
| Manufacturer: | ||
| Price: | £0 | |
| Reviewer: | Mark MacKay | |
| Review Date: | Nov 2008 | |
| Speed | 38/45 | 84% |
| Features | 28/30 | 93% |
| Value | 21/25 | 84% |
| Overall | 87% | |

Verdict: [+] P6TGreat layout; fast; easy to overclock; CrossFire and SLI support[-] 60 PEASExpensive
The
Asus P6T Deluxe is based on Intel’s X58 chipset and has the LGA1366 socket of
the new Core i7 range of CPUs (see p36). The new socket isn’t compatible with
LGA775; you’ll need a new cooler, as the socket is larger and the cooler
mounting holes are further apart.
EXPANSION SLOTS
The
board has three PCI-E 2.0 slots, which allows for full-speed CrossFire or SLI
dual-card setups. The P6T Deluxe doesn’t have an nForce 200 chip, and we don’t
expect any motherboard released in the next few months to have such a chip. See
p45 for our SLI and CrossFire testing on X58.
While
the X58 chipset can give both cards of a dual-card SLI or CrossFire setup 16
lanes’ worth of PCI-E 2.0 bandwidth, the third slot has only eight lanes, so
triple-card setups could suffer. The board also has two PCI slots and one 1x
PCI-E slot. Should you use two dual-slot graphics cards, you’ll still be able
to use one PCI slot and the 1x PCI-E slot.
PORTS
The
PCB has EIDE and floppy headers, defying murmurings that they were to be phased
out with the release of LGA1366 and Core i7. Joining the EIDE port are four
RAID-capable S-ATA II ports and two SAS ports, which are aligned parallel to
the PCB for neat cabling. A further two S-ATA II ports sit just behind this
bank of six.
The
P6T Deluxe has four additional fan headers, three USB 2 headers and one
FireWire header. Ports on the back panel include optical and coaxial S/PDIF,
six analogue audio out ports, one eSATA and two Gigabit LAN ports. Purveyors of
ancient peripherals will be pleased to learn that there’s also a single PS/2
port for an old keyboard or mouse.
Despite
the extra PCB surface area required for the six DDR3 sockets, the P6T Deluxe
has a superb layout.
PERFORMANCEClick here to open the benchmark results (opens in new window)Click here to download the Custom PC Media Benchmarks to compare performance with your PC
Running
at stock speeds, the image editing and multitasking scores were both higher
than 1,200 points, but the P6T Deluxe helped the eight processing threads of
our 2.66GHz Intel Core i7-920 to produce a mammoth 2,248 points in the video
encoding test. The hefty overall score of 1,565 points means this 2.66GHz Core
i7 system is more than 50 per cent faster than our reference 2.66GHz Core 2 Duo
E6750 PC at stock speeds.
With
a Zotac GeForce GTX 260 AMP!, the P6T Deluxe
scored a 34fps minimum and a 45fps average in Crysis at 1,280 x 1,024.
OVERCLOCKING
There
are only two memory divider options in the BIOS of the P6T Deluxe. With the CPU
at stock speed, these are 800MHz and 1,066MHz, meaning that if your memory runs
any faster than 1,066MHz you’ll lose speed.
When
testing for a maximum QPI frequency, we opted for the lower memory divider to
ensure our overclock wasn’t limited by the memory. Dropping the multiplier to
the minimum 12x, we pushed the QPI up from 133MHz to 210MHz.
While
pushing for the maximum overclock of which the board was capable, we opted for
the higher of the two memory dividers. We left the Corsair PC3-10666 at its
stock voltage of 1.6V, and pushed the CPU to 3.6GHz at its stock voltage. Only
when we pushed the CPU beyond 3.6GHz did we need to add more voltage, which is
incredible for a CPU shipping at 2.66GHz.
With
the vcore at 1.475V, and the Southbridge and X58 chip overvolted to 1.3V, we
finally pushed the Core i7-920 to 4GHz. With a QPI of 200MHz, the memory was
now running at 1.6GHz.
Not
only was the Core i7 surprisingly easy to overclock, but the performance gains
were also incredible. The minimum frame rate in Crysis jumped from 34fps to
39fps, while the overall Media Benchmark score rose from 1,565 to 2,294. This
score was the second best in the world at the time of writing, and was achieved
with basic air-cooling.It should also be noted that during all of our testing,
we didn’t experience any flakiness from the P6T Deluxe. This is a great result,
considering that the kit arrived in our office more than a month before Core i7
was due to launch.
OC PALM
The
P6T Deluxe ships with a small PDA-type device called the Asus OC Palm; as well
as having features such as a component temperature monitor, this allows you to
overclock the motherboard. Unfortunately, our review sample wasn’t up to much.
We achieved a menial overclock of 2.8GHz with the little gizmo, but anything
over that crashed the system, proving that there’s still no substitute for
good, low-level dirty BIOS overclocking.
CONCLUSION
There was a lot of speculation and doom-saying
on various forums about the overclocking ability of lower-end Core i7 CPUs, but
the P6T Deluxe proves these pessimists wrong. The P6T Deluxe isn’t only a good
overclocker, but it also has an excellent layout. Add to this the rock-solid
stability as we pushed the clock speeds higher, and the end result is a superb
board that gets the most from Intel’s excellent new CPU. Only the high price
prevents unequivocal recommendation.