Gigabyte GA-K8N51GMF-9 Motherboard 

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PCQ Bureau
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The much anticipated Nforce 4 based motherboard gets integrated video, making it affordable for entry-level users

With the NForce4 range, NVIDIA has set the bar a couple of
notches higher for everyone else. However, we have always had a small problem
with the lack of on-board video, which meant that budget users missed out on the
excellent value for money NF4 boards. NVIDIA fixed all that with their C51
chipsets and they seemed to have gotten one up on ATi's RS480 this time.
However, NF4 with video is available only for the AMD platform as of now with no
immediate plans for an Intel rollout.

Price:
Rs 6,100 (3 yrs warranty)
Meant
For:
Casual gamers
mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:
EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">Key Specs: AMD Socket 939, 8 USB ports, 4 SATA 3Gb/s. integrated 7.1 channel 
mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:
EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">Pros: Nforce4, SATA, on-board video, great performance
mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:
EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">Cons: No HD support
mso-fareast-font-family:"Times New Roman";mso-ansi-language:EN-US;mso-fareast-language:
EN-US;mso-bidi-language:AR-SA">Contact: Gigabyte Technologies,
Mumbai.

Tel: 26526696

Email id: sales@gigabyte.in

RQS# E57 or SMS 130157 to 9811800601

The first thing that's different about this board is that
NVIDIA has provided two GPUs, the 6100 and the 6150 (the latter obviously being
faster, 425 MHz v/s 475) and two southbridge chips, 410 and 430. This has given
manufacturers the ability to mix and match the chips while providing solutions
that target the audience more directly. The top-end version of the board would,
thus, be based on the GeForce 6150 chip and the Nforce 430. While we would've
loved to review the top-end board, this one is a middle-level board that has a
6100 GPU coupled with an Nforce 430 southbridge. The board is a microATX form
factor, but that in no way means it lacks any features.
It supports pretty much all the 939 processors from AMD, including the
dual core X2. It has four RAM slots supporting a total of 4 GB DDR400 memory (no
support for DDR2 yet), one PCI-E x16 and x1 slot each coupled with two PCI slots
and four SATA 3 Gb/s slots. Even though it has 7.1-channels high-def audio, it
is still based on the RealTek chip and cannot match the Creative Sound Blaster
chips we are seeing on some boards. But then, those are priced much higher than
this one.

As far as the connectivity goes, it features eight USB
ports, four at the back and four in the front, one Gigabit LAN port along with
the latest feature--an on-board video port.

Being a budget board, we didn't really expect it to break
any records, but it did surprise us. Even though we just got 657 on our 3DMark
2005 test, the creditable thing is that the test ran its entire length on the
on-board video solution. We being serious gaming enthusiasts wanted to play all
the latest ones on it and tested this board with a whole host of them. It
performed brilliantly for an on-board solution and if you turn off most effects
and lower the resolution, you will get a fairly playable frame rate even in Doom
3 and our latest favorite, NFS Most Wanted.

In Far Cry, the board did wonders and gave us more than
just a playable frame rate at 55 fps! We did an auto detect, and Far Cry
automatically set the settings to high and returned a 25 fps frame rate, which
is not exactly perfect but is more or less playable. We then measured the
overall performance using the PCMark 2005 suite and the board did a commendable
job at 2895.

These are some of the best scores we have ever seen on an
IGP solution.  It easily beats
Intel's GMA 900 and we suspect that the higher end 6150/430 will easily beat
ATi's IGP solution as well.

Bottom Line: 
Due to the lack of SLI on this board, it is definitely not an enthusiast
gamer's board. But it's a great offer for the casual gamers/users who would
prefer buying a graphics card later. If you are an everyday user, we would
recommend this.

Having said that, we think that for small office home
office users, high definition video would have been an excellent addition. But
that is only available in the top-end boards based on the 6150/430 chips. Also
we seriously feel that NVIDIA has missed out a great opportunity to provide a
killer integrated graphics solution by limiting the pixel pipelines to two
instead of four but as someone at NVIDIA once told us, 'we always come out
with something faster later', well, we are waiting!

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