RSS 2.0 News Feed
HEXUS.net - Definitive Technology News and Reviews
Latest content
Notebooks
Notebooks
NVIDIA Optimus technology: mobile GPU implementation done right?
Latest Reviews
minimise maximise
Beans
minimise maximise
Guides
minimise maximise
Press Releases
minimise maximise

ASUS K8N-E Deluxe

Mainboards
Mainboards

Published: Wednesday 3rd November, 2004 | Author: Ryszard Sommefeldt
Companies: ASUSTeK (All ASUSTeK content), AMD (All AMD content), VIA Technologies (All VIA Technologies content)

Buy now
SCAN : £50.01 (inc. VAT) : details
Addthis
printer friendly layout     discuss in the forums     email to a friend
Next page: ASUS K8N-E Deluxe
The URL you followed to get here is no longer in use and we have redirected you. If the URL was in your bookmarks then please update your bookmarks. If you followed the link from another web site or search engine then please notify their webmaster.
Advertisement

Introduction

ASUS never made a K8N back when Athlon 64 was introduced on Socket 754. K8 obviously denotes AMD's K8 CPU architecture, the definition behind the Opteron and Athlon 64 implementation. N would have denoted the use of NVIDIA's supporting chipset, which was nForce3 150 at the time. So while ASUS created the K8V (VIA chipset, Socket 754 for Athlon 64) and SK8V (VIA chipset, Socket 940 for Athlon FX and Opteron), along with an SK8N (Socket 940, nForce3 150), there was no K8N.

And that's probably a good thing, given what a stinker the SK8N turned out to be. NVIDIA's initial nForce3 offering was pretty underwhelming, stacked up against VIA's instantly-mature K8T800 chipset. When chipset refresh time rolled around for both companies, combined with a new socket introduction, everyone waited with baited breath to see which chipset the major board vendors would pair with the pair of consumer sockets.

nForce3 250 in its various guises turned out to be just what the doctor ordered, combining strong performance with great features. Initial testing bore out the introduction of a first-time PCI lock for the chipset, allowing overclockers to get their teeth into new boards based around it.

Also, given the strong following the ASUS SK8V and K8V had, and rightly so (I'm using the SK8V to type this, the board happily powering a VapoChill-cooled FX-53 at a speedy 3GHz), it's a shame to see them abandon Socket 754 and Socket 940 using VIA's K8T800 Pro chipset, instead creating a solitary Socket 939 offering called A8V. Updates to those boards would have been great.

That leaves owners of Socket 754 processors, looking to keep their investment in that socket type, wondering if ASUS would also pass them by with nForce3 250, allowing them a solid upgrade path for the time being.

So with ASUS dropping Socket 754 and Socket 940 with VIA chipsets, and their reluctance to bring nForce3 250 to Socket 940 either, it's a great sigh of relief to see them finally give birth to a K8N, pairing Socket 754 and nForce3 (in the 250Gb form no less), to give loyal ASUS Socket 754 followers a means to new features and a bit more performance.

ASUS might be quiet in the AMD64 world right now, but as long as the couple of boards they are committing to are decent, I don't think anyone will mind.

Tarinder looked at the A8V. It's my turn with the other one. Enter the K8N-E Deluxe.
Next page: ASUS K8N-E Deluxe

Buy this product

All prices are updated by the retailer. E&OE

Company sort by Company ascending sort by Company descendingPrice (exc. VAT) sort by Price (exc. VAT) ascending sort by Price (exc. VAT) descendingPrice (inc. VAT) sort by Price (inc. VAT) ascending sort by Price (inc. VAT) descendingPrice Date sort by Price Date ascending sort by Price Date descendingPrice History
SCAN £43.49 £50.01 15:45 on Wed 26th Nov 2008 history

Data recovery raid
Click here if your need data recovery on your RAID system.

My HEXUS


:: New User
:: Lost Password

Browser Plugins
:: IE7 Search
:: Firefox 2 Search
Hottest items
minimise maximise
Latest Poll
minimise maximise

2010, the year of...








Headlines
minimise maximise