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Review: ASUS M2R32-MVP Radeon Xpress 3200 CrossFire motherboard

by Steve Kerrison on 31 August 2006, 08:36

Tags: ASUSTeK (TPE:2357)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qagor

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Ports and features, BIOS

ASUS M2R32-MVP

It's good to see ASUS free themselves from the shackles of the archaic parallel port, but it seems the resulting void isn't used for anything. There is, however, eSATA and FireWire, both of which we like to see on modern boards as external storage connectivity options.

ASUS M2R32-MVP

Both northbridge and southbridge are passively cooled on this board, no fancy heatpipes either. We don't want to sound like a broken record, but as always, a well ventilated case will be required to keep the temperatures of these components down.

ASUS M2R32-MVP

BIOS

ASUS M2R32-MVP

BIOS options aren't as plentiful as, say, ATI's Sturgeon reference board (which had southbridge voltage settings, for example) or the Socket 939 A8R32-MVP. It should be possible to implement more options, and ASUS could well do for the final product. Current significant options are listed below:

OptionAdjustments possible
HT Reference Clock200-400MHz (1MHz increments)
CPU FIDx5-CPU MAX
PEG Reference Clock100-150MHz (1MHz increments)
HT Multiplier (CPU-NB)1-5x (x1 increments)
Memory Clock200/266/333/400MHz
CPU Core voltage0.8-1.5625v (0.0125v increments)
Vcore Over-voltageAuto, Enabled, Disabled
(seems to boost VCore by approximately +120mv above nominal when set to Enabled)
Memory VDIMM1.80-2.45v (0.05v increments)
NB Voltage1.20-1.50v (0.10v increments)
HT Voltage (CPU-NB)1.20-1.50v (0.10v increments)

ASUS M2R32-MVP

ASUS M2R32-MVP

We tried our hand at overclocking the board to see just how high we could get the FSB. James, using his mad overclocking skillz, obtained 325MHz with the CPU and memory clocked back so that we were testing only the FSB. That's not the best o/c we've had on AM2 motherboards, lagging behind nForce 5.

An interesting quirk in the BIOS, is that USB devices are given boot priority if they're present when the system is powered up. That means if any are attached when attempting to boot from hard disk, the boot order will need changing. Hopefully ASUS will change this behaviour.

Bundle

ASUS M2R32-MVP

In our bundle was an incomplete manual (we imagine it'll be finished come release), driver CD, USB expansion bracket, I/O shield, IDE, floppy and SATA data cables along with a SATA power cable and finally, Q-Connector attachments. Q-Connector is a neat idea from ASUS that allows all the fiddly case wiring to be hooked up to a block that then just plugs into the motherboard's headers. It saves having to fit your fingers into tight corners and give you a fighting chance at attaching the cables to the correct pins.

Features and issues

Sound is provided through an AD1988 chipset. However, this particular model lacks DTS-Connect or Dolby Digital Live support.

There's no POST diagnostic readout on this board, so users must rely on old school beeps for feedback, which aren't always as informative.

CrossFire worked fine for us once we'd fiddled with a driver installation. The cards detected OK first time around but the drivers didn't install correctly. We can't place blame for this one right now, so it could well be a driver issue and not board related. Regardless, CrossFire worked in the end.

Once again, we have an ASUS AM2 board with faulty Cool 'n' Quiet support (the third to pass through our labs recently). With the feature enabled, we couldn't run our testing RAM at 4-4-4-12 2T timings, but it worked fine with SPD settings. Turning it off eradicates the problem.

Finally, AMD Live is supported, but the manual mentions nothing of it.