welcome to ByteSizedReviews.com

HomeReviewsArticlesGamesCompare Prices at US shops for cheapest prices :: Pricebomb USBest BuysLinksAbout UsContact UsFilesNews
Latest Reviews
Intel Core 2 Duo Review
Foxconn C51XEM2AA 8EKRS2H Motherboard Re
Asus P5W DH Deluxe Motherboard Review
Cooler Master iGreen 430W PSU Review
MSI K8N Diamond Plus Review
More ...


Reviews
Category: Motherboards
Manufacturer: Microstar
MSI K7N2G-ILSR nForce2
Posted by: Jeff Philips on 10th of June 2003

Introduction

This review came about as somewhat of a fluke, since this wasn't the motherboard that I had planned to get for my bro's PC. I was actually looking for an Epox 8RDA+ as an nForce2 Ultra400 replacement for the already installed Asus A7V266-E that was performing quite well in some respects considering it's age, but we wanted more - especially since the new Radeon9500Pro, RAM and AthlonXP1800 were showing much promise in the overclocking department, and certain benchmarks scores were decidedly on the low side.

The A7V foiled our overclocking attempts on several fronts by not having enough frequncy dividers for the AGP/PCI to FSB ratios, not having enough voltage adjustments (and none for the DDR or AGP/IO voltage, pretty much only the CPU), left us with a max FSB of 140Mhz stable giving a CPU speed of a little over 1.6Ghz (11.5x140=1610Mhz). At first, this seemed like the max the CPU would do at this multiplier since the temps were climbing to around 130F using a SwiftechMCX462 and a screaming Vantec Tornado fan. We were also hesitant to unlock the processor, in part because it's not a quick or simple process for what seemed like a dubious gain at this point. The RAM was purring along happily at even the highest FSB we managed on this mobo at the most aggressive settings that were available - 154MHz at CAS2-2-2-5-1; nothing to sneeze at, and SiSandra was reporting a 97% efficiency of the bus's max theorhetical throughput. Very good there indeed. 3dMark around this point was a tad over 1900 - completely underwhelming for this vid card and CPU combo.


So, after battering the system with various utilities and benchmarks, the motherboard seemed to be the weakest link.....so, buh-bye. I was also *very* impressed at the scores floating around the web for the nForce2 boards (and the KT400a's too), particularly the A7N8X and the 8RDA+. The Asus seemed to be the board to have, sporting all the goodies but the 8RDA+ was no slouch either and the $45 difference was the deciding factor between the two.

A trip to Fry's to pick up an 8RDA+ proved fruitless - they only had one left. It had the "infamous Red Sticker of Death (IRSD[TM]). The sticker also said "missing IO shield--since the nForce2's have decidedly nonstandard rear panels, so we ruled that out immediately. The Asus A7N8XDeluxe was there, but it was $160. We decided on a board that we'd read no reviews on, or really heard of before - the MSI K7N2G. What made us pick this board was;
1)It was red(!) and matched the 9500Pro (bling bling!)
2)it was an nForce2 (although *not* the new nForce2Ultra)
3)It had *WAY* more bundled/included features than any of the other boards that were under $150
4)It was only $99.90 :)

Don't get the impression that a red PCB is a *really* important factor for us, but I *will* say that it definitely made us look more closely at it than if it was the ugly brown-gold color. Plus, bling bling is always nice to have! heheheh. Getting it home and looking through the box, I was pleasantly surprised to see the right amount of included connectors/cables/goodies.
Select Page:

Find and compare prices for 'MSI K7N2G-ILSR nForce2' at Pricebomb.com [] or Pricebomb.co.uk []



© Copyright 2000-2010, ByteSizedReviews.com. All Rights Reserved [Privacy Policy]
Hot Deals

More ...