Buy Cheap EVGA 113-YW-E115-TR nForce 730i SLI and GeForce 9300 Intel 775 GPU Motherboard 
Buy Low Price From Here Now The nForce 730i SLI Motherboard from EVGA is SLI performance at a great price.The features of the 113-YW-E115-TR include GeForce Boost Technology, NVIDIA Pure Video HD up to 1080P, NVIDIA PhysX Ready, NVIDIA CUDA, support for Intel LGA775 processors from Core 2 Quad to Celeron, NVIDIA nForce 730i MCP, on board graphics e-Geforce 9300 with 450MHz GPU and shader clock of 1200, a Front Side Bus up to 1333MHZ, Dual Channel DDR2 up to 800MHz with 1 PCIe x16 expansion slots, 2 PCIe x1 slots, and 3 PCI slots, ATA 133 IDE, Serial ATA(SATA)/RAID:Serial ATA IIx6 with RAID 0,1,0+1,5, JBOD, Serial ATA II x2 with Raid 0 and 1 only, 8 channel Azalia HDA audio, Native Ethernet x 1, 8 USB 2.0 ports on board, and back panel i/o ports including 1 PS/2 keyboard, 1 PS/2 mouse, 1x LAN 10/100/1000, 1 set of audio jacks, coaxial SPIDIF output, Optical SPDIF output, HDMI, VGA, DVI-D output, four USB 2.0 slots, and ATX form factor.Built for Microsoft Vista with NVIDIA nForce chipset driver for the 730i SLI chipset, GeForce 9300 GPU, and HD Audio Drivers. Product comes with a one year warranty with an additional year free with registration.. Product must be registered at www.evga.com within 30 days of purchase to get the second year of warranty
Readmore Technical Details
- NVIDIA 730i SLI Chipset with support for Intel LGA775 processors from Core 2 Quad to Celeron
- On board graphics with Geforce 9300 with 450 MHz GPU and shader clock of 1200 MHz
- Supports Dual Channel DDR2 Memory up to 800 MHz
- Includes one PCIe x16 slot and two Pcie x1 slots
- 8 Channel Azalia HD Audio and NVIDIA Pure Video HD up to 1080P
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"It is an OK Board, but it is Not for the Enthusiast Gamer." 2009-08-23
By J. Sterling
I used this motherboard for my new gaming computer, and while it is a nice board for the price, it does have its cons.
My first problem with this was the ram timings. I had the Pi-Black DDR2 800Mhz RAM, and this motherboard would not let it run to its advertised settings. One change in any of the timings, and the motherboard would revert back to defaults. I even did a small overclock on my E8400, and same issue. Most of the people on the EVGA boards have been crying for a BIOS update, but since the last time I used this board (I'm on a 790i Ultra now), there hasn't a BIOS update to my knowledge.
My second issue was the northbridge. The heatsink on the northbridge is held in by push pins. I hate push pins on heatsinks. Why? Because they are never completely secured to the surface that they are trying to cool. The northbridge heatsink on this motherboard would rock back and forth to the touch. If any heatsink does this, it will not cool very well as a heatsink that is screwed down to its surface. You can probably mod the heatsink with screws, but I wouldn't bother. My northbridge ended up overheating a lot, even when I turned IDE, floppy controllers, onboard video, etc. off (ambient temps in my room are about 36-38C in the summer). I ended up trading this motherboard in for a 790i Ultra.
This board has potential, but the BIOS is just not ready for it. If EVGA issued out a BIOS that fixed half the problems that most are having with this board, then people will be happy with it. If you are looking for a budget board, I would go find something else.
EVGA is the best in the business, but this is one product that does not live up to their name.

"Working well so far" 2009-06-02
By D. Sanders (Irvine, CA)
This motherboard fit my needs nicely because I am not a gamer, so I didn't need top of the line graphics/3D performance. One important feature for me was the built-in RAID capability, so I could mirror my disks and not worry about losing my family photos if my hard drive crashes. Lots of SATA connectors so you can do RAID 5 also (which requires at least 3 disks) and still have slots for CD/DVD drives.
I put in an Intel E7400 CPU and 4GB Corsair RAM, and everything is running well with this board.
If there's one thing I'd change, it would be the location of the SATA connectors. They are positioned at the front edge of the board, facing outward, so you plug in the cables parallel to the board. Most other boards have their SATA connectors facing upward, more in the middle of the bard, so they are more protected and easier to plug and unplug cables. I've read of others breaking these connectors, as it would be easy to accidentally pull up on a plugged-in cable, breaking the plastic connector on the board.
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