Presshd.com

Technology | Gadget | Electronic | Hardware | Software

Posts Tagged ‘Motherboards’

Upgrading Motherboards and CPUs

Monday, May 4th, 2009

The Intel Rig

The motherboard and CPU upgrade path on the Intel system is a far simpler affair than Henry’s complete AMD socket nightmare. Intel has been running DDR2 on its chipsets for far longer than the Texan company, and the LGA775 socket too has been around for long enough that our old 650i motherboard is more than capable of running the 65nm Core 2 Quads.

There is, however, always the problem of bottlenecks in the system. Were we to simply upgrade the processor alone the benefits would be pretty negligible. As good as the X1900XTX was in its day this has now become as much of a limiting factor in our rig as the slow processor. Upgrading to a 2.6GHz Core 2 Duo will net us an extra few frames per second in most games, while pushing the boat out and slotting in a low-end quad chip gives us hardly anything extra on top of that.

By coupling the CPU upgrade with even a halfway decent GPU, like the bargain – basement 9600 we instantly see a massive performance hike over the 2GHz dual-core with the same graphics card. Although the first generation PCI Express slot will still limit any higher spec GPUs you try and throw at it.

We’ve found the performance space between the faster dual-core and the quad is far less. Performance is better in game, but we’re only talking the difference of a few frames, not the 10fps jump that we saw going up in clockspeed on the dual-core side. Where you will see the most difference is in multimedia applications and simply playing back HD content. What you have to ask yourself is: are you an all out gamer or do you need your PC to perform in other, more productive tasks? If you’re the productive sort then a quad chip is the way to roll.

The AMD Rig

It was around this point that Henry made a rather enlightening discovery, the sticks of memory from his computer, he found that he had, in fact, been running on DDR RAM for the past six months. Not DDR2. Not even DDR3. But plain old, ageing DDR memory. Still, the fact that he managed to get 50 frames per second out of GRID says a lot about hardware that’s supposedly obsolete.

The next step, then, was to upgrade the motherboard and processor. We ditched the Athlon 64 X2 4800+ processor, in favor of the beefier socket AM2+ 7750 Black Edition ($l00). During this process, we also installed 4GB DDR2 memory into the new AM2 motherboard. The grand total of this kind of upgrade would be about $l65, but that’s excluding the graphics card. We benched a low, reasonable graphics card and high-performance one to see how the rig balanced out.

With our low-end NVIDIA 7900GT installed, there turned out to be absolutely no benefit in doing the upgrade. Frame rates were identical to the original rig’s, apart from World in Conflict, which bizarrely enough dropped a frame. So if you’re going to invest $160 in the above gubbins, you’ll also need to drop the cash for a semi-decent graphics card at the same time. There’s no one shot solution here it would seem.

The 9600GT proved to be a fair match for the setup. The benchmarks we got weren’t exactly through the roof, but World in Conflict comfortably gained a few frames per second. GRID barely changed at all, but remained eminently playable. And it’s a good idea to bear in mind that we were testing Far Cry 2 in Ultra settings – which will stretch any graphics card.

Adding a GTX260 to the mix resulted in even better scores, however. Far Cry 2′s performance doubled in both resolutions, and GRID zoomed past any previous scores. If you’ve got a semi-decent graphics card and you’re on a budget, our advice would be to upgrade everything else first, then wait for cards like the GTX260 to drop a little in price before snapping them up.

The next step up is akin to putting money laxatives in your wallet for about four years. We added a Phenom 810 processor ($260), an Asus motherboard ($250) and two gigabytes of OCZ DDR3 ram ($85), which brings us to $595 of silicon goodness. It’s at this point that you have to toss a coin between upgrading your PC’s innards, or buying a whole new chunk of PC, such as one of CyberPower’s similarly-specced rigs.

Naturally, we did experience the best frame rates with this setup, but it comes at quite a price. Even the 7900GT experienced a boost, and when coupled with the 9600GT the advantage was massively noticeable. The GTX260 offered the best performance, but at this point you’re looking at spending almost $800 on components – and that’s excluding a case which you may well need if you’re planning to upgrade to one of NVIDIA’s latest space hogs.

Sandra Prior PhotoAbout Author
For all your Discount Computer Parts, Notebook and Games requirements visit us at http://sacomputers.rr.nu and http://usacomputers.rr.nu.

The Ultimate Guide to Motherboards

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

This type of article will often try comparing a motherboard to a body part, like the kneecap, gallbladder or our favorite: the Islets of Langerhans. But that is almost as ridiculous as saying the processor is the most important part of a PC, like we’ve stupidly being using all those extra unnecessary components in our PCs all these years. In actuality, a motherboard defines a PC: dictating which processor can be used, the expansion capabilities, the memory supported and what abilities the PC will have as a final unit. Your choice of motherboard is key to what the PC will end up doing.

The next six months will see a fundamental change in the market too, with AMD and Intel both introducing new desktop platforms. Intel’s X58 chipset will offer support for the hotly anticipated ‘Nehalem’ processor – not only will this have a new socket (probably called something like LGA1366), but it will also boast an integrated triple-channel, DDR3 memory controller, as well as a new CPU interconnect called QuickPath. AMD’s 800 series meanwhile will support the new AM3 sockets.

As with every other component, motherboards have come a long way from the original IBM PC of 1981. If you’re old enough to remember the first De Lorean DMC-12, perhaps the original PC XT motherboard still casts some dark shadow over your memory? At the time there were certainly wonders to behold; these days, they simply look a mess with integration the last thing on the designers mind and all the I/O having to be decidedly off-board.

The XT had all the same parts as today’s motherboards, they just worked a little slower. Instead of having a dedicated, integrated chipset, the XT used discrete off-the-shelf components: clock generators, DMA controller, interrupt handler, keyboard and bus controllers, a system timer and a real-time clock, along with the CPU, FPU, ROM and system memory. That’s eleven individual integrated-chips along with all the additional components, adding up to one expensive mother of a board. What we might recognize today as a motherboard didn’t appear until 1986, when a company called Chips and Technology offered a single-chipset solution, by rolling most of the previous parts into one. Requiring only a few support chips, it simplified motherboard design, reduced costs and started the trend of ever-greater integration.

Almost all motherboards still use a twin-chipset design, commonly called the North and Southbridges. Intel tries to call it a hub these days, but we’re not sure why. This dual-chipset design balances functionality and manufacturing considerations. The Northbridge is the high-speed part, sitting between the processor bus and connecting it to the graphics, memory – okay, so not AMD – and interface buses. At the other end of the motherboard, the Southbridge handles all the I/O; ATA interfaces, USB, networking and PCI; any legacy interfaces such as floppy drives and ISA slots is often done via a ‘Super 10′ chip.

Chipset makers often offer alternative Southbridges for premium and budget boards. It’s amazing just how robust this design has been. NVIDIA and SLi have offered single-chip solutions in the past, but the vast majority of solutions share features across the pair. In future, it does seem the Southbridge will be relegated to less and less importance, but it’ll still be around at least into 2010, even if it’s just to provide extra PCI Express lanes.

How do the two bridges communicate? And how do they manage to transfer such large

amounts of data so quickly? Originally, the PCI bus was used; perfectly adequate when hard drives ran at 8MB/S and the parallel port was most people’s idea of a high-speed external interface. But with data demands rising exponentially, Intel introduced a dedicated quad-pumped Hub Bus that ran twice as fast as PCI. This turned out to be a revolutionary move: nowadays, every manufacturer uses this type of high-speed link. It’s essential with so much data flying around the Southbridge. Intel now uses DMI running at 2GB/s, VIA has V-Link, SiS has MuTIOL, while HyperTransport has been used by AMD and NVIDIA. Despite the different technologies, they all do the same thing: transport data at high-speed. This bus system also helps simplify motherboard design as the serial links require far fewer physical connections, resulting in faster design turnaround, fewer physical layers and a reduced price.

It is a recurring theme in modern motherboards that old parallel buses are being replaced by new, shiny, high-speed serial ones. The only major exception to this rule being the memory bus: reason enough for users to love serials – from a manufacturing point of view, it simplifies design and cuts costs, as fewer numbers of lines are easier to route around the motherboard and result in less layers being required, significantly reducing costs.

The most obvious addition to the serial party was the introduction of PCI Express. This usurped PCI and AGP as the primary way to add graphics and expansion cards to a PC. Attached to the South or Northbridge, PCIe slots have multiple lanes associated with them -16 for a graphics slot offering 4GB/S worth of bandwidth. The new PCIe v2 standard doubles this rate and is supported by all the latest chipsets. The biggest side-effect of PCIe was the ability for motherboards to suddenly support multiple graphics cards.

As you probably know, NVIDIA offers SLI and AMD CrossFire – the latter also supported on Intel’s high-end X chipsets – for multiple GPU support. Whilst twin 16-lane PCIe slots have been the norm until now, expect new boards to offer three slots, as we move into a period where GPUs will be used for physics acceleration. So it’s a case of more the merrier… Oh, our poor steaming PSUs.

Sandra Prior PhotoAbout Author
Subscribe to Sandra Prior’s Online Newsletter and get up to date Computer Technology News delivered right to your email box for free. See website for details http://usacomputers.rr.nu and http://sacomputers.rr.nu.