Testing Methods:

With the exception of SiSoft Sandra, all of our benchmarks have been engineered to give you numbers that you are likely to find useful when actually using the products we have evaluated in the real world.

We are also focusing a lot more of our time on evaluating the stability of the motherboards (and platforms) using a stress test designed to highlight any of the potential weaknesses that the product may have. That involves a gradually increasing amount of stress starting with Prime95 and expanding to IOMeter and an endless loop of Far Cry loop if all is well. This is to ensure that all parts of the system are stressed simultaneously over a period of time.

We believe that the consumer is never likely to subject their platform to this level of stress and we are not expecting every product to complete an entire extended stress test. However, most poorly engineered products fail within the first couple of hours, or even minutes, allowing us to make a conscious decision on whether a motherboard (or platform) is worth your money, regardless of how well it performs in our benchmarks.

Foxconn N68S7AA nForce 680i SLI Test Setup

Test Setup:

Intel Core 2 Extreme X6800 (operating at 2.93GHz - 11x266); 2x 1GB OCZ FlexXLC 9200 (running at DDR2-800 in dual channel with 3.0-3-3-9-1T timings); Nvidia Geforce 7900GTX; Seagate 7200.9 200GB 7200RPM SATA 3Gbps hard disk drive; OCZ GameXStream 700W power supply unit; Windows XP Professional Service Pack 2; DirectX 9.0c; Nvidia Forceware 93.71WHQL;

Systems:

  • Foxconn N68S7AA (Nvidia nForce 680i SLI);
  • Inno3D nForce 680i SLI (Nvidia nForce 680i SLI);
  • Asus P5N32-E SLI Plus (Nvidia nForce 650i SLI SPP, nForce 680i SLI MCP);
  • EVGA nForce 680i LT SLI (Nvidia nForce 680i LT SLI);
  • Asus Commando (Intel P965);

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October 14 2021 | 15:04