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Out of the box, we get our first
look at the AW8D. The board is dominated by the Silent OTES
cooling system and matching blue Mosfets. I am immediately
impressed with the openness of the design. Nothing feels crowded
together or forced, even the CPU mounting leaves plenty of room for
aftermarket cooling.

The Silent OTES system uses a
combination of heat sinks and heat pipes to reduce the need for noisy
active cooling. Unlike some of the ABIT motherboards featuring
DUAL OTES systems, the Silent OTES system requires no fans at all.
The resulting back ports look a little strange without the audio but
ABIT has moved the audio to a riser board to make room for this
innovative solution.

The
top of the AW8D shows of the MOSFET cooling and gives a better idea of
the size of the heat sinks. Here you can also see the three fan
controllers located along the edge and one slightly hidden next to the
24 pin power socket. The placement of the 4 pin power socket so
close to the top edge is a
welcome change as well.

The Intel 975X chipset and LGA 775
provide support all current Socket 775 processors up to the Pentium D
965 series. The AW8D does not support the new Conroe processors.
Check your Processor compatibility
here.
The AW8D does support DDR2 in speeds up to PC2 8000 and up to 8 GB with
the right operating system and is Windows Vista ready.

The bottom of the AW8D is host to
the device controllers and card slots. You may have already noticed the
AW8D has very few slots for cards. There are two PCI-E
16x ports (8x in Crossfire mode) one PCI port , two PCI-E 1x slots and the AUDIOMAX slot.
With the AW8D, ABIT has chosen to go with a single IDE controller facing
the front of the case and relocated the floppy controller to the bottom
of the board. The result is a design that benefits SATA based
installs and seems to advocate the floppy to an afterthought. As I
usually only need a floppy during the initial Windows installation, this
is less of a bother than I expected but some users will find the
location challenging to cable. The two fan controllers you see
here bring the total to a whopping 5 plus the CPU cooler!

From this view you can better see
the layout of the rest of the ports. The SATA ports are divided
between the two Silicon Image Sil 3132 ports to the left and the four
Intel ICH7R controlled ports to the right. IEEE 1394 support is
located on the back edge and can be seen as red in the above picture.
The two internal USB ports are located by the Sil 3132 ports and are
colored blue. The inclusion of a POST code display is a welcome addition
for both status and troubleshooting information. The odd 12 volt socket
found at the lower left is used to provide auxiliary power to the PCI-E ports. The AW8D
manual states the minimum recommended power supply is a 300 Watt unit.
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