Rating
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|
Rating
(x/10)
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Performance
The performance
of the AK73 ProA is a little bit above average, but since we are talking
about no more than 5% difference for each test, you shouldn’t see any
major differences in daily use.
|
7.5
|
Price
The price of the
AK73 ProA is a little bit below average, but at the same time you are
not getting as much out of the board as you would have with some other
KT133A solutions.
|
6.0
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Stability
AOpen motherboards
used to be rock solid in our stress tests, but the AK73 ProA turned
out to be rather disappointing, crashing a total of four times within
24 hours. Compared to some other KT133A motherboards that did not crash
once after 48 hours, the AK73 ProA really loses some points here.
|
4.0
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Quality
The quality of the
AK73 ProA still live up to AOpen’s standards. We are still looking
at a very high quality motherboards here.
|
7.5
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Features
The lack of multiplier
settings in the BIOS as well as 1MHz increments for the FSB speeds really
hurt AOpen in capturing the overclockers’ market, since a lot of manufacturers
have implemented those features in the BIOS already.
The expansion slot
configuration is not ideal either, offering only five PCI slots and
no ISA slot. Furrther, AOpen continues to be one of the few manufacturers
that has yet to offer an IDE-RAID option on their motherboards.
On the other hand,
general features like Die-Hard BIOS, Dr. LED, and Dr. Voice could come
in handy but not nearly as much as the ones that are missing.
|
5.5
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Layout
The layout of the
motherboard is pretty decent. Except for the large size of the PCB,
all components are seated in the right places without any major obstacles.
|
6.0
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Availability
It shouldn’t be
hard for you to find AOpen products out there, either on-line or in
local computer stores. Don’t expect to see them in large retail stores
yet though.
|
6.5
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Documentation
& Software Bundle
The included poster
provides most of the information you will need to get up and running
with your new motherboard. Unfortrunately, the manual lacks information
on BIOS settings.
The
CDs provide all the drivers and utilities for the motherboard, as well
as the retail version of the Norton Antivirus 2000.
|
7.0
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Overall
Rating - not an average Click here to find out
why |
6.0
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