MSI NF750-G55 Motherboard Review

November 19, 2009 | 09:41

Tags: #am3 #analysis #benchmarks #board #g55 #mobo #motherboard #nforce #oc #overclock #overclocking #performance #result #review #sli

Companies: #amd #msi #nvidia #test

Crysis

Publisher: Electronic Arts

Crysis

1,680 x 1,050 2xAA 0xAF, All High Settings

  • MSI NF750-G55
  • MSI 770-C45
  • Asus M4A785TD-V Evo
    • 30.4
    • 18.6
    • 32.9
    • 17.7
    • 30.8
    • 16.8
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
  • Average FPS
  • Minimum FPS

Crysis (Overclocked)

1,680 x 1,050 2xAA 0xAF, All High Settings

  • MSI 770-C45
  • MSI NF750-G55
  • Asus M4A785TD-V Evo
    • 38.1
    • 24.3
    • 33.5
    • 21.2
    • 33.1
    • 20.9
0
10
20
30
40
  • Average FPS
  • Minimum FPS

Crysis performance is not bad: minimum frame rates are competitive, but the average fps is decidedly low. The MSI 770X-C45 we previously reviewed is considerably faster here.

Stability

As usual we reset the BIOS to its default values and loaded up both the Prime 95 torture test and 3DMark 06 looping to see if the board could withstand the stress to CPU, memory and PCI-Express power draw for 24 hours. Apart from a fan to cool the CPU heatsink, there were no other fans used, meaning the heatsinks (or lack of them) have to withstand very little airflow and still keep the components cool.

We even ran the system with two Zotac GeForce GTX 260 AMP! in SLI, just to stress the motherboard traces, power and PCI-Express a little more. Even despite this, after a full 24 hours we came back to to find both 3DMark and Prime95 still running and the system completely responsive; an excellent result for the MSI NF750-G55.


Conclusion

While we don't necessary ever push multi-GPU solutions, it's nice to have multi-GPU competition in the AMD space since one chipset still doesn't fit all. The integrated graphics are a nice backup too, even if you don't use them. It's equivalent is the 785G from AMD which we also like - at a later date, the board can be retired to a HTPC for example.

While the stock performance fritters between highs and lows, the overclocking potential is very, very good for board of this price, although we did expect a more commanding lead by the NF750-G55 given the large difference in overclocks.

It looks great, it has a basic but competitive set of features and Nvidia/MSI includes the Advanced Clock Calibration now, and unlocking the extra cores is exceptionally simple to do. However, the £53 770-C45 can also keep up with it in our tests and with the latest BIOS it too can now unlock those extra cores.

We like it; it fits a niche, which is rare in this industry, but only its aesthetic design really lights a fire of desire for us. If you really want a budget SLI board and an AMD AM3 CPU, it's certainly worth the short list, but otherwise, don't go too far out of your way for it.

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  • Features
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Score Guide
Discuss this in the forums

Posted by cybergenics - Thu Nov 19 2009 09:53

Great review, but anyone who wants to go SLI with anything put a pancake thin graphics card in the lower slot can't use the only PCI slot for say a sound card or TV Tuner. I have a Xonar that I am rather attached to. Other than that, good board at a good price.

Posted by Abdul Hadi - Thu Nov 19 2009 10:20

Nice budget product. Some old people may need it.

Posted by Aracos - Thu Nov 19 2009 10:34

I'm sorry but did you state anything about the max stable HT bus speed you could achieve was? I read every page 3 times and still couldn't see it, I noticed there wasn't anything like that on the MSI 770 review too, is it possible to let me know what the max stable speed you could get was? Reason I ask is my cousin is upgrading his Pentium D system with an AM3 build and would like to be able to overclock in the future but keep costs down so that's quite important to me :(

Posted by Guest-16 - Thu Nov 19 2009 10:54

storm20200
I'm sorry but did you state anything about the max stable HT bus speed you could achieve was? I read every page 3 times and still couldn't see it, I noticed there wasn't anything like that on the MSI 770 review too, is it possible to let me know what the max stable speed you could get was? Reason I ask is my cousin is upgrading his Pentium D system with an AM3 build and would like to be able to overclock in the future but keep costs down so that's quite important to me :(
No I didn't test, only just simple overclocking because it was a light review. It's still setup so I'll give it a whirl when I get back in the office. I'm ill today so I can't do it :(
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