Translate to:

Reviews
Displays
Processors
MotherBoards
Graphics cards
Memory
Cases
Storage
MultiMedia
Cooling solutions
Optical drives
Power Supply Units
Peripherals
NoteBooks
Digital cameras
Gadgets
Configurations
Syndicate
Quotes

Toshiba Satellite L300-11G

Beside Satellite A300 and P300 notebook series, Toshiba also released on market redesigned Satellite L series. We will introduce you with all novelties through testing of model Toshiba Satellite L300-11G. L series didn’t experience that much cosmetic changes like new A and P series did. We could even say that Satellite L300 is less “fancy” than its predecessor. Some of us will count that as big plus because L300 has above all “neutral” design. ...

 

ATi Radeon HD 4870 X2

Launch of nVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 280 brought a huge enthusiasm in last two months, but it already begun to fade. The main “culprit” is ATi which showed to all of us that even when hard times come they are continuing with good work as if competition isn't a problem and as confirmation of their efforts we got incredible new generation of graphics cards. The whole story started with great Radeon HD 4850 and continued with HD 4870 that had GDDR5 memory. After great critics for these two GPUs, ATi was aware that they shouldn’t stop there, if they want to overthrown nVIDIA from the top performance throne. And they did it… ...

 

Level One WBR-3460, WBR-3408 & WAP-0006

This time we introduce to you three devices from Level 1, which cover different target user groups: WBR-3460A, WBR-3408 and WAP-0006. WBR-3460 is ADSL/ADSL2+ router, WBR-3408 is Wireless AP Broadband router and WAP-0006 is Wireless LAN. So, something for everyone. Let's see...   ...

 

ASUS Crosshair II Formula

Engineers from ASUS took into account every little detail while designing Crosshair II Formula motherboard and by taking a closer look at layout it is obvious that they didn’t economize with components integrated into this motherboard. This had big impact on final price tag for this motherboard but all this doesn’t guarantee that configuration based on this motherboard will work flawlessly and be able to satisfy needs of every overclocker out there. ...

 

Biostar A740G M2+

Biostar introduced “office version” of motherboard based on “office” AMD RS740 chipset. Graphics core is based on RV410, identical graphics core as for AMD RD690 chipset. DX10 is not supported, which isn’t a big problem because there isn’t any integrated graphics that can run DX10 games with decent framerate yet.     ...

 
Additional Translations
Forum Latest Posts
Forum Popular Threads
  1. PSU Calculator (10340 views)
  2. AMD Radeon HD 2900XT Review (9507 views)
  3. HTC Touch (6746 views)
  4. New World in Conflict Trailer (5497 views)
  5. Logitech MX1000 Laser Mouse (5210 views)
  6. Is it true that if you buy 1000mhz+ RAM.. (5132 views)
  7. Installing Linux as a second operating system (4806 views)
  8. Can't Play MP3/WAV over HTTP (4162 views)
  9. Half Life Two: Episode Two (4100 views)
  10. Network problems (3937 views)
Home arrow MotherBoards arrow Foxconn X38A Digital Life
Foxconn X38A Digital Life PDF Print
Written by Dusan Srbljak   
Friday, 09 November 2007
As we got used to Intel presenting new chipsets quite often, it is rather strange that the 975X chipset managed to remain on the high-end market for nearly two years (the 975X chipset appeared on the market in December 2005 for the first time). In the meantime, we have tested 965 and P35 chipsets, which were significantly cheaper, but the 975X remained in the high-class seat. Well, not anymore.

Intel X38

Finally, the 975X got its successor to the throne, codenamed X38, which was definitely worth waiting for. If we have a look at the schematics of the chipset, the more experienced users will see everything that this chipset brings, however, the less experienced ones might need some explaining. Well, that's why we're here.

 Motherboard Foxconn X38A Digital Life
 Memory 2 x DDR3 (Max 4GB) + 4 x DDR2 (Max 8 GB)
 Chipset Intel X38 + ICH9R Chipsets
 Sound Realtek ALC888S  7.1 HD Audio
 Storage 6x SATA2 + 2x eSATA2 + 1x IDE PATA  + 2x IEEE 1394
 LAN Realtek RTL8111B + Realtek RTL8110SC 10/100/1000 Controller
 RAID Serial ATA RAID 0, 1, 0+1, 5 
 Connectors 3 PCI Express x16, 2 PCI Express x1, 2 PCI,12 USB 2.0, Firewire

Just like the P35 chipset, the X38 will be working on symbiosis with the ICH9 Southbridge. The ICH9 itself will be in charge of USB ports, audio, LAN and other ordinary things. One thing that X38 introduces is official support for DDR3-1333 memory, being more “advanced” than the P35 (which supports DDR3-1066) in that segment. Support for the upcoming 45 nm CPUs is also there, and Intel guarantees that every 45 nm Quad-Core CPU (Yorkfield series) will function on this chipset with no problems at all. Of course, older generations (90 nm and 65 nm CPUs) are 100% supported as well. Intel rates its chipset branch by the total power consumption of the CPU, so you can have a look at that chart as well. One of the biggest (and most important) novelties is the PCI-E 2.0 standard which has been implemented herein, bringing higher bandwidth for graphics cards while retaining compatibility with the 1.0 cards.

  

It's nice to see this feature, although there are currently no cards with such a high bandwidth request. Another important question that was raised many times is when CrossFire will finally work on Intel chipsets as supposed to, as the competition has had no problems with this for a longer period of time (Nvidia nForce680i and ATi CFX3200, for example). This issue was resolved as well, as the chipset now has a couple of full PCI-E 16x slots. Intel Extreme Memory is another new thing – it's the easiest to compare it with Nvidia's Sli-memory support.

The board auto-overclocks parameters by reading the SPD directly, thus retrieving information about the best possible stable settings. Many manufacturers already possess such features, named “Intel Extreme Overclocking Utility” or similarly, but it's nice to see this gone official. However, all this is theory, and we're here to see how the board WORKS. So let's get down to business :-)

Foxconn X38A Digital Life

We had the opportunity to meet the new chipset on this motherboard. Inside a large, neat box we found a lot of things. However, first things first. We have to acquaint you with the new “naming” principles of Foxconn, which were rather confusing in the past few years. For example, the motherboard we received was labeled “X38A”. The first three characters are the chipset name, and the final character signifies the format: “A” for full ATX, “M” for microATX and so forth. There are also a fifth and a sixth character which give a clue to whether you are dealing with an upgraded board (“P”) or its cheaper variant (“X”) etc., respectively.

 

The sixth character signifies the bundle. If there is no sixth character, you are dealing with a standard bundle, and if you see an “S” at the end, you can expect a premium bundle. The first thing you will notice on this board are six memory slots. We were kind of expecting that somebody will create such a concept, as the X38 chipset supports both DDR2 and DDR3 memory. Four out of these six slots are for DDR2, which is great, concerning the current price of DDR3. And when the upgrade time comes, you will still have a DDR3-ready motherboard. The layout is very good. We fancied the fact that the user can add a fan (comes in the bundle) atop the passive heatpipe system on the Northbridge.

 

The blue PCI-E slots are in charge of CrossFire, whereas the black PCI-E slot is a 4x one. Voltage filtering is 6-phased, and the board has all of the capacitors magnetic-plated. Power, Reset and Clear CMOS microswitches are located in the lower right corner, which we believe is the most suitable place. Signal lamps and a display are present as well, indicating the state of the motherboard – very useful when overclocking. The only possible flaw is the position of the SATA connectors, which could be a problem when a couple of long graphics cards are used, but even this can be surpassed by using the so-called “G-SATA” connectors.

 

The board is definitely a “multimedia” one. Connectors are aplenty, and we shall concentrate on the most important ones. Foxconn “Dual Digital Audio” offers a high-quality sound over a digital or analog output, therefore enabling the user to reproduce two separate audio signals via two different outputs. On the back side of the motherboard there is also a F.D.C. (Foxconn Digital Connector) on which various Foxconn devices can be attached. There will be a certain sort of display showing pictures, e-mails etc. We do not currently know exactly how this concept will work, but rest assured that you will be notified as soon as we find out. It sounds interesting indeed.

 

The BIOS was made by AMI. The BIOS itself is very thorough, and we admit we have never before seen some options such as choosing the exact number of available USB ports etc. It is also possible to set fan speeds for every temperature range in percent. Monitoring of all vital parts is very quick and efficient, which is not so common these days. All overclocking options are contained within the “Foxconn Overclocking Engine” option. All the required options are there, but we didn't like the fact that every single one of them has a separate “folder”, so to speak. The maximum FSB is 800 MHz, while the CPU voltage is raised in 12.5 mV steps (!), which there are 31 of.

The memory will go up to +0.476 V from the nominal voltage (both DDR2 and DDR3), in 0.032 V steps. The Northbridge can go up to +0.380 V, and the Southbridge can be “driven” up to +0.424 V. There are four memory dividers. Although the X38 chipset is by itself quite overclocking-friendly, we couldn't get our motherboard to work with the E6750 CPU. Memory overclocking was possible, but any sort of FSB-tweaking was brutally punished – the processor was downclocked to 8x266 MHz. We remind you that the default FSB of this CPU is 333 MHz. Foxconn's staff later notified us that the motherboard BIOS was causing all these problems, and that an update will solve them. In any case, we are sure that the Foxconn mobo will turn up being on the same level as all other X38 chipset-based motherboards.

  Foxconn X38A Digital Life
 Cinebench 10 5,261
 Nucelarus 2 ALU / FPU / Multi 5.068 / 5.680 / 10.433
 Photoshop CS3 40.1 s
 DivX 6.7 185.5 fps
 WinRAR 3.7 1.421 KB/s
 WPrime 32.751 s
 Everest 
 Memory Read 8.178 MB/s
 Memory Write 6.112 MB/s
 Memory Copy 6.577 MB/s
 Memory Latency 65.2 ns 
 3DMark06 SM2 / SM3 / CPU 2.417 / 2.145 / 2.401
 COH (HighQ) 52.7 fps
 Quake4 (UltraQ) 96.4 fps
 FarCry (VeryHighQ) 103.9 fps
 Testbed: C2D E6750 @ 2.66 GHz, 2x1GB KingstonHyperX DDR3 1066
  7-7-7-20, 8600 GTS, Win XPSP2

All in all, we are very satisfied with the new face of Foxconn. If we take for granted the promised price of 170€ for this board, with all the possibilities it has, this is definitely a “Best Buy” motherboard in the upper segment. Foxconn obviously found its path in the multimedia-overclocking philosophy, which is a truly promising concept. Good work.
 
Related Articles
Contents copyright © 2007-2008 by Digital World. All rights reserved.
All trademarks used are property of their respective owners.
News comments and forum posts remain property of posters.