Showing posts with label x58. Show all posts
Showing posts with label x58. Show all posts

14.5.11

EVGA X58 SLI - Recert

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EVGA X58 SLI Motherboard - Recertified Take advantage of the most significant architectural change in the x86 architecture in 13 years, the Intel Core i7. The EVGA X58 SLI introduces a new era for extreme performance. It is an X58-based motherboard that supports Intel's new generation extreme performance Core i7 Processors and both SLI and CrossFireX! Ten SATA ports with RAID 0, 1, 5, and 10 gives you plenty of storage options and the ability to use enterprise quality hard drives with speeds of up to 10,000 RPMs. Memory support includes up 6 DIMMs of Triple Channel DDR3 memory at speeds up to 1600MHz*. Its Super Hybrid Engine delivers world-record breaking performance or radically reduces power consumption depending on your need. Intel has brought back Hyperthreading technology and combined it with a native quad-core design to give support for 8 seperate threads in the new LGA1366 / Socket B CPU interface and their replacement for the old Front Side Bus technology, QuickPath Interconn
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2.10.10

MSI X58 Pro Core i7/Intel X58/6DDR3-1333/ATI CrossFireX/GbE/R/A/1394/ATX Motherboard

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GEO TREK LUNCH KIT
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Technical Details

- CPU Socket Type LGA 1366; CPU Type Intel Core i7; Quick Path; Chipsets; X58
- Number of Memory Slots 6x240pin (support for DDR3); DDR3 1066 / 1333 / 1600 (OC); Maximum Memory Supported Max: 24GB (DDR3); Triple Channel Memory Bus
- Expansion Slots: 3 x PCI Express 2.0 x16 ;PCI Slots 2. Storage Devices: PATA 1 x ATA100 2 Dev. Max; 6 + 2 SATA 3Gb/s; SATA RAID 0/1/5/10.
- Audio Channels 8 Channels
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Customer Buzz
 "OK board but IOH is very hot - design issue?" 2009-11-30
By Debojyoti Dutta (Santa Clara)
The board is ok once you get it right. I bought it because it was much cheaper than the others and I thought that most X58 boards should be similar in performance for someone who doesnt overclock. I was wrong. The IOH is very hot (~70degC on idle). I had pressed the heatsinks and it went down to 57C. Then I added a bigger CPU fan and the temps went up again to 80C on idle! My case is a decent one - antec solo. I was surprised that this is a common issue with lots of these boards. I should have checked before.



In hindsight I should have just got another board. Also, it wasnt stable with Corsair premium memory. Changed brands to OCZ and it has been stable (with a hot IOH). Hopefully the temps will go down when I change the case and add a spotcool fan. But this seems to be a design oversight.



I would not recommend this board unless someone got it at half the price of the other ones.

Customer Buzz
 "Terrible" 2009-11-07
By Anne A. Vitasek (Corsicana Texas)
[...] after buying this product, the box looked great and exciting, after opening it it got better but then the heat problem was very true, did exactly what he said as described, worked like a charm, but then noticed my memory modules was not seeing full 6 gigs, only 4 but after installing the HDD it would constantly crash blue always in the form of a memory crash, so i took all memory sticks out and only kept one in of course, ran through windows vista fine but after loading to vistas desktop got numerous errors from memory module still, after hours of figuring the motherboard out, turned out to be a defeat in the modules itself, in the middle of a RMA of this product, for anyone who is looking for a 3way sli, skip this board, this is by far the worst board i have ever worked with. no doubt, if you dont agree, buy the board like a did and youll see. real good board but still very buggy and needs to be reworked on, take this item off of amazon period

Customer Buzz
 "Shame on MSI" 2009-05-26
By Thom R. Spengler (Oregon)
If you are looking into making a Nehalem system, this isn't a bad board. It's far and away faster than my Core 2 Quad system. MSI has a good price on this system. However, you really need to "finish building" this motherboard for MSI.



The problem is over-heating on the x58 "Northbridge" IOH chip set. This is the chip with the big heatsink that says "MSI." With my proc running a cool 30C, the IOH was running a very hot +80C, so I put a fan on the IOH, but the chip temp only dropped to 70C (still too hot.) However the heatsink was very cool to the touch.



This made me think that the heatsink had a poor thermal bond to the IOH chip, so I pinched the nylon heatsink holders, pulled 'em out and slid off the heatsink. Heatsink was bonded by a flimsy piece of double-stick tape. I scraped the tape off with a fingernail (being carefull to not disturb the black insulating film,) applied a good heatsink compound and re-assembled the heatsink.



Voila! Heat problem solved, IOH down to 45C. If you're comfortable doing this modification, it's a great board for the $$. If not you might want to find another board, as a hot 80C degrees IOH just might burn up in a year or two... right after the warranty goes away.



NOTES: 1. You can find out more with a google search on "MSI hot x58 IOH"

2. You can see the chip temps by going into BIOS at boot and looking at Chipset Hardware Monitoring. 3. MSI *really* should offer an optional IOH heatsink that has mounting attachment threaded for a standard 40mm fan.


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22.6.10

ASRock X58 SUPERCOMPUTER/Core i7/Intel X58/1366/6DDR3-2000(OC)/ATI Quad CrossFireX/NVIDIA Quad SLI/V/2GbE/R/1394/ATX Motherboard

Buy Cheap ASRock X58 SUPERCOMPUTER/Core i7/Intel X58/1366/6DDR3-2000(OC)/ATI Quad CrossFireX/NVIDIA Quad SLI/V/2GbE/R/1394/ATX Motherboard


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ASRock X58 SUPERCOMPUTER/Core i7/Intel X58/1366/6DDR3-2000(OC)/ATI Quad CrossFireX/NVIDIA Quad SLI/V/2GbE/R/1394/ATX Motherboard
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Customer Buzz
 "FANTASTIC MOTHERBOARD! Asrock X58 SuperComputer" 2010-01-19
By S. Vega (california)
This is a great Socket 1366 Core i7 Motherboard. Have used it for 7 months and works great!


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4.5.10

MSI X58M 1366 Intel X58 uATX Intel Motherboard

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MSI X58M Motherboard Take advantage of the most significant architectural change in the x86 architecture in 13 years, the Intel Core i7. The MSI X58M introduces a new era for extreme performance. It is an X58-based motherboard that supports Intel’s new generation extreme performance Core i7 Processors and both SLI and CrossFireX! Six SATA ports with RAID 0, 1, 5, and 10. Memory support includes up to 24GB of Triple Channel DDR3 memory. Intel has brought back Hyperthreading technology and combined it with a native quad-core design to give support for 8 seperate threads in the new LGA1366 / Socket B CPU interface and their replacement for the old Front Side Bus technology, QuickPath Interconnect provides a system bus speed of up to 6.4GT/s. The two PCI-Express 2.0 slots can operate at either x16/x16/x1 or x16/x8/x8 to take full advantage of either 2 graphics cards.
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Technical Details

- MSI X58M Socket 1366 FSB 4.8*6.4 G/s CPU Support Core i7 Chipset Intel X58 SATA2 RAID PCI-E 16x - 2 Gen2 (16x+16x) PCI-e - 1 slots PCI - 1 slot
- 6 DDR3 Channels Memory Bus Triple Channel 1333+ Max 24GB 8 Channel Audio Dual GB LAN
- CrossFireX, 1394, Intel RAID 0,1,5,&10, SATA2, ATA133, eSATA, PCI-e Gen.2
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Customer Buzz
 "Works great, nice features" 2009-09-01
By R Gibbons (Silicon Valley, California)
This board is working great. Comes with good S/W (two CDs). Auto updates for BIOS. Good instructions. Has all the interface/connectors I wanted. Running with 6 DDR modules for 12 Gig. Hasn't crashed yet (Had it for 2 months, most reliable of the two dozen Computers I've owned).

Customer Buzz
 "MSI X58M" 2009-07-04
By Nestor F. Cruz
Overall, I give this product above average. There are few things that needs to better, such as:

1. Yje IOH/northbrige chipset get hot. The stock heatshink is inadequate. Solution; aftermarket like thermalright HR 05/IFX did a great job in bring it down to 42 C.



2.The layout for the two motherboard fan connector were in poor location. If you are using Dual slot video card like Nvidia gtx 280 or ATI 4870x2, this connector are impossible to connect.



3.The memory latching mechanism is too close to the long video cards.



$. The Floppy headers and overclok switch are unnessary item.



Other than these, the board is great and the low cost is added bonus.

Customer Buzz
 "MSI X58M" 2009-06-29
By Dale R. Weathers
I was looking for a motherboard under $[...] to use with my new Core I7 920 CPU. I read a review [...] that gave me the answer I was looking for. They gave it a great review. I was able to purchase this board for [...] because I got a [...] rebate for using my Amazon.com credit card on my very first purchase. That made this deal even sweeter. Great board, with a great price!!!! What more can you ask for? Thanks Amazon.com.


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23.4.10

MSI X58 Pro-E Core i7/Intel X58/6DDR3-1333/ATI CrossFireX/GbE/R/A/1394/ATX Motherboard

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MSI X58 Pro-E is using the Gen.2 DrMOS and APS power supply designs, keeping high performance and power savings in a beautiful balance. These technologies will provide excellent energy-saving capability and offers high-computing performance.MSI X58 Pro-E provides the split thermal system which is combined with great outlook and performance. Compared with old split thermal system, the design is using metal screws instead of push-pins which will improve heat dissipation.Additionally, X58Pro-E is comprises MSI's Exclusive technology - easy OC switch. This is the most quick and easy solution to adjust the CPU frequency and clock speeds. By breaking various overclocking levels into sections, the switch allows the user to shift to different levels of performance without opening the BIOS. X58 Pro-E can supply dual full-bandwidth x16 connections and one more x16 PCI Express slot that brings the maximum bandwidth premium systems for 3-way graphics.
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Technical Details

- MSI X58 Pro-E Socket 1366 FSB 4.8*6.4 G/s CPU Support Core i7 Chipset
- Six DDR3 Channels Memory Bus Triple Channel 1333+ Max 24GB 8 Channel Audio Dual GB LAN
- Gripping tall opening as well as energy assets in a pleasing balance
- Technologies will yield glorious energy-saving capacity
- Offers high-computing performance
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Customer Buzz
 "First one was defective, second one awesome." 2010-02-16
By Tim Martin (Wisconsin)
When I got my first motherboard and looked at the manual, I was very impressed with the features that this thing has. There are a tons of overclocking features on this board, including a reset, power, and Clear Cmos button right on the board. Plenty of plugins, including 3 USB headers,6 SATA,plus an ESATA right on the board itself. Room for three videocards.



The only problem I had was I could not get the three 2GB sticks of memory to show. The board and Windows only recognized 4GB. I tried three different kinds of memory and determined the board had a bad slot. Amazon was real nice to replace the motherboard, even at the 28 day of ownership. The new board works perfect.



I applaud Amazon and will buy all my electronics from them as I have already done in the past.





Customer Buzz
 "Excellent product so far..." 2009-12-25
By JN (Brooklyn, NY United States)
Although I can't claim to have wide experience with the current offering of X58 main boards, I will say that I am impressed and very satisfied with the MSI Pro-E. Assembling components onto it, all of which seat securely, was extremely easy. The supplied BIOS is comprehensive, informative, and easy to manipulate. Documentation is decent. Socket placements make sense and that confers easy wiring while working inside the case. Having a power switch on the board is handy while working, and the 3 setting over clocking switch makes it easy to alter the CPU clock speed w/o entering the BIOS. Jumpers are supplied for both SLI and CrossFire set ups.



If you are building a machine using Intel Core i5 or i7 CPUs, I would urge you to examine this product. Velocity Micro uses it in their graphics/video processing machines, and I have found it offers plenty of options in a quality product for less money than most of the Asus, Gigabyte, or EVGA offerings. Give it a close look.

Customer Buzz
 "Excellent value" 2009-08-01
By Gil
All the features you might need for an excellent price:

6 SATA + 2 (one eSATA without need of any additional bracket)

6 memory slots

GB Ethernet

Plenty of USB

Good sound on board

Excellent BIOS with plenty of overclocking options


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18.4.10

EVGA 132-BL-E758-TR x58 SLI Mainboard with Intel LGA 1366 chipset

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The nForce x58 SLI Motherboard from EVGA is designed for the win. With VDroop control for maximum stability while overclocking, 100% solid state capacitors, Onboard Clear CMOS, Onboard power and reset buttons, E-LEET tuning ability, and onboard Debug LED's for current temperature reading, your system will be able to handle the latest games, high definition digital video, and Windows Vista with aplomb. The features of the 132-BL-E758-TR include support for Intel Core I7 processors, Triple Channel DDR3 up to 1600MHz, Enthusiast Layout supporting 2-way SLI, 3-way SLI, and Crossfire X, 10 SATA II 3 GB ports with 1 e-SATA, 2 GB ethernet ports, 8 channel audio, support for up to 12 USB 2.0 ports, and 2 1394 slots.Built for Microsoft Vista with Intel LGA1366 chipset and innovative chipset fan with sideways exhaust. Product comes with a 1 year warranty and a second year free if registered at www.evga.com within 30 days of purchase.
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Technical Details

- E-LEET motherboard tuner
- Triple Channel DDR3 up to 1600 MHz
- EZ Voltage reader
- 8 Channel audio
- Vdroop Control and Onboard Power and Reset Buttons
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Customer Buzz
 "Great motherboard from EVGA" 2010-01-28
By nacho299
I was a bit nervous when choosing a motherboard for my i7 build because there were so many, finally I decided to go with EVGA mainly because of it's overclocking capability. I am very happy with my purchase, worked right out of the box and it's a great looking board.



pros

-Fast and easy to setup

-supports tri-SLI without case modifications

-Great BIOS

-Overclocks like a charm

-LCD displays on board displays temperature

-lots of accessories

-RAID works well

-shiny

cons

-POST takes like 10-15 seconds

-Will not fit large coolers like Noctua

-no PCI x1 at the top for sound card





Customer Buzz
 "Good Mobo" 2010-01-09
By Kaz Long
Easy to follow included instructions. Good deign. Easy to hide cables 5 out of 5.

Customer Buzz
 "Very solid board" 2009-12-16
By J. Beck (Seattle, WA USA)
Just finished building this out with an i7 920, and am really pleased so far. It's going to be a monster gaming machine, and runs Ubuntu (64 bit) with no issues. On-board RAID card is nice, though you'll want to ditch the stock CPU cooler if you plan on doing any overclocking.



A few things to be aware of:

- There are some issues with component layout. Right under that big heat sink near the chip is where they decided to place both CPU fan and board power sockets. It's a really bad place, as it's hard to get to and places cables near a component known to get hot.

- The audio plug is between the two PCIe slots, which will be a cable routing challenge if you're doing SLI with monster video cards.

- Not a big fan of how they did the 9 SATA ports (10 really, if you count the eSata port on the backplane). Sata 0-5 are run off the Intel southbridge, and SATA 6-7 and 8-9 are run off separate chipsests. SATA 7 is a port in the middle of the board, designed to drive a port on the front of the case. Anyway, you can only RAID each of the chipsets, meaning any big array you build will need to run off 0-5. There are also pauses during start for each chipset, which is annoying.

- A minor annoyance, but this board takes a while to POST (~20s).



Some things I really like:

- There are power, reset, and CMOS reset switches on the board, so you don't need to make case hookups while you debug stuff.

- There a 2-digit LED on the board, which shows error codes for anything wrong during POST, then turns into a CPU temperature monitor.

- Overclocker's dream. Control over all multipliers voltages needed to take your chip well past 4GHz.



My rig:

This board, with i7 920 (modest overclock to 3.5GHz)

Zalman CNPS9900LED Ultra Quiet CPU Cooler, with Arctic Silver 5

CORSAIR XMS3 12GB (6 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800)

GIGABYTE GV-N275UD-896I GeForce GTX 275 896MB 448-bit GDDR3 PCI Express 2.0 x16 HDCP Video

3 x Western Digital RE3 WD1002FBYS 1TB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive

(2 running in RAID1, the spare running as a scratch).

COOLER MASTER HAF 922 RC-922M-KKN1-GP Black Steel + Plastic and Mesh Bezel ATX Mid Tower Computer Case



Very nice!

Customer Buzz
 "Bug-free So Far" 2009-08-30
By The Tinkerer (Texas)
Great i7 board. Worked right out of the box (after assembly of course). Very responsive. Documentation is great. Have not had to contact EVGA except to ask how much cooler weight the board can support since the board will be in a vertical orientation in an upright full-size motherboard. Have not had an answer to this question. The 64-bit drivers work Ok. However, I have Adobe Acrobat Pro 7 which has not installed properly with the Acrobat printer port working. Am not sure whether this is a problem with the drivers or the XP x64 OS. For those reading this review, bear in mind that I have had many years of assembling this type of stuff and have sweated on many sleepless nights prior to this endeavor.

Customer Buzz
 "Amazing board" 2009-08-20
By Al Blank
Bought the board along with 920 2.66, OCZ 6 gig kit, ATI 4890 and OCZ VERTEX SSD.

entire system ran perfect right out of board -the firmware update for SSD.

board has auto-OC feature that i used and its now running at 3.2.

vista loads in 3 bars and entire os is loaded within 20 seconds of windows logo.




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13.3.10

P6X58D Premium X58 LGA1366 MAX-24GB Atx 3PCIE16 Pcie Pci

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Technical Details

- Intel LGA1366 Platform & Intel X58/CH10R chipset
- Next Gen 32nm 6-Core Processor Ready!
- True USB3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s Support!
- ASUS True 16+2 Phase Power Design
- 3-Way SLI & Quad-GPU CrossFireX Support!
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Customer Buzz
 "Fantastic Motherboard" 2010-02-25
By Erik Read (Springfield, MO)
Not much more to say about the product except that, as always, ASUS has delivered a great product.

No issues, great performance, cutting edge technology.

I always built my own PCs and always attempt to stay a little ahead of the curve.

This MOB eliminates dated technologies like a floppy controller and IDE controllers while adding USB 3 and SATA 6 gb/s interfaces.

Again, a great MOB that should last me awhile.

Customer Buzz
 "Great for OC and Future-proof" 2010-01-30
By P. Won (Hawaii)
Easy to OC, SATA-6 and USB 3.0 great for future upgrades. PCIe layout could be better, my triefire radeon 5970 and 5850 are literally stacked on each other.


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10.3.10

EVGA 141-BL-E760-A1 X58 Classified SLI Mainboard

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The X58 3X Classified SLI Mainboard from EVGA is engineered for those who demand more than the best. Enthusiast layout supports 2 way, 3 way, and 3 way SLI with PhsX, 10 phase digital PWM with switching frequency up to 1333 KHz, 300 % more gold content in the CPU socket, dual 8-pin + 12V for up to 600 watts of CPU power, and high quality ESR and ESL film capacitors. Built with 100 % solid state capacitors, features include Intel X58/ICH10R chipset, 6 DIMM triple-channel DDR-3 1600 MHz + up to 24 GB of memory, VDroop control for maximum stability while overclocking, E-LEET tuning ability, EZ Voltage read points, 2 GB ethernet ports (10/100/1000 Mbs), 8 channel audio, onboard clear CMOS, power and reset buttons, onboard CPU temperature monitor, passive chipset heatsink, and EVGA SPD Utility which saves to the motherboard's bios. Product comes with a 1 year warranty and limited lifetime warranty if registered at www.evga.com within 30 days of purchase.
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Technical Details

- 2-way, 3-way, and 3way SLI with PhysX support
- 10 Phase Digital PWM with switching frequency up to 1333 KHz
- E-LEET motherboard tuner
- Vdroop Control and Onboard Power and Reset Buttons
- 8 Channel audio
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Customer Buzz
 "great board" 2010-01-09
By M. Mauro (Savannah, GA)
Great board. There are setting for everything, including extreme cooling setting for those of you that phase change cool. It makes it more fun to overclock. Seriously though i could have gotton the same overclock off of my CPU from the EVGA SLI LE. This board has alot of nice features but i dont use more than half of them.

Customer Buzz
 "Very empressed with performance" 2009-10-20
By Ark77Leg (Trinidad and Tobago)
I have to say that I am very empressed with the Evga classified X58 motherboard. After arriving in Trinidad and Tobago on 3rd August 2009, a week after it was bought online, I assembled it in a Coolmaster CM 690 case with 6 gb of 1333 Ghz OCZ ram, XFX geforce 8400 graphics card ( All I could of gotten at short notice with the little change I had left over), Corsair 1000 watts power supply, Core I7 920, 500 GB hard drive and Lite on DVD burner. When I first turn on the PC, with out the operating system installed, it booted up or posted successfully. I then installed Vista Ultimate operating sysem, which was a smooth process, with no issues. After installing all the drivers, virus programs etc, I ran Fallout 3, Need for speed most wanted and Bioshock and it ran smooth with no problems.



One issue I had was that with Vista, I could not use the two RJ45 Ethernet network ports to share the internet between my cable modem and another computer, no matter how much updates I did on my drivers and OS. This issue was later solved after installing windows 7. It took me a while to find a way to fit this big motherboard in a mid tower but after unscrewing the plastic cable Guides, the motherboard fit perfect. It looks as if the CM690 mid tower case was made for this motherboard. Even after running Resident evil 5 and Devil may cry 4, on Windows 7, the computer gave me no issues with drivers or viruses or computer crashes. The Bios boot up sequence has a very professional look and feel, with the very defined text. I compared it with my friend's MSI AM2+ 790fx platinum boot up screen and I have to say that it cant compete. Every thing about the motherboard from the way it was packaged, the layout of the motherboard, and how it performed was very professional. There is great spacing of the PCI express slots on the board. It was easy to update the drivers of the computer from the Evga website. I would have liked it very much, if they had a lighted back plate like the Asus rampage 2 extreme.



I have not tried overclocking yet to find out how stable the board really is, but that is in development. Unlike so many reviews I have read about the Asus rampage 2 extreme and the MSI X58 eclipse having posting problems, The Evga classified had shown me that it works straight out of the box. I recommend this board to anyone who want X58 performance without the headache, especially if you are not a computer nerd.



Ohh gosh this review is long so let me take this time to big up the workers at amazon for getting my computer goods to me in record time, and treating me like VIP. I had sent my first motherboard to the wrong address, but Amazon, made the changes and sent another motherboard to the right address at no extra cost. These people know about customer service. I will definitely continue shopping with Amazon.com. I still have to stop borrowing my friends monitor and buy my own and also buy 2 GTX 295.

Customer Buzz
 "EVGA Classified X58 Motherboard, The Star of the Show!" 2009-05-23
By Wavey Davey (Southern CA, USA)
This is going to be a "mini-review" of the E760-A1 Classified Motherboard by our favorite silicon-sandwich maker, EVGA. Believe it or not Amazon.com gave me a deal on this "mainboard" or I'd still be staring at a standard EVGA BL-132-X58 3 x SLI Motherboard, and not this pretty Classified baby that's inside of my newest PC right now. So, thanks to Amazon.com, for making a bad thing right and taking care of business with me and the Classified.



I actually want to thank them a LOT for turning me onto this beautiful sculpture that's inside my HAF 932 "highly mod'd" PC since yesterday at about 9AM PST, because this is The Kind, as we say in Hawaii. Actually, it's Da Kine, which is KUHL, KUHL, KUHL! The most striking visual appeal of this board is the awesome black and red finish to *everything* there is, ie the theme is repeated from the DIMM slots, to the PCI-Express slots, to the CPU area, it's all mirrored in visually stunning graphics, colors, and finished, blackout Chrome metal, and a mirror-finished motherboard itself. Like WOW! Visually it's a 20+ on a 10-Scale, it just jumps out at you and says, "I am Class, and you may as well call me by my real name, 'Classified' before I whack you up side of da head!"



The board has *presence*, and features that beget a much better review than I am going to make tonight. All told, I have been up perhaps the better part of two days getting the new PC all gussied up in new Duds, including this beautiful thing, and my judgment and wit are on the wane, right about now...or I'd seriously get into the dialectics of the huge electronic masterpiece that this motherboard is. But I won't just now, promising to come back to this review and update it with impressions after a week, a month, heck, whenever I feel like it if you don't mind!



Wavey Davey gives this motherboard his solid 5-Stars ***** across the board, and I'll mention just a couple coup's that the board has that others do not:



1)There are 4 Full-Length 16/8 x Lane PCI-Express Slots, actually 5 (yes, that would be five!) with the single-lane slot for something like your X-Fi Fatal1ty Pro Sound Blaster card, like that...actually it's there for you to run, of course, Quad-SLI mode, if nothing else! How about that gamers? You could potentially, if you had enough power supply "firepower" and cables, (you'd need a minimum of a Kilowatt PSU to do this! [1000-Watts or higher!!])ie run 4 x 2 PSU-6-pin connectors to 4 matching cards, or rather 3 matching cards for gaming and that sort of deal (God forbid the scores with 3 cards in SLI mode!), and a 4th video card for "normal pursuits" like Folding@Home, doing Phys-X stuff, things like that.



2) Then there's the Custom Cooled North Bridge, I believe it's called (I'll research it and come back and change this if it's the South Bridge, hah-hah!). That black-anodized piece with an intricate and effective cooling heat sink setup looks so stealthy, and Darth-Vaderish, in all it's glory on the motherboard, that it will scare off heat! Well, would that it could...would be nice if it could, yah? And ON that North Bridge is a magically "glowing" LED "E" in EVGA Speak, the biggest, and baddest eletric LED graphical interface I've ever seen on a motherboard of anybody's making! WOW! It just looks positively stunning at night, or in a darkened room, to look inside your PC and see the "Glowing E" of EVGA, all nice and cozy on your motherboard. Nobody has that, for sure! This is unique!



3) The "running lights" in the Classified are also color-keyed along the company line, with a "red" ON button, normally it's green right? But not with this item, guys and gals! Red is "ON" and red is Good, so don't get confused and think that your motherboard is posting bad things and call Tech Support over at EVGA with a dire request for an explanation of this phenomenon...which looks Tres KUHL, like everything else about this motherboard does! It's just first class, and All First Class, from point to point, feature to feature, vs all the other boards for sale now.



Of course, the motherboard has the usual fare from EVGA, like the Digital Post Board at the lower, front edge of the board, conveniently located there for your perusal, and it will tell you the temp of the CPU at any given time, after full boot is made good, and up to then it's giving up all kinds of Post Codes, which are explained fully in the back of the rather massive "owners manual" that comes with the board. The "Activity Light" is Amber to Yellow-colored, so that's also a new wrinkle! At least the "Clear CMOS" button is still familiar Red, well, of course, it would be Red, right? Right!



The motherboard comes with a host of cables and things, a bunch of SLI-enabling cables for multiple Video Cards, different types of SLI (I later learned there are several(!) modes: SLI-2, SLI-3, and SLI-3 w/4th video card for Phys-X, FAH, or another monitor!). There are SATA cables, and otherwise some Molex connectors for your collection of fans and gadgets inside the case, something to help organize the deal so it won't look like a trash heap of wires in there!



There's also a Chrome-satin finish care portal arrangement, I believe it's called something particularly fitting, ie it's called the I/O Shield... It's the place where all the USB, FireWire, Ethernet, RJ-45, and other ports like PS2 ports, are, on the so-called back of the case....that's what they furnish you. There's also a combo FireWire and USB port gadget, which can be placed in any open PCI slot (like if you're a true aficionado you're going to HAVE a clear or open PCI slot...don't think so! at least not in mine anyway).



I will caution those of you with an eSATA port in the front of your PC, like I have with my HAF 932, that you will NOT be able to hook up that port normally, shall we say, with the Classified, if you plan on utilizing that single lane-PCI Express slot, AND the adjacent PCI-Express full-length 16X Lane slot plus the flat-motherboard SATA connector. There is no way in Hades that you can put two cards of any persuasion there, and still have the connector free for the SATA part of your front panel, so I had to Pasadena on using that Single-Lane PCI-Express port for my X-Fi Titanium Sound Blaster Fatal1ty Pro Card, and front panel for that matter! It would have been nice there, the my front eSATA port is very, very important to me because I've got some eSATA external equipment that I like to use with the PC, and I NEEDED THAT PORT hooked up!



Alternatively, you can hook up that front eSATA/SATA port to the regular motherboard SATA connectors, and NOT use that particular motherboard SATA connection, and then use all 5 PCI-Express Slots for whatever purposes you wish, end of that story! EVGA has it all covered, trust me.



That's about it for my 1st impressions of this total KNOCKOUT and DRAG ME DOWN motherboard. It is so visually stunning you will not believe it goes in the bottom of your computer! Crazy!! I love it, I mean my PC is stylin' like never before tonight, Gosh Darn It! Why did they have to make it so pretty, anyway?



Of course I didn't mention this one's No.1 purpose in all of the above gadgets, and stuff! It's meant for the Intel i7 "Nehalem" CPU, and all of the OVERCLOCKING possible, all you could do, and THEN SOME, because there are things to do to your CPU with this board that I wouldn't dream of telling Intel, for fear of warranty banishment! This is the Overclocker's Dream, if there ever was one, so come one, come all, it's the E-760 EVGA Classified for you if you want to overclock unlike any other overclocker on your street!



Come get it, this is the one!



Wavey Davey 5-23-2009



ADDENDUM, 6-29-2009



A couple things that comes to mind with this setup which I have learned to love, that I didn't mention with the above "mini-review" which was written hastily, under the influence of a lack of sleep, ie before I had time to actually experience all of the blessings that the Classified bestows on its owners:



1) ELEET, aka E-LEET Tuning Utility



This is something that you've got to use to truly appreciate, and only time and your creativity stops miracles from happening with it punched up in the control center, your desktop! ELEET allows for fine tuning, ie adding additional overclocking parameters to your initial overclock just to make things more stable, push the "envelope" higher than it already is, by adjusting virtually *all* of the important Voltage and Frequency adjustments available with Classified. Let me give an example:



Let's say you boot up to a 4167Mhz overclock, dialing in 19 X 219 QPI, but your real goal is 4257Mhz. Small things make all the difference in the world doing this sort of thing, and here's where ELEET comes into play...



Open ELEET, "Voltages" tab, where you can increase VCore a minute (minoot!) amount, CPU VTT Voltage an equally minute amount, then go to the "Overclocking" tab. Hit the Increase Mhz tab ten (10) little clicks, and BAM! Instantly after hitting "Apply Selection" things rock, and roll, for a second or two as the computer's hardward is "adjusted" by ELEET, you're at 4257Mhz, the elusive goal is reached!



ELEET is the only hardware overclocking utility built into the GUI in any computer/motherboard/CPU tandem that I know of, and it's very, very effective...so there you go, another EVGA 1st, first on the block, first at the race, and there at the finish to hand you the trophy!



2) North Bridge, South Bridge, motherboard features unique to Classified



The North Bridge and South Bridge in the Classified put the pedal to the metal so to speak, they are the operating hardware features of this board that distinguish it from all others. Without getting technical, the NB is a big old heatsink system, while the SB is the brains, the control center for SATA and other intricate functions. These are NOT, by the way, things to "grip" the motherboard by when handling it during installation, as I've cautioned people over and over again. They are on the board with specific itineraries, each has special fittings on the bottom of the board which enables maintenance and/or adjustment(s) to the TIM sealing, but be careful there...EVGA doesn't like the bottom end of this board "taken apart" by the consumer, even though there's a special thread in the EVGA forums devoted to doing just that, with all the special techniques mapped out that are necessary for re-seating the TIM (Thermal Material, ie insulation) on each controller and heat sink surface.



Just thought I'd mention this for the uninitiated, as there may be attempts at messing about with the NB and SB, but unless you are prepared with the *right tools* and knowledge, it's best left to an RMA to EVGA Tech Support to deal with high temperatures or other anomalies that can occur with improperly applied or mastered TIM sealing.



3) 24GB of SDRAM



Here's another interesting part of the deal with Classified: if you've got the deep pockets to make it happen (6 x 4GB DIMMs = 24GB SDRAM, but you'll pay a small fortune for the pleasure!), this board supports 24GB of DDR3 SDRAM in Triple Channel Mode ONLY! That's right, it will do this if you've got a regular job, like long payment schedules, and can FIND a SDRAM manufacturer to make this happen! I am running 12GB of G.Skill P3 8x8x8x21x74 Clocks 1600Mhz SDRAM these days, running @ 1772Mhz (!) (we call it "Purple Wonders" SDRAM!) instead of the Corsair Dominator that I bought into this game with, because well...it's just so darned good that I couldn't resist the temptation to try it, and it worked out even better than I'd planned.



But back on topic...4GB 1600Mhz DDR3 DIMM modules are NOT cheap by anyone's measure, even if you happen to be filthy loaded rich, and by that I mean in today's market they are fetching in the neighborhood of more than $300 each, that's right EACH ONE costs about $300 or so, if you can find it that is! But for the budding entrepreneur with loads of cash to burn, and a notion to have the world's highest overclocked media and graphix station, well...you get my drift...Classified supports 24GB of DDR3 SDRAM if you had your druthers!



Now, back to earth here and earthly pursuits...



4) SLI Modes, Classified E-760 Supports these and these alone



With Classified you've got more choices than hens have eggs, and that also involves the video card business. Presently I am running twin EVGA GTX-285 1GB DDR5 'SuperClocked' Video Cards in SLI x 2 Mode, which is plenty good enough for my purposes, which is mostly normal pursuits with an occasional game like COD:WAW thrown into the mix. IN ADDITION, I have to actually use my Classified for bring-home-the-bacon stuff, yikes... aka WORK! So I don't have a "dedicated to overclocking, and fun and games only" luxury running in my world Classified, it's destined to build web pages, construct volumes of photography and graphics projects, and yes, audaciously manage a film and video portfoloio, all things that I get paid for.



So, SLI x 2 for me means that I have video cards in PCI-Express slots 1 and 2, with PCI-Express slot 3 dedicated to my wireless network card, a DLink DWA-556 in case you wondered what Wavey Davey depends on for "Look Ma, no wires here!" Slot 4 gets my bread and butter, an Areca 1680IX-8 SAS RAID Controller (yup, real HARDWARE RAID in my baby!) that administers to more than 8TB of storage, which you may find strange in such a machine, but like I wrote above, I make $$ using the Classified, it's not all show and go!



Conceivably people are running SLI x 3 mode, which would be video boards in PCI-E slots 1, 3, and 4, for ultimate effect, or 1, 2, and 4 for SLI x 3 x 8 Lanes, which doesn't give the big KICK in Da Head that SLI x 16 does, at least on the graphix scores and game playing that is. So, you ask what is PCI-E slot "0"? Well guys and gals, that is the Single-Lane PCI-E slot, and it's just a little blip on the Classified's radar, just North of PCI-E slot no.1, and it's meant for things like my Fatal1ty Sound Blaster Titanium card, the thing which makes music and sounds happen with this PC.



And happen it does with a full quiver of Logitech Z-5300e THX 5.1 Speakers, backed by JBL (James B Lansing for those who wondered) Studio Sound Speakers, which are all hooked up and into my Samsung TOC 40" LCD HDTV/Monitor (which runs in 1920x1080 pixel mode for pretty dramatic movies, games, and AppleTV mode too!).



So, there you have my setup with this unbelievable Classified E-760 A1 motherboard ("mainboard" to Amazon.com folks) serving as the backbone to it all. It's kind of hard to imagine a $15K PC sitting here in my studio where I used to have a G5 PowerMac running the show, but there you go...times, people, and equipment does happen to change...and so has my flavor of tea, it turns out. I never said I wouldn't have a PC as my main squeeze, but then again, I never said I would either...it just sort of HAPPENED that way...Wavey Davey couldn't be happier than a clam in the sand at Malibu Point+ that turns out to be the way things are, too!










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9.3.10

EVGA 132-BL-E758-A1 X58 3-Way SLI Core i7 Motherboard with Tri-Channel DDR3 and Tuning Utility

Buy Cheap EVGA 132-BL-E758-A1 X58 3-Way SLI Core i7 Motherboard with Tri-Channel DDR3 and Tuning Utility


Buy Low Price From Here Now

The EVGA X58 SLI Motherboard is designed for the overclocking addict.The features of the 132-BL-E758-A1 includes support for Intel processors including Intel Core i7 processors, EVGA VDroop control that stabilizes voltage and ensures the maximum stability when overclocking, onboard clear CMOS, Power and Reset buttons, with reset button showing HDD activity, EVGA E-LEET tuning utility gives you quick access to overclocking controls without going into the BIOS, 100% solid state capacitors allowing for better overclocking and stability, EVGA EZ voltage gives hardcore overclockers quick access to reading their voltage levels, onboard debug LED shows current CPU temp, Intel X58/ICH10R chipset, 6DIMM Triple Channel DDR3 at 1333MHz+,enthusiast layout supporting 2 Way SLI, 3 Way SLI, and CrossFireX, 10 SATA II 3.0GB/s ports,(1 e-SATA), 2 Gigabit Ethernet ports, 8 channel audio with coax and optical, support for up to 12 USB ports(8 i/o and 4 external), 2 1394 firewire ports, innovative chipset fan with sideways exhaust, and detached enthusiast VREG cooler.Built for Microsoft Vista. Product comes with a one year warranty with lifetime warranty free with registration.. Product must be registered at www.evga.com within 30 days of purchase to get the lifetime warranty.
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Technical Details

- Supports Intel Core i7 processors and X58 Chipset
- Supports Triple Channel DDR3 Memory at 1333 MHz+
- EVGA Vdroop control for maximum stability when overclocking
- Onboard clear CMOS power and reset buttons showing HDD activity
- EVGA E-LEET tuning utility gives you quick access to overclocking controls without going into the BIOS
See more technical details
Customer Buzz
 "Great product, read this to save yourself some headaches" 2009-12-30
By guy miller (Austin,TX,USA)
I'm extremely happy with the board. There were two issues that I had, not with the board, but read this to avoid problems. Initially I purchased two sets of OCZ3G2000LV6GK 6GB tri channel kits to populate 12GB on the board. Each kit worked by itself just fine as 6GB, but put in together I would see any random amount of memory from 4GB to 10GB, but never 12GB. Playing with timings did not yields any better results. It looked like there were some potentially bad memory slots on the board, and I had read reviews where other people had jumped to this conclusion. However I went out and purchased more expensive Corsair tr3x6g1600c7g kits. These worked perfectly out of the box at 1600 Mhz with no parameter tweaking necessary. Needless to say the OCZs were RMA'd.

The second was a more problematic problem. I installed Windows 7 x64 ultimate and had configured a Raid 10 array with 4 x Seagate 1.5TB drives. Everything worked fine for about a week, then suddenly my system locked up. Upon reboot the Raid bios claimed I had a bad drive. I tested the drive standalone in an external enclosure and it was fine, so I reinserted the drive and marked it OK. The rebuild took 22 Hrs. Meanwhile I did some research and the problem that many people are also experiencing is with the Intel Matrix Raid drivers version 8.9.0.1023. Intel is aware people are having problems but continues to put the software out there, and says they can't reproduce the issue. I can assure Intel I had no trouble reproducing it !! Anyway I did what others have done, back level my Matrix Raid drivers to 8.8.0.1099. Intel claims this version does not support Windows 7, but it seems to work better than the version they say does !!! Anyway six weeks have now gone by without any other problems.



With 12GB memory I only need a minimal page file, despite the heavy duty development work that I am doing. I'm sometimes getting up to 8GB commit charge, but plenty to spare.



I used a Corsair water cool kit, which I can recommend over the stock fan. I put it in a case with 140mm fans and my system is very quiet. I hardly hear any noise from the four Seagate drives either.





Customer Buzz
 "pretty nice motherboard" 2009-12-16
By Goran Sherzad Fattah
This motherboard is pretty awesome. Its very easy to do overclocking, nice temperature gauge, very nice looking because its blacked out and has some gray as well. The only problem I have with the board is that it has a very slow boot up due to the numerous splash screens. There is not any quick boot option so it is very annoying to restart the computer or even to start it up. Over all this unit is very clean and very nice.



my rig

i7 920 at 4.2 ghz @ 30C idle

evga x58 sli x3 A1

Cooler Master V8

6GB Corsair Dominator at 8-8-8-24 1600mhz

1 x Hitachi 7200rpm Deskstar 32mb cache

1 x Maxtor 7200rpm cache

HD 5770 (maybe christmas time)

Cooler Master Stacker 830 (AWSOME!)





Customer Buzz
 "Solid Board" 2009-12-07
By M. Rojas (SAn Diego)
I recently looked at the price and I am glad I got this early. As part of a bundle I got this board for $249.

If you want to enable eSATA as a hot plugin make sure you change your BIOS settings before you install your OS as it will cause BSOD if you try changing it after you OS is installed.

Customer Buzz
 "EVGA 132-BL-E758-A1-X58 SLI x 3 Mainboard=Rock Solid Performer!" 2009-12-02
By Wavey Davey (Southern CA, USA)
What a name for a motherboard! EVGA 132-BL-E758-A1-X58 SLI x 3 Motherboard....!!! WOW, you'd think that EVGA would have picked something trendy, or KUHL, like "E758 Rocketboard", or "BL-132 Blast Off Board"..oh I dunno, I am failing miserably just like EVGA did, so I'll stop there. No harm in trying to get a handle on it though, right?



Well, the review of this thing is long, long overdue, so I'm going to have a go at it, wish me luck in getting all my thoughts about this great intermediate X58 board, and I only write that because it IS an intermediate board to the Classified series of EVGA boards. By itself, the 132-BL E758 board stands on its own merits, and has a lot of good people who have built it up over the past year since its release, but people are always wanting to compare it to Classified...that will NOT be the case here, tonight, I promise you that.



I started out with this motherboard and the Core i7 920 series CPU, my 1st i7 920 build this year, and the motherboard never disappointed me at all. I naturally gravitated to a Classified for my main PC as the year progressed, but I have always kept this board in the box, safely stored in my garage cabinet for later use, and lo and behold I finally had so many "spare parts" sitting around that I built a 2nd Core i7-based CPU with the 132-BL E758 board and it has had my attention for the past couple of weeks as I trained it for duty here in my studio as an auxilary PC. I don't have a lot of uses for it presently, but as time goes on I'll devote more time and energy to using it. It's a really nice build-up that is running @ 4210Mhz 24/7 now, a very substantial number, one that certainly is making a lot of Folding@Home WUnits get into my tally at Stanford.edu!



When I started out with the Core i7 920 series, it was with a C0/C1 CPU, tendered from back in March, 2009, where its life began at the Costa Rica Intel factory. Thus, I didn't have an easily over-clockable i7 920 D0-series CPU to work with initially, and suffice to say I had my work cut out for me to get the C0/C1 clocked up to 3.8Ghz, and run stable, and cool with a (*then*) Cooler Master V8 CPU Cooler in the house, a most daunting task. I *was* running 12GB of Dominator C8G 1600Mhz CL-8-8-8-24-74 SDRAM in the beginning though, so that posed some unique issues for me also. Read BIG HEADACHE! That RAM was just all junk, the long and the short of it, and was later RMA'd to Corsair, who replaced it all for some very, very nice RAM that was shipped direct to me from their Taiwan, CN factory, a very nifty trick they pulled off, and I was finally a happy camper with some Corsair RAM that was worthy of the name "Dominator", not "Suckinator"!



But this is a review of the 132-Bl board, not my build with it, so let me start out by writing some of its strengths and attributes of note. First, with the right CPU in tow these boards are capable of achieving an overclocking that is right up there with the best of the X58 boards, Classified included. One of the key ingredients to a successful launch and maintenance is the board's BIOS, and I found that the BIOS from May, 2009 worked best for me, YMMV, and you may want to go with the latest and greatest BIOS for the 132-BL boards, but I felt, and still feel that that is the best BIOS for my purposes. Conversely, you may just want to use the current BIOS at EVGA since there won't be anything else available unless you have kept an ever-larger-growing library of the various BIOS enhancements from EVGA, and Lord only knows that the wizards at EVGA are constantly churning out a new BIOS!



On that subject, let me write a few words...if the hose ain't broke, would you change it out for a new one? Probably not, right? Well, I feel just like that about BIOS for these boards...if your board is working great, why should/would you change BIOS? Right! So now you get my drift, and I'll leave that alone and let that be a personal decision between your conscience, reason, and outlook on such things...you know where I stand on it, that's all she wrote for my purposes.



The 132-BL SLi x 3 motherboard can handle RAID 0, 1, and 5 as I recall on the internal bus, but suffice to say that I never used it. I very simply in the beginning went for the non-RAID SATA IDE/ATA application on the ICH10R bus, and used the JMicron (red SATA tabs on the board) for a 2TB RAID system, which never really did much for me in terms of storage. Later on I went for an Areca 1680IX-8 SAS RAID Controller and ran ALL my HD's off the Areca controller bus, didn't even use the internal bus, so I am a bad source for information on how to use the Intel RAID bus with this board...won't even go there.



I did use the 12GB of RAM on board from the get-go, and that was a handful for me but not because running that much RAM is hard to do...it was a handful because the RAM was defective, and I didn't know it! How about that? NOT a good thing...to say the least. The boards have an interesting quirk with respect to over-volting the VDIMM though, which you may want to jot down for future use, and that is this: When you are adjusting VDIMM in BIOS, the board do NOT have the increments 1.63V or 1.64V in BIOS, they go from 1.625V all the way to 1.65V, nothing in-between there! So if you are wanting to run 1.63V or 1.64V on the VDIMM adjustment, you cannot do it! Crazy! But true...so buyer beware there.



Further, when you run the SDRAM @ 1.65V VDIMM (many believe this one of the keys to successful overclocking with the boards and most SDRAM of the 1600Mhz+ DDR3 variety), it over-volts the SDRAM to 1.69V in BIOS, and that can be too much voltage for some RAM. Me? I preferred running my SDRAM @ 1.625V VDIMM, which resulted in a setting of 1.65V in BIOS if you set the SDRAM. then jumped back into the BIOS and went to the "System Health" Report in BIOS, and BAM! You can get the accurate actual voltage for these boards then, and then alone, unless you are using a DMM (Digital Mutli-Meter) on the test points on the board UNDER LOAD, to get an accurate reading of actual voltage being applied by the board to the components. So that is an interesting little quirk of these boards that you might want to note for the future, and if you are using RAM at higher voltages those ideas will apply.



What else is interesting and unique to these boards of note. Oh yes, you might want to read this if you are concerned about the VREG assembly of the boards. These tend to run HOT! Yes, it's a proven weakness, weak point of the assembly process mostly, but the VREG heat sink, which is the heat sink assembly which faces YOU when you look down at the CPU area of the boards, opposite the SDRAM area...yes, THAT heat sink and assembly. Well, if it does run HOT in your board consider this, because I had to do it to mine:



If your VREG is consistently running at higher than 75-80-degrees Celsius UNDER LOAD you may want to remove the bolts that hold it to the motherboard, remove it, and R&R the TIM material (which is a set of paper insulating thermal pads OEM from EVGA) therein, and replace it with some good, high-test TIM material, which is NOT CONDUCTIVE, ie don't use Artic Silver 5 there!! Use something like MX-1-2, OCZ Freeze, any of the good non-metallic TIM materials, and replace those pads, and to the best of your ability clean up that area, see if you can get the heat sink and the VREG assembly to to seal reasonably well, (which can sometimes be impossible, or at least seem impossible, because they are so far "off center" and not in alignment), reinstall the heat sink and the VREG assembly, and BAM! You will if you do a nice job of it that is, probably change those temps to be sub-50-degree Celsius ON LOAD, and certainly sub-60-degree Celsius ON LOAD, merely by straightening out the VREG assembly and the TIM material therein! So that is another little tidbit about this board, a caveat if you will, that CAN be important. If your board runs cool on the VREG this will not apply to your board, but most of them do run hot!



An easy fix to the VREG issues in addition to doing the TIM Shuffle? Put a small 40mm fan on the VREG assembly, have it taped down there with some double-sided 3M Tape is the usual way that people do this, and just put a little current of air across the heat sink there and that is another way to cool it down, even with the above treatment, for super low temps at the VREG.



Here's another caveat, and I am asked this question all the time: Will a Megahalems CPU Cooler FIT with this board? With twin 25mm or 38mm fans? Answer: YES, a resounding YES it will fit! The fit is tight on the North Bridge Heat Sink and assembly, but with a little coaxing you are Golden! No issues there, ok? You CAN use the Megahalems CPU Cooler with this board, no sweat, no hill for a climber!



Those are my simple tips for this board thus far, and I'll come back and answer any other questions if people have them for me-- so don't be shy if you have a question about the board and it's not any of the above questions, just ask here and I'll be notified and do my best to answer any other trick or interesting questions with regard to the 132-BL E758 boards. They are a good board, every board series has its quirks, this is not unique with respect to motherboards...they ALL have something weird that is unique to each one, THIS IS NO DIFFERENT! It doesn't mean they are bad boards, it just means what it is!



EVGA has made a beautiful package here, they can run 12GB of RAM no sweat, they can run with the best of the CPU overclockers no sweat, and I have personally gone as high as 4528Mhz with my board, just for fun, ON AIR, no problem really, just wouldn't want to be doing it, going there 24/7. A good number on AIR is about the 4200Mhz area, which is do-able, easily with the right adjustments and CPU in the house, always you need a nice CPU to do such things, but it is possible to overclock these waaaay up there into the stratosphere!



Have fun, and happy overclocking with the 132-BL-E758-X58 A1 SLI x 3 (WHEW!) Motherboards!



Wavey Davey - Dec 1, 2009





Customer Buzz
 "EVGA x58 SLI" 2009-12-01
By kkfredde
EVGA Great name and lifetime warranty. If anyone has ever dealt with EVGA then they know the meaning of customer service, they are second to none. I have bought their products for years and have no complaints they are excellent in every regard!


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