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Motherboard Asus M5A99X Evo Review

Posted on | December 20, 2011 | No Comments

asusm5a99x 300x200 Motherboard Asus M5A99X Evo ReviewIt’s not that we don’t care; it’s just that the fire is burning on the other side of the fence these days. That’s not to say that the 990X chipset in Asus’s midrange M5A99X Evo is a slouch. As a real AM3+ board, it’s guaranteed to work with the upcoming Bulldozer line of CPUs from AMD. On the other hand, plenty of older 890FX boards will also work fine with Bulldozer, so is it even worth your time to check out a 990-series board? In a word: yes.

For one thing, these days most 890FX board designs are pretty dated. For example, not all feature USB 3.0 headers. The most exciting change with the 990 series, though, is SLI support. It’s not that we necessarily want to run two Nvidia cards in an AMD board, it’s that we want the freedom to pick our poison. A word to multicard users: The 990X chipset in the M5A99X doesn’t have the PCIe lanes of its performance-oriented 990FX kin. The dual x16 slots run at x8 speeds when running multi-GPUs while 990FX boards let you run two x16 slots at x16 speeds. It’s truly not a deal-breaker for most folks, as the difference in performance is negligible.

Despite its midrange price of around $150, the M5A99X Evo has plenty of features that make it better than older 890FX boards, such as a USB 3.0 header as well as newer and faster USB 3.0 chips. Performance, however, is virtually identical, as we discovered when we tested the M5A99X Evo against MSI’s 890FXA-GD70 board. Oddly, one area where the 990X spanked the MSI board was in SATA 6Gb/s. We’re still investigating why, but the Asus is the clear winner.

We also saw a difference in USB 3.0 performance. Like many older boards, the MSI uses the NEC/Renasys USB 3.0 controller. The Asus uses the ASMedia controller, which is a tad bit faster in both reads and writes. We also tested the board with all DIMM slots loaded with DDR3/1333, as well as its performance booting an OS to an OCZ RevoDrive X2—no problems on either count. Our final test was installing a second GeForce GTX 580 card to see if SLI indeed worked. It did.

If there’s anything the Asus board is guilty of, it’s being boring. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, though. Sometimes you don’t want a board that’s loaded down with garish extras. The M5A99X Evo is pretty much a good midrange board that crosses all the t’s and dots all the i’s. With its ultra-modern UEFI, SLI, and front-panel USB 3.0, it’s a board that today may be pedestrian—but is nonetheless satisfying.

Specifications

Chipset AMD 990X/SB950
PCIE 3 PCIe x16 (x16/x8/x4), 2 PCIe x1
PCI 1
USB Controller ASMedia ASM 1042
USB 2.0 Ports/Headers 8 / 3
USB 3.0 Ports/Headers 2 / 1
Other I/O FireWire, eSATA
Video Ports N/A
Audio Realtek ALC892
SATA 3Gb/s Ports 2
SATA 6Gb/s Ports 6
Storage Controllers JMB362
Network Realtek 8111E
Fan Headers 5

Benchmarks

Asus M5A99X-Evo MSI 890FXA-GD70
PCMark7 Overall 2,750* 2,723
PCMark7 Storage 1,847 1,851*
3DMark 2011 P5760 P5760 P5630
Valve Particle (fps) 114 116*
AIDA64 Read (Mb/s) 8,569* 8,344
AIDA64 Write (Mb/s) 7.047* 6.992
AIDA64 Copy (Mb/s) 10,493* 10,481
AIDA Latency (NS) 52.4 52.6
SiSoftware Sandra (Gb/s) 12.86* 12.77
SATA6 Seq. Read (MB/s) 484.4* 372.2
SATA6 Seq. Write (MB/s) 299.6* 288.6
USB 3.0 Seq. Read (MB/s) 191.4* 178.5
USB 3.0 Seq. Write (MB/s) 178.8* 164.8
SLI Compliance Pass N/A
16GB RAM Compliance Pass Pass
Boot to PCIe Drive Pass Pass

Best scores are marked with an asterisk (*). All tests were conducted with a 3.3GHz AMD Phenom II 1100T, 4GB of Patriot DDR3/1333 RAM, a GeForce GTX 580, a WD VelociRaptor, and 64-bit Windows 7 Professional. The SATA6 results were obtained using CrystalDiskMark 3 run on an OWC Mercury Pro 6G. The USB 3.0 results were obtained using CrystalDiskMark 3 run on an OCZ Enyo USB 3.0 drive. The boot-to-PCIe compliance was obtained with an OCZ Revo X2 drive. Price $155, www.asus.com. Source from MaximumPC.com.

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