Review: ABIT KV8-MAX3 S754

by Tarinder Sandhu on 4 December 2003, 00:00

Tags: abit, AMD (NYSE:AMD), VIA Technologies (TPE:2388)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qau6

Add to My Vault: x

Thoughts



Where to start ?. ABIT's presentation skills are impressive right now. It used to be known as a company that focused, almost solely it has to be said, on performance above all else. Other industry heavyweights then realised the importance of a slick package. Potential buyers don't want to spend the wrong side of £100 and only have a motherboard to show for it. ABIT's concerted effort at presentation has paid off handsomely. Rounded cables, decent manuals, complete SATA setup and the SecureIDE function make it above average in our eyes.

We'd like to espouse the same kind of praise on the board's layout. That, however, isn't the case. The OTES board-cooling system is a nice enough touch and does appear to work. One of its drawbacks is in the use of PCB space. ABIT then decides to adopt what can only be described as a poor layout. The power plugs aren't situated in the positions we usually see them in on ABIT boards. System RAM cannot really be removed with the AGP card in place, and a Zalman 7000Cu cooler blocks off the first DIMM slot - not ideal, is it?.

DIMM arrangement and the blocking off of the first slot by oversized coolers can also cause problems, as we found out to our cost. The KV8-MAX3 cannot a module at DDR400 speeds in slot #3. It's fortunate that the VIA K8T800 is a single-channel design, but this still prohibits two, say, 256MB DDR400 modules running to spec. in slots 2 & 3. Our testing revoloved around the use of a single 512MB module.

Storage connectivity, though , is pretty robust. The K8T800's partner is the VT8237 Southbridge with native SATA support. ABIT introduces another 4 SATA ports via Silicon Image's new controller, giving 6 in total. All kinds of wonderful RAID arrangements are available. Our test with HDTach showed both sets of SATA to be competent performers with the undesirable side-effect of high CPU utilisation. Layout south of the AGP port is better. We appreciate the gap between the port and the first PCI slot. Modern fan-assisted cards usually obscure the first slot. ABIT uses the gap to house the FireWire controller from T.I, and Gigabit LAN is a nice touch.

Both the overall performance and BIOS are excellent, especially with respect to voltages. Manual latencies and ABIT's newer take on SoftMenu that's helped by the inclusion of the microprocessor-controlled µGuru hardware monitoring and manipulation. It's usefulness extends into an OS environment. Our only concern here is that ASUS' S754 boards appear to offer a selection of CPU multipliers for true tweakability. There's no mention made of it in the latest ABIT A16 BIOS. The dark spectre of unlocked buses causes overclocking to be a concern.

ABIT's first stab at S754 glory is a decent enough attempt. We'd prefer a revised layout that makes installation easier and a newer BIOS that uses AMD's Cool'n'Quiet tech. to the fullest. Like ASUS, we'd like some form of control over the CPU's multiplier. The KV8-MAX3 isn't the perfect S754 board, but we feel that it has enough going for it to convince performance seekers over to the AMD 3xxx+ camp. It's extremely fast, stable with the correct DIMM population and boasts a refined BIOS and bundle. Perhaps a rev.2 board will iron out some of our more pressing concerns. MAX3 magic has been sprinkled on to the VIA K8T800 with encouraging results.



Bottom line - priced at around £130 from most good e-tailers, it's available immediately. You could do a whole lot worse. Whether you can do better is something that will become clear in the next few weeks as we look at implementations from ASUS and Albatron.


HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
Pure intel pwnage!
I ran into the memory problem with Zalman 7000A series heatsinks, especially if you need two dimms running at ddr400, you must place them at slots 1 and 2 for the AMD controller. The solution? Just don't buy the pro series XMS memory from corsair for this board - It's too tall. I fortunately had access to some normal corsair XMS memory of the same speed (normal black or platinum fit just fine!!!) and made a quick trade. Now I don't know if there is any ram on the market that is as tall as the XMS pro ram with it's double size heatsink, but as long as your dimms are not of an incredible height like that you'll be fine. One recommendation for the squeamish: place your ram before mounting the heatsink. The motherboard has to be outside of the case anyway, and the heatsink mounting is simple and will not endanger your dimms. For everybody else, you can sneak the dimms in under the big zalman. It has a groove of sufficient size to sneak the rams underneath it's fins, and it has sufficient clearance from them that I am not at all concerned. As to the LED lights: sorry guys, no BLING BLING for you.
drmeerkat
I ran into the memory problem with Zalman 7000A series heatsinks, especially if you need two dimms running at ddr400, you must place them at slots 1 and 2 for the AMD controller. The solution? Just don't buy the pro series XMS memory from corsair for this board - It's too tall…….QUOTE]

Thanks for the tip there :rockon: