Somewhere on teh intarweb "Paul" typed:
> ~misfit~ wrote:
>> Hey all,
>>
>> I'm Intel all the way at the moment. However, a friend bought a
>> built-up 'gaming machine' (I've mentioned it before here, it's been
>> nothing but trouble) using an Asus M3A motherboard, a Phenom 9500
>> CPU, 1x2GB DDR2 module and a 9600GT.
>>
>> The machine's abeen a nightmare. Firstly it was supplied with a PSU
>> that was barely capable of 300W (Tt 420W). I replaced it with a
>> reasonable 510W PSU, reinstalled Windows (don't ask!), updated the
>> BIOS and it seemed alright for a while. I showed him how to raise
>> vcore if it kept crashing. Well, yesterday he rang me and asked about a
>> replacement mobo. He's
>> raised vcore all the way (!) in BIOS, 1.550V and it's still
>> crashing. I expressed concern at the high voltage but he assured me
>> that the two hardware monitoring apps I'd given him, HWMonitor and
>> CPU-Z both say that the vcore is only 1.2xxV when in Windows. I also
>> got him to raise VDIMM to (at the moment) 2.05V. He doesn't have
>> another stick of DDR2 to try and I only have what's in this machine
>> and I'm loathe to mess with it. My luck hasn't been great of late.
>> :-/ I've been sick so I advised him to get a single 1GB stick of DDR2 -
>> 800 and try that alone. However, if that doesn't work he wants me to
>> advise on a good mobo. (and fit it, reinstall Windows...) I like
>> Asus personally (followed by Gigabyte) but the vanilla M3A model
>> that he has, going by Googling, seems to have been a lemon. As I
>> mentioned, I'm not au fait with current AMD boards or chipsets so a
>> suggestion or two would be nice. :-) He'll pay between NZ$200 and
>> $300. (US$150 - $200 by the time it gets here?) Also, he's said that
>> this is the last time he ever buys a PC on impulse. I've built the
>> last two machines for him and they've been trouble-free. He's rather
>> surprised that a PC can be this much trouble, LOL. Another thing, I've
>> heard that the first Phenoms, the 9x00 range,
>> were 'flaky', that the 9x50 are much better. However, surely they're
>> not *that* bad that he needs to replace his CPU?
>>
>> All input appreciated. He's desperate and is going to be calling me
>> soon. I'll look around but anyone with a positive experience with an
>> AM2+ mobo that they want to share would be great. Also, any comments
>> on the above; RAM? CPU?
>>
>> The clowns that threw this machine together were, IMO, getting rid of
>> troublesome or slow-moving stock. The PSU was a lemon, the mobo
>> won't work with LAN drivers off the supplied CD, nobody's buying the
>> 9x00 Phenoms now the 9x50 ones are around... These guys are that
>> incompetent that they didn't remove the jumper from the Seagate
>> 500Gb 7200.11 HDD that limits it to SATA I speed.
>>
>> Anyway, I digress. Suggestions appreciated. Oh, I'm in New Zealand
>> so mobo availablility could be limited.
>>
>> TIA.
>
> There is a list here, of boards with better Vcore regulators. But this
> would be more of an issue if you had a higher end processor (9850).
>
> http://event.asus.com/mb/140w/
S'funny, the Asus specs page for the M3A has "*Supports CPUs up to 95W."
written there in what looks like an addition to the original specs. It's in
a larger font. The 9500 *is* 95W, therefore, by the leter of Asus site,
unsupported. However, in a contradiction, the Asus supported CPU list for
the M3A lists some 125W CPUs. I think that they've changed the specs page
but haven't got around to changing the supported CPU page. The board is a
lemon.
> And when I checked the price on the M3A32, it was over the NZ$300
> limit. I think it is also cursed by only having one PS/2 port (which
> matters
> to some people). I used this to get some pricing.
>
> http://www.pricespy.co.nz
Alas, I gave up on NZ Pricespy a long time ago. Fully 70% of deals that
sound too good tobe true are. They claim no stock or similar. However, I
very much appreciate your time and effort Paul.
> I notice that search engine only indexes by title line, so if you use
> "AM2" as a search term, it doesn't manage to list all the AM2
> motherboards!
> You could go with something from the previous generation. The M2N-SLI
> Deluxe has a good set of connectors on the back. It is an AM2 board, but
> AM2+ processors are backward compatible (just need the right BIOS).
> The HT bus won't run as fast (no big deal) and the memory controller may
> not go to
> astronomical speeds. But it might be a cheaper solution. There are
> 1600 reviews on Newegg, so you should be able to get a good idea of
> how much of a dud it is.
Thanks.
> I don't really enjoy shopping for AM2/AM2+, because the reviews tend
> to be depressing.
Yeah. Part of the reason I'm using Intel again after several years with AMD.
> Another option, is to use this Motherboard Selector at AMD. It lists
> motherboards versus your processor selection.
>
> http://products.amd.com/en-us/RecommendedMBFilter.aspx
Much appreciated, thanks. However, in my reply to Phil I've mentioned that
it's probably working fine using a single 1GB stick or RAM (at least I
haven't heard).
Thanks again Paul, you're an asset to this group. :-)
--
Shaun.
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