Thursday, December 30th 2010

Foxconn Channel Ready with Quantum Force P67 Motherboard

OEM major Foxconn's very own channel brand is ready with its first high-end socket LGA1155 motherboard based on the Intel P67 Express chipset, supporting upcoming "Sandy Bridge" processors. The motherboard falls into Foxconn Channel's gamer and overclocker oriented Quantum Force brand. The Quantum Force P67 from Foxconn uses bleeding-edge components such as digital PWM offering precise voltage control for the processor, multi-phase VRM for the four DDR3 memory slots, and is rich in connectivity options.

The LGA1155 socket is powered by a 14-phase digital PWM circuit using independent single-phase PWM inductors made by CPL, and memory using a 2-phase VRM. Expansion slots include two PCI-Express 2.0 x16 (electrical x8/x8 with both populated), three PCI-E x1, and one PCI. Both ATI CrossFireX and NVIDIA SLI are sure to be supported. Storage connectivity includes two internal SATA 6 Gb/s, four internal SATA 3 Gb/s, two eSATA 3 Gb/s, and one ATA connector supporting up to two IDE devices.
External connectivity includes 8+2 channel HD audio with optical and coaxial SPDIF connectors, two USB 3.0 ports, a number of USB 2.0 ports, FireWire, and two gigabit Ethernet connections. The Quantum Force P67 is loaded with overclocker-friendly features. There is a set of onboard overclocking control buttons, diagnostic LED display, rear-panel CMOS reset button, redundant BIOS in separate EEPROM chips, and high-precision voltage control thanks to the Volterra PWM IC. Foxconn's Quantum Force P67 could be part of the first wave of motherboards that will be released along with Intel's socket LGA1155 CPUs in early 2011.
Source: DonanimHaber
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16 Comments on Foxconn Channel Ready with Quantum Force P67 Motherboard

#1
blu3flannel
I like the look of this board, even though my color of choice is blue. I also like how the socket looks a bit rusty (that could be bad), it gives it a hardcore feel. I don't like that they still put IDE connections on modern enthusiast motherboards, jeez. Almost nobody uses them.
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#2
Lionheart
Whens Sandy bridge releasing again, sometime in late January was it :)
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#3
bear jesus
blu3flannelI like the look of this board, even though my color of choice is blue. I also like how the socket looks a bit rusty (that could be bad), it gives it a hardcore feel. I don't like that they still put IDE connections on modern enthusiast motherboards, jeez. Almost nobody uses them.
The board does look quite nice but the socket makes me think this board was left outside at some point and went rusty :laugh:
CHAOS_KILLAWhens Sandy bridge releasing again, sometime in late January was it :)
I thought it was being released during CES so very start of January, although it could just be shown off at CES and released at a later date I'm not 100% sure but i am really looking forward to the reviews :D but i have a feeling i should wait to upgrade until the LGA1356 CPU's are released.
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#4
Widjaja
What did Foxconn do, talk to the local village blacksmith to forge the socket bracket out of some junk they had left over?

I see they are also going with a gimmick name. QUANTUM FORCE!

Better than MSI's Dr.Mos!.....reminds me of green eggs and ham Sam I am.

Or Gigabyte's Ultra Durable ...... reminds me of durex condoms.
Posted on Reply
#5
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
WidjajaWhat did Foxconn do, talk to the local village blacksmith to forge the socket bracket out of some junk they had left over?
That's a tough alloy Lotes/Foxconn use on their sockets, which doesn't expand on heat much. I've got it on my X58A-UD7, too.

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#6
blu3flannel
Why does it look like that though? I'm sure there's some way to make it look uniform/stainless steel-ish like everything else in technology.
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#7
pantherx12
blu3flannelWhy does it look like that though? I'm sure there's some way to make it look uniform/stainless steel-ish like everything else in technology.
Honestly I imagine it's because most people don't care, it's going to be covered by some kind of cpu cooler for the vast majority of it's life.



Although having said that foxconnn are reaaal crappy board makers in my experiance so it could just be that :laugh:
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#8
RejZoR
WidjajaWhat did Foxconn do, talk to the local village blacksmith to forge the socket bracket out of some junk they had left over?

I see they are also going with a gimmick name. QUANTUM FORCE!

Better than MSI's Dr.Mos!.....reminds me of green eggs and ham Sam I am.

Or Gigabyte's Ultra Durable ...... reminds me of durex condoms.
DrMos are capacitors and/or Mosfets, not sure which exactly. And they are highly regarded actually. So i don't think MSI invented this, they just brag about these components on their boards.
Posted on Reply
#9
bear jesus
RejZoRDrMos are capacitors and/or Mosfets, not sure which exactly. And they are highly regarded actually. So i don't think MSI invented this, they just brag about these components on their boards.
You are right DrMOS is a combination of MOSFET's (metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor) with the MOSFET driver as in Driver MOSFET into one chip instead of multiple, I'm not sure who makes them for MSI but Texas Industries makes the DrMOS used on the AMD 68xx graphics cards so not exactly a MSI only thing and MSI don't even make them (at least as far as i know they don't make them or anything component wise :laugh:).
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#10
nINJAkECIL
That socket uses Carbon steel material on frame,stainless steel on load plate and load level, thermoplastic frame insulator, low-carbon steel on back plate and screw(s), coated with Nitride oxide. Kind of like coating on the front fork on modern sportbikes (which uses titanium-nitride-oxide coating to lessen the friction).

And some uses copper alloy frame, with 15u" gold plating.

And the truth is, foxconn (or lotes) could make it more appealing, like this.or maybe they use less durable coating on them
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#11
micropage7
nINJAkECILThat socket uses Carbon steel material on frame,stainless steel on load plate and load level, thermoplastic frame insulator, low-carbon steel on back plate and screw(s), coated with Nitride oxide. Kind of like coating on the front fork on modern sportbikes (which uses titanium-nitride-oxide coating to lessen the friction).

And some uses copper alloy frame, with 15u" gold plating.

And the truth is, foxconn (or lotes) could make it more appealing, like this.or maybe they use less durable coating on them
and one more it looks more expensive than the board
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#12
xaira
republic of gamers much
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#13
Dave65
Nice looking board but I to don't like the looks of the socket and the IDE or the PCI slots..But good looking board none the less..
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#14
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
Dave65Nice looking board but I to don't like the looks of the socket and the IDE or the PCI slots..But good looking board none the less..
Looks of the socket kind of shouldn't matter, unless you run the system without any CPU cooling whatsoever. Even a skimpy water-block should cover the socket.
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#15
sneekypeet
Retired Super Moderator
BTA doesn't your cover polish to a shiny finish as mine did? Looks to me like the Foxconn is just all oxidized from handling.

Of course its never going to be seen unless you are building the rig or tearing it down;)
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#16
extrasalty
And don't forget- each Foxconn you buy lets you participate in our suicide game!:roll:
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