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Re: Finally Decided on a System Upgrade (Read 555 times)
Reply #15 - Apr 30th, 2004 at 3:56pm

Delta_   Offline
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You need to ask the person you are buying from if they have any motherboards with the "VIA K8T800 chipset".  DDR400 Athlon64 motherboards use that chipset, also that is a cost effective, reliable and very good performance chipset.
 

My system:Intel Q6600@3.6GHz, Corsair XMS2 4GB DDR2-6400 (4-4-4-12-1T) , Sapphire 7850 OC 2BG 920/5000, X-Fi Fatality, Corsair AX 750, 7 Pro x64
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Reply #16 - Apr 30th, 2004 at 5:23pm

Iroquois   Offline
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Quote:
You need to ask the person you are buying from if they have any motherboards with the "VIA K8T800 chipset".  DDR400 Athlon64 motherboards use that chipset, also that is a cost effective, reliable and very good performance chipset.


That's the chipset that the other two motherboards I was looking at have. One is the Gigabyte K8T800 which is highly recomended. The other is the Aopen Ak86-L.

Here's the Aopen: http://usa.aopen.com/products/mb/AK86-L.htm

And here's the Gigabyte: http://www.giga-byte.com/MotherBoard/Products/Products_GA-K8VT800M.htm#
 

I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday. Wink&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
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Reply #17 - Apr 30th, 2004 at 5:29pm

Delta_   Offline
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My personnel preference is the Gigabyte motherboard, i am using one now, it is very reliable and has a jumperless design, where you control everything from the bios.  It has also given me very good performance.
 

My system:Intel Q6600@3.6GHz, Corsair XMS2 4GB DDR2-6400 (4-4-4-12-1T) , Sapphire 7850 OC 2BG 920/5000, X-Fi Fatality, Corsair AX 750, 7 Pro x64
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Reply #18 - Apr 30th, 2004 at 6:12pm

Iroquois   Offline
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Quote:
My personnel preference is the Gigabyte motherboard, i am using one now, it is very reliable and has a jumperless design, where you control everything from the bios.  It has also given me very good performance.


My dad has a Gigabyte board and he has had no problems. I'll probably end up going with that one seeing it's slightly cheaper.
 

I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday. Wink&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
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Reply #19 - May 1st, 2004 at 3:32am

congo   Offline
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Quote:
How do I even know if you guys are telling the truth?


Hi Orenda,

Others and myself here in the hardware forums spend a lot, a real lot - of our free time trying to help people with their particular problems.

In my case, I'm unable to work for health reasons and this is one way I can offer something back to the community, who ultimately support me.

I typically spend around four hours a day, sometimes much more, advising people in forums about their problems. Much of this time is spent researching in detail the particular hardware in question. The research, combined with personal experience is what I base my advice on.

You, of course, have no guarantee the advice is correct, so you either have to trust us, (You are asking in the first place!) or go out and spend the time researching the problem yourself.

I often advise people to research their problem themselves. Learning the in's and out's of PC hardware is a vast learning curve, and can't be done in theory alone, hands on experience is essential. I find this process interesting and rewarding. This is one of the reasons why I often suggest that people build or upgrade their own PC's.

I realise many people don't have the time or inclination to do that, so, on my own time and effort, I endeavour to provide what limited knowledge I have to the community at large.

I also realise and take seriously the fact that I am basically playing with other peoples time and money.

At times I may appear flippant, many times I try to add humour to a basically nerdy subject. If I appear rude, it's typically out of frustration of not being able to get my message across.

I offer my advice in these forums to the best of my abilty, whether right or wrong, but I assure you I do my best and I will never intentionally mislead anybody. Consider that my disclaimer if you will.

Good luck with your upgrade.

congo
 

...Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24" WS LCD
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Reply #20 - May 1st, 2004 at 10:29am

Iroquois   Offline
Colonel
Happy Halloween
Ontario Canada

Gender: male
Posts: 3244
*****
 
Quote:
Hi Orenda,

Others and myself here in the hardware forums spend a lot, a real lot - of our free time trying to help people with their particular problems.

In my case, I'm unable to work for health reasons and this is one way I can offer something back to the community, who ultimately support me.

I typically spend around four hours a day, sometimes much more, advising people in forums about their problems. Much of this time is spent researching in detail the particular hardware in question. The research, combined with personal experience is what I base my advice on.

You, of course, have no guarantee the advice is correct, so you either have to trust us, (You are asking in the first place!) or go out and spend the time researching the problem yourself.

I often advise people to research their problem themselves. Learning the in's and out's of PC hardware is a vast learning curve, and can't be done in theory alone, hands on experience is essential. I find this process interesting and rewarding. This is one of the reasons why I often suggest that people build or upgrade their own PC's.

I realise many people don't have the time or inclination to do that, so, on my own time and effort, I endeavour to provide what limited knowledge I have to the community at large.

I also realise and take seriously the fact that I am basically playing with other peoples time and money.

At times I may appear flippant, many times I try to add humour to a basically nerdy subject. If I appear rude, it's typically out of frustration of not being able to get my message across.

I offer my advice in these forums to the best of my abilty, whether right or wrong, but I assure you I do my best and I will never intentionally mislead anybody. Consider that my disclaimer if you will.

Good luck with your upgrade.

congo


I'm sorry I snapped at you Congo but it's easy to get frustrated with all of the conflicting information.
 

I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday. Wink&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
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Reply #21 - May 1st, 2004 at 12:28pm

congo   Offline
Colonel
Make BIOS your Friend
Australia

Gender: male
Posts: 3663
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No problem, That's what we're here for, to share information! (conflicting or otherwise Wink )
 

...Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24" WS LCD
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Reply #22 - May 1st, 2004 at 3:45pm

Iroquois   Offline
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Ontario Canada

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Posts: 3244
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I'm going for the Gigabyte K8VT800 Pro for $169.99CND. It supports the RAM I have now with room to grow to DDR400 (up to 3gb) in the future. Has dual bios, firewire, and RAID support along with USB 2.0 and ethernet ports. Has everything I need and them some and the price is on par with other Socket 754 mobos.
 

I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday. Wink&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
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