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Application:

A64 939 Motherboard

Provided by:

Soltek

Available at:

Newegg

MSRP:

$125

Availability:

Now

Review by:

Matt

Edited by:

Scott

Review date:

December 28th, 2004
   
 


Features

     As mentioned earlier the layout on the Soltek is simply awesome. Gone are the days of removing your memory to install a graphics card and vice versa. No longer will you have to manipulate your ATX PSU cable around your CPU cooler, and make sure you have a 18in floppy cable.

 
 
     This has been a typical problem area, but with the Soltek you won't have to worry about removing anything to install something. There is an abundance of room around every component that can be taxed and heated up which means good stability so long as you have some case cooling to help out.
 
 
The VIA chipset is pretty obvious here. We had no problems with the onboard audio of the K8TPro.
 
 
      The K8TPro does a good job of pasting its chipset cooler, but with no fan it's going to be relying on your case cooling to be a stable overclocker. Of course that's mainly theory, but why take the risk to only find out afterwards? We took precautions and mounted a Micro Cool chipset cooler on the Soltek board before we even lit it up.
 
This should be a factory option on every 939 motherboard.
 
 
      The K8T800 Pro chipset from VIA may be inferior to the NF-3 ultra chipset when it comes to benchmarking a 939, but in this case we were quite surprised at how well the Soltek performed once the BIOS was optimized. In our eyes the K8T800 Pro chipset is a really good chipset, and is extremely stable under stressful conditions. Once overclocked it performs really well under a mild overclock. If I were to describe what that means it would be saying the NF-3 has more horsepower, whereas the VIA has more grunt.
 
 
     The phase arrangement appears to be three phase given the number of mosfets on the motherboard. We cooled these too with a sink kit we had lying around. The cooling of your components is very important in overclocking instances, and the Soltek gets extra points in that department due to the amount of space given around the components that will heat up the most.
 
 
     The VIA southbridge does most of the duty on 939 boards (754 too). Notice the LED diagnostic display. I have grown to love these displays since you no longer have to run a speaker to read beep codes in case something goes wrong. You just look up the code(s) being displayed and look them up in the motherboard manual or "board book". Notice the three SATA headers, the two in conjunction with one another operate from the VIA SATA RAID, and the single one is for the Promise SATA/RAID. The second Promise SATA header is located by the yellow IDE header.
 
 
The second Promise SATA/RAID header is located underneath the Soltek BIOS ROM.