Wednesday, August 20th 2008

ASUS P6T Deluxe Intel Core i7 Nehalem Motherboard Up Close and Personal

After Intel's Nehalem platform is no secret anymore, it's time to start looking at the motherboards that will support the new Socket 1366 buddies. One of them is ASUSTeK's upcoming P6T Deluxe mainboard based on Intel's yet-to-be-released X58 Express, the first chipset to power the Socket 1366 Core i7 Nehalem processors. As part of the whole platform, the P6T Deluxe has a total of six DDR3 slots intended for triple-channel mode and three PCI-Express x16 slots with support for dual and triple video card configurations. It's too early to say which one, ATI's CrossFire, NVIDIA's SLI or both combos. Expect further information when the time comes. Meanwhile if you want to take a closer look at the motherboard please click here.
Source: PCGH
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27 Comments on ASUS P6T Deluxe Intel Core i7 Nehalem Motherboard Up Close and Personal

#1
H82LUZ73
Wow a few changes to the way the PEG go in the slots,Those hooks remind me of the AGP 2 days with the self locks.Also the way they look beveled and what not,must be for heat?The board itself looks crowded around the cpu socket with all them caps,Must be that the new after market coolers will need to go straight up over them caps then surround the rest of the area(thinking the Cooler Master V8 ) also those pvrm coolers look way to high holy god overkill maybe? .
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#2
REVHEAD
Looks allright, but why on earth does it still have a North Bridge?
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#3
malware
REVHEADLooks allright, but why on earth does it still have a North Bridge?
I'm not sure but that's maybe the NVIDIA chip which will bring SLI support for the Socket 1366 era, but that's unconfirmed information yet
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#4
OnBoard
H82LUZ73Wow a few changes to the way the PEG go in the slots,Those hooks remind me of the AGP 2 days with the self locks.

The board itself looks crowded around the cpu socket with all them caps,Must be that the new after market coolers will need to go straight up over them caps
Like the new PEG hook in the end. Hate the current "standard" 1st slot side hook that gets always stuck when removing GPU. AGP style wasn't the greatest either, when longer cards came. The latch was under the card/cooler and sometimes impossile to reach.

Caps are no problem, current coolers already go over them in S775, like mine. Anything inside that pushpin area can't be higher than they are and aftermarket coolers are designed to be compatible.
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#5
thebeephaha
Oh my god... Must have. :eek: :respect:
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#6
Morgoth
Fueled by Sapphire
the reason it got a northbridge becus its a connection chup from cpu to NB to PCI-e and southbridge
other words its just a connection ship
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#8
qwerty_lesh
omg 6 ddr3 sockets, that is freakin awesome! i hope the x58 chipset has just as good hopefully if not better memory support compared to its older extreme chipset buddies, i can just imagine an extreme core i7 cpu on this baby with 6 of hynix's new 16gb ddr3 modules, whatever flavour uber gfx cards aswell, i reckon game development will take a while before there able to pull a 'crysis' on these specs :toast:

also; im suprised and delighted that im seeing the next generation boards so soon :rockout:
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#9
Tatty_Two
Gone Fishing
It would be nice, if this time around, there were a few more decent Intel single PCI-E x16 boards available that would be cheaper and more relevant to single slot enthusiasts.
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#10
Joe Public
I had wished they'd do something about the CPU cooler retention system, but we seem to be stuck with the push pin system. I'm looking forward to the official Core i7 release and test reviews tho.
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#11
theJesus
malwareIt's too early to say which one, ATI's CrossFire, NVIDIA's SLI or both combos.
The page now says "SLI support confirmed"
malwareI'm not sure but that's maybe the NVIDIA chip which will bring SLI support for the Socket 1366 era, but that's unconfirmed information yet
I think you're right, because there are only 6 expansion slots that I see.
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#12
Viscarious
I love the colors they chose, makes it look evil and demonic.
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#13
PCpraiser100
I see that i7 is still using some traditional technologies, thank god its using a 4/8 pin, if it were eight pin that would steam the community.
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#14
Whilhelm
Interesting battery placement. Only six DDR3 slots? :shadedshu

What is up with the red usb ports on the rear I/O
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#15
Tatty_Two
Gone Fishing
WhilhelmInteresting battery placement. Only six DDR3 slots? :shadedshu

What is up with the red usb ports on the rear I/O
12Gig not enuff for you, probably the only puter to use that kind of memory is located in NASA.....you a spaceman or somethin? :D
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#16
theJesus
Tatty_One12Gig not enuff for you, probably the only puter to use that kind of memory is located in NASA.....you a spaceman or somethin? :D
lol maybe he wanted to use it for a high-end server/workstation.
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#17
PCpraiser100
WhilhelmInteresting battery placement. Only six DDR3 slots? :shadedshu

What is up with the red usb ports on the rear I/O
With that in mind, there will might be a first E-ATX if too many features are on the mobo.
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#18
Korban_Dallas
WhilhelmInteresting battery placement. Only six DDR3 slots? :shadedshu

What is up with the red usb ports on the rear I/O
USB 3.0?
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#19
PP Mguire
12Gig not enuff for you, probably the only puter to use that kind of memory is located in NASA.....you a spaceman or somethin?
Last i heard Nasa uses 386's.
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#20
Wile E
Power User
PCpraiser100I see that i7 is still using some traditional technologies, thank god its using a 4/8 pin, if it were eight pin that would steam the community.
I don't think it would be an issue at all. Almost anyone looking to buy this board, and the chip that goes with it, is gonna have a psu with an 8pin on it.

I eagerly await the boards that are Crossfire AND sli capable.
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#21
theJesus
PP MguireLast i heard Nasa uses 386's.
Umm, maybe you're referring to the crap they user on little landers and stuff like this ahtim.com/nasa-computer-specs-to-mars/

But, I think when most people refer to NASA computers, they mean the supercomputers like this www.nas.nasa.gov/Resources/Systems/pleiades.html

Edit: And 12gb is nothing compared to what's in systems like that.

"Memory

* Type - DDR2 FB-DIMMs
* 1GB per core, 8GB per node
* Total Memory - 20 TB"
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#22
Tatty_Two
Gone Fishing
PP MguireLast i heard Nasa uses 386's.
Yep, with the fastest ramdrive's on the planet......and lots of them!
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#23
Hayder_Master
wow , i think it is sli mobo , cuz Deluxe from asus com with sli
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#24
Zantheus
Do any of you know if the board will support 12gigs DDR3-15000 1866ghz??

I am looking to buy OCZ Reaper 8-8-8-28

Memory product code is OCZ3RPR1866LV6GK

Ive been researching all day and have not been able to find an answer
Thanks in advance
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#25
Binge
Overclocking Surrealism
malwareI'm not sure but that's maybe the NVIDIA chip which will bring SLI support for the Socket 1366 era, but that's unconfirmed information yet
the north bridge of x58 controls the PCI-E slots and directs it to interface with the memory I/O in the CPU. That would include all SLI and crossfire protocol.
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