The power connector is positioned under the memory slots. The voltage regulator is an 8-phase analogue part, although we would have prefefred a digital VRM. The ASUS P3K Deluxe is of course an "all-solid" design, and was expected initially at a €200,- price tag. The colour scheme is quite pleasing, a black PCB with yellow and black memory slots and red and black SATA connectors North Bridge Voltage Reference: Auto, 0.67x, 0.61x North Bridge Voltage: Auto, 1.25V to 1.70V in 0.15V increments Transaction Booster: Auto, disable, enableĬlock Over-Charging Mode: Auto / 700 / 800 / 900 / 1000 mVĬore 2 Duo: 6x-11x in 1X increments - Core 2 Duo, downwards unlockedĬore 2 Extreme: 6x-16X, downwards unlockedĬPU Voltage: auto, 1.1000V to 1.7000V in 0.0125V incrementsĬPU Voltage Reference: Auto, 0.63x, 0.61x, 0.59x, 0.57xĬPU Voltage Damper: Auto, disable, enableĬPU PLL Voltage: Auto, 1.50V to 1.80V in 0.10V incrementsĭRAM Voltage: Auto, 1.80V to 2.55V in 0.05V incrementsįSB Termination Voltage: Auto, 1.20V to 1.50V in 0.10V increments PCIe Frequency: Auto, 100 to 150 MHz in 1MHz increments
JMicro JMB363 SATA II RAID 0, 1/IDE controllerĢx Dual-Channel DDR2-slots for PC2-5400U/PC2-6400U memory up to 8GBĦ-Port SATA II featuring RAID 0, 1, 5, 0+1, JBODīus Speeds: Auto, 200MHz to 800MHz in 1MHz increments
Is the P35 a worthy successor to the P965, or is it just a me too chipset? This is the first high-end P35 motherboard in our labs.