DFI nForce4: SLI and Ultra for Mad Overclockers
by Wesley Fink on February 5, 2005 9:30 AM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
DirectX 8 & OpenGL Gaming Performance
The DFI nForce4 boards continue their outstanding performance in gaming benchmarks. In almost every benchmark, we find the DFI at the top or near the top in performance. Those who will never overclock will be very happy with the performance of the DFI. Enthusiasts will be pleased to see outstanding performance both at stock speeds and in record-breaking overclocking.
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bigtoe36 - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
regarding the NF3 939 i hear NF3 may disapear soon so we may never see an AGP version of this board.Wesley Fink - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
DFI has advised that the final nF4 product line will consist of 3 models. The information on page 2 has been revised to reflect the latest information.bigtoe36 - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
The extra molex is to add extra power to the board especially when using 2 video cards.The chipset fan is very quiet and does work quite well. When stressed the chipset does get quite warm though but I have seen no instability on my boards here and all use stock chipset cooling.
The board will work with 20 and 24 pin ATX connectors.
The SLI bridge can only be sold with SLI boards, you will be able to but it seperately though.
jwix - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
I've been waiting and waiting and waiting for this board. Finally, Anandtech posts this review late last night just as someone posts in the forum that the board is stocked at ZZF. I surf to ZZF. Indeed, the board is in stock. I quicky read the review then return to ZZF to buy. Board is out of Stock. *sigh* I'm betting the price of this board goes up before it goes down.LoneWolf15 - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
A good review overall. Some questions I'd have liked to see answered though:a)As others have said, what is the 5.25" Molex power connector on the board for?
b)ATX power connectors - does the board require the 24-pin, or, like other boards, will a 20pin +4pin P4 connector run it just fine?
c) I'd have liked a little more detail on the maglev chipset fan, was it noisy, the design, etc. I'm being picky, but it's a new feature and all of us get annoyed when a northbridge HSF fails, especially if it's in a location where you can't replace it with just anything due to expansion cards.
d)Question on the SLI finger-board: It seems like it doesn't come with the non-SLI boards, if it doesn't, how useful is it to be able to convert this to SLI? I've not seen retailers selling them separately.
I like the boards. Only minor gripe is, I still need an onboard serial port, I use it for things like configuring a router now and again. Hopefully they include a backplate for it at least, though I'd doubt it.
Burbot - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
#22: It would be a good idea to look back at history of industries. When was the last time a sprinter broke a record by 8%? Probaby in first days of organized sprint. When was the last time processor speed increased by 8%? Every A64 200MHz speedbump gave slightly bettter improvements. 8% is difference between 2.4 and 2.6 GHz Athlon FX. Does one demolish the other? Or it is "merely" a fair improvement? I side with the latter.I do not want to diminish DFI effort, but I'd reserve "demolished" to huge improvements, as in "that A64 machine demolishes my Duron box".
lsman - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
#14. it provides extra current when under SLI mode so its more "stable"Aquila76 - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
I've said it before, I'll ask for it again:SLI Mobo Roundup.
Please.
byvis - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
The board is nice, but not outstanding, incredible, top performing, etc... Jesus AnandTech I have never seen you so biased. I hope that the benchmarks don't lie. Poor preview, poor...Wesley Fink - Wednesday, February 2, 2005 - link
ChineseDemocrcyGNR - Thank you for all your replies to reader's questions.#22 - Good analogy and a very accurate descrip-tion of breaking records at the top end. New CPU's are often hyped to the heavens and often they don't even do 8% more performance than the one they replace. Breaking new ground at the top is quite different than 8% in the middle.