Asus P5Q Deluxe with Intel P45 chipset review
in Motherboards
Verdict
A well-equipped board, but the brand new P45 chipset adds disappointingly little.
Review Date: 14 May 2008
Reviewed By: Darien Graham-Smith
Price when reviewed: £104 (£120 inc VAT)
Buy it now for: £89
(see more store prices)
Features & Design
![]()
Value for Money
![]()
Performance
![]()
Intel hasn't even officially announced its new P45 chipset yet, but Taiwanese manufacturer Asus has already started shipping its first range of P45 motherboards. We looked at the P5Q Deluxe, though there are cheaper and more expensive options.
As the name suggests, the P45 is a progression from the P35 chipset - and a minor one at that. The significant difference is support for Intel's 45nm processors, but that's no big deal as almost all modern P35 boards are manufacturer-tweaked to support the newer CPUs already. There's also support for PCI Express 2.0, doubling the bandwidth of the original PCI Express specification, which Intel previously only offered in its X38 chipset.
From Asus' point of view, however, the P45's most interesting feature is its ability, like the P35, to support either DDR2 or DDR3 RAM, and the P5Q series includes both DDR2 and DDR3 boards. Officially, the P45 only supports DDR3 at up to 1,066MHz, but by sharpening up the electronics, Asus has persuaded the chipset to support DDR3 frequencies up to 1,600MHz as well.
Moving away from the particulars of the P45 chipset, the P5Q Deluxe is a capable upper-mid-range board. It offers three PCI Express 16x slots, with CrossFire X support for up to four ATi GPUs, and four DIMM slots which, on this model, support DDR2 at up to 1,200MHz. As befits its "deluxe" nomenclature, there's also eSATA, and FireWire, and even onboard power and reset buttons - though there's no button to clear the CMOS, nor a POST display, as with Asus' enthusiast boards.
The P5Q Deluxe is joined by six other boards in the P5 range, four supporting DDR2 and two using DDR3. Different models have different PCI Express 16x support, from the single slot of the P5Q and P5C up to the P5Q Premium with four full-speed slots.
The high-end boards, including the Deluxe, feature Asus' new 16-phase power supply and management system, which is promised to increase power efficiency, and an onboard solid state drive containing the ExpressGate micro-OS, which lets you boot into a Linux-based internet environment in a matter of seconds. Low-end models will feature eight-phase power, and a version of ExpressGate that can be installed on the user's hard drive, offering the same features but a slower boot time.
All models also feature Asus' "Drive Xpert" system, which provides RAID mirroring or striping in a way that's transparent to the OS, and which can be set up from within an onboard GUI.
At £104, the P5Q Deluxe isn't cheap, but it's long on features and not out of line with comparably-specified boards using older chipsets. For those on a tighter budget, the plain old P5Q is also starting to pop up at retail for around £75 exc VAT, although it's a more basic board.
For the average user, though, there's little reason to jump at the P45 rather than sticking with its predecessors, so weigh up all options before you buy.
Author: Darien Graham-Smith
Best Prices
Price comparison powered by 
| Prices, delivery and availability at 4 retailers | Go | |
|
£99 | Go |
|
£125 | Go |
|
£133 | Go |
From around the web
advertisement
- LinkedIn revenue doubles as membership soars
- Kodak kills off cameras
- UK broadband project spending £1m on legal fees
- Microsoft: Windows on ARM won't be sold separately
- Intel pays five hours of profits to settle antitrust case
- Windows 8 on ARM to run desktop apps... but only Office
- Ofcom dithers over plans to tackle broadband slamming
- Data boost bolsters Vodafone revenue
- Google working on cloud storage system
- Lenovo's profit leaps 54% on market gains
- Chrome's shine getting lost in translation
- BytePac: the cardboard hard disk enclosure
- How tech loosens our grip on reality
- Hokum watch: Safer Internet Day
- Why I'm deleting Adobe from my PC
- Prepare to be patronised: it's Safer Internet Day
- Dear Sony, Samsung and every other tech company in the world: stop trying to be Apple
- Will Apple's Final Cut Pro X update placate the pros?
- Smartr Contacts for iPhone review
- Switching to Office 365's Outlook Web App
- The ultimate guide to passwords
- How Apple lulls Mac owners into a false sense of security
- Privacy - outdated luxury or public necessity?
- Building the bionic man
- The making of open-source software
- Top 10 stupid security stories of 2011
- 10 techs to watch in 2012
- PC Pro's favourite tech products of 2011
- 10 most read articles on PC Pro in 2011
- 50 ways to make your PC better
- Why virtualisation hasn't slowed the growth of data
- How to make Google AdWords work for your business
- The curse of sloppily written software
- Paying for your crimes with Bitcoin
- Behind the scenes: tech support for Formula 1
- The security risk of fat fingers
- Why Windows Phone 7 isn't quite ready for business
- When will Microsoft stop fiddling with Windows 8?
- Flash down the pan?
- Metro Style apps vs desktop applications
advertisement






