Anand Tech Report Card Rating 90/B+
CPU Interface | Slot-1 |
Chipset | Intel 440BX |
L2 Cache | N/A (on-chip) |
Form Factor | ATX |
Bus Speeds | 50 /66 / 75 / 83 / 100 / 103 / 112 / 133 MHz |
Clock Multipliers | 2.0x - 8.0x |
Voltages Supported | 1.3v - 3.5v (Auto-Detect) |
Memory Slots | 3 168pin DIMM Slots (EDO/SDRAM) |
Expansion Slots | 1 AGP Slot 4 PCI Slots 3 ISA Slots (1 Shared / 3 Full Length) |
BIOS | Award BIOS |
Expandability seems to be virtually standard on almost all of the BX boards out today, the 4 PCI, 3 ISA, 1 AGP peripheral card expansion configuration is plenty for average users, and the 3 DIMM slots on-board the P2XBL should be adequate for most user's needs. The layout of the P2XBL is almost identical to the ASUS P2B, in a somewhat cramped ATX form factor board.
The P2XBL is configured via the use of a fairly simple Dip-Switch setup to control the clock multiplier, with the Bus Speed auto-configured by the BIOS or manually set in the Setup. You can choose from a list of Bus speeds ranging from 50 - 133MHz, all of which boot when used with PC100 SDRAM. If you notice, the Chipset Features Setup of the P2XBL's Award BIOS doesn't list any options to configure any SDRAM Timings...so how are these timings set? By using the Serial Presence Detect ROM on PC100 SDRAM the P2XBL automatically configures your SDRAM for the best possible balance between stability and performance, it is for this reason that the P2XBL is the only board out of the roundup to date that managed to boot at 133MHz. |
Although the ABIT BX6 and the AOpen AX6B both support this feature of SDRAM Auto-Configuration, it seems as if the P2XBL takes matters completely into its own hands, which means for one thing that those of you with regular SDRAM (no SPDROM on-board) will be out of luck when it comes to achieving the best combination of stable/fast memory timings. It also means that if the P2XBL encounters a communication error between the Chipset and the SDRAM you will suffer in the end, possibly plagued by instability. |
The motherboard itself appears to be designed with quality in mind. The presence of only 3 DIMM slots, like with the ASUS P2B, eliminates the need for any external DRAM Data Buffers, and the placement of the 14 mid-sized capacitors around the CPU Slot Interface and the DIMM slots account for this board's stability during normal operation. Like all other BX motherboards, in order to keep the intense heat production of the BX Chipset under control, the P2XBL features a decent sized eye-catching orange heatsink on the chipset itself.
The P2XBL manual is fairly thorough, although still lacks the depth necessary to be placed on the same platform as the ASUS, AOpen, and ABIT manuals. The documented settings include all clock multipliers ranging from 3.0x - 8.0x, the latter few which are indicated as being Reserved for Future Microprocessors, although it is highly unlikely that we'll ever see a Pentium II - 800 running on a BX board at 100 x 8.0.
Concluding "The Good" section of this review, the price of the DFI P2XBL can't be beat, at $169 the P2XBL even makes the relatively affordable ABIT BX6 appear to be overpriced. If we have learned anything from the PC Hardware world it is that 9 out of 10 times, you get what you pay for in this industry - leading us to "The Bad" part of this review...
First of all, the positioning of the Dip Switch block on the P2XBL couldn't be worse, it is snugly fit between the Pentium II's SEC Slot and a mid-sized capacitor, making a tiny pen or screw driver almost a pre-requisite for configuring this motherboard (unless you have extremely tiny fingers).
Secondly, while the 133MHz setting did boot, the system wasn't stable enough to complete a full run of Winstone, this could be expected due to the use of 8ns SDRAM whose theoretical limit is 125MHz. Unfortunately, the 112MHz setting was quite erratic as well, leading to the conclusion that the P2XBL's Memory Timing Auto Detect could be improved just a little bit, since all the other motherboards tested that supported the 112MHz bus speed setting had no problem running the Corsair PC100 SDRAM tested at that speed.
Finally, the performance of the P2XBL could be improved just a little bit, it fell behind in all of the Winstone tests, therefore completely dropping it out of the race for the Best BX Board out.
DFI P2XBL Chipset Features Setup |
|||
Item | Recommended Settings | ||
EDO/SDRAM 66/75/83MHz Bus | SDRAM 100/133MHz Bus | Safe | |
DRAM Data Integrity Mode: | Non-ECC | Non-ECC | Non-ECC |
System BIOS Cacheable: | Enabled | Enabled | Disabled |
Video BIOS Cacheable: | Enabled | Enabled | Disabled |
Video RAM Cacheable: | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
8 Bit I/O Recovery Time: | 1 | 4 | 4 |
16 Bit I/O Recovery Time: | 1 | 2 | 2 |
Memory Hole At 15M-16M: | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
Passive Release: | Enabled | Enabled | Disabled |
Delayed Transaction: | Enabled | Enabled | Disabled |
AGP Aperture Size (MB): | 64 | 64 | 64 |
Recommended SDRAM: Corsair PC100 SDRAM
SDRAM Tested: 1 x 64MB Corsair PC100 SDRAM
Manufacturer: Corsair Microsystems
Purchase Web-Site: http://www.nf-ny.com
In recent times, choosing a motherboard cannot be completely determined by a Winstone score. Now, many boards come within one Winstone point of each other and therefore the need to benchmark boards against each other falls. Therefore you shouldn't base your decision entirely on the benchmarks you see here, but also on the technical features and advantages of this particular board, seeing as that will probably make the greatest difference in your overall experience.
How I Tested
Each benchmark was run a minimum of 2 times and a maximum of 5 times, if the motherboard failed to complete a single test within the 5 allocated test runs the OS/Software was re-installed on a freshly formatted Hard Drive and the BIOS settings were adjusted to prevent the test from failing again. All such encounters were noted at the exact time of their occurrence.
Business Winstone 98 was run at each individually tested clock speed, if reliable scores were achieved with the first two test runs of the suite an average of the two was taken and recorded as the final score at that clock speed. If the test system displayed erratic behavior while the tests were running or the results were incredibly low/high the tests were re-run up to 5 times and an average of all the test runs was taken and recorded at the final score at that clock speed
After each motherboard was tested a complete format of the test hard drive was initiated and the OS/benchmarking software was re-installed afterwards a defragment was initiated using Windows 95's Disk Defragmentation Utility
Tests using AGP Video cards were run under Winstone 97 and Winstone 98
No foreign drivers were present in the test system other than those required for the system to function to the best of its ability
All foreign installation files were moved to a separate partition during the test as to prevent them from effecting the test results
All tests were conducted at 800 x 600 x 256 colors
Test Configuration |
|
Processor(s): | Pentium II - 300 Retail Pentium II - 333 OEM Pentium II - 350 OEM Pentium II - 400 OEM |
RAM: | 1 - 64MB Corsair PC100 SDRAM DIMM |
Hard Drive(s): | Western Digital Caviar AC21600H |
Video Card(s): | Matrox Millennium II (4MB WRAM - AGP) |
Bus Master Drivers: | Intel v3.01 |
Video Drivers: | MGA Millennium 4.03.00.3410 |
Operation System(s): | Windows 95 Service Release 2 |
Ziff Davis Winstone - Windows 95 Performance |
||
Business Winstone 98 | Business Winstone 97 | |
Intel Pentium II - 300 (66 x 4.5) | --- | 64.9 |
Intel Pentium II - 300 (100 x 3.0) | --- | 65.9 |
Intel Pentium II - 350 (100 x 3.5) | --- | 69.6 |
Intel Pentium II Deschutes - 333 (66 x 5.0) | --- | 67.9 |
Intel Pentium II Deschutes - 350 (100 x 3.5) | 23.2 | 69.4 |
Intel Pentium II Deschutes - 400 (100 x 4.0) | 24.6 | 73.3 |
Intel Pentium II Deschutes - 336 (112 x 3.0) | Failed | Failed |
Intel Pentium II Deschutes - 448 (112 x 4.0) | Failed | Failed |
Intel Pentium II Deschutes - 399 (133 x 3.0) | Failed | Failed |
If your belt is kind of tight, and you simply can't live without a BX board now, then the DFI P2XBL is probably the answer to your prayers. Otherwise, save up an extra 10 bucks and pick up the ABIT BX6.
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