by congo » Tue Sep 13, 2005 4:40 pm
Any quality brand nForce2 Ultra400 chipset based board will do for Socket A, as long as it has the features you require.
SIS chipsets simply reek and VIA had their share of problems in socket A chipsets.
Chipset is of utmost importance. I suspect that people with wild, unsupported stories simply haven't got the knowledge to successfully, or even safely fool about with PC hardware, but hey, it's their money. Just because they broke their hardware or recieved faulty goods doesn't give them intimate knowledge of chipsets and the inner workings of PC's.
What amuses me is the fact that such experts care to advise at all, not only considering the embarrassment it could potentially cause him, but there is a strong chance that some associate may act on that ill advice, and be much worse off for their trouble.
But they are probably too busy trying to repair or replace their system components after doing so much damage that they hadn't actually thought it through too much before commenting.
So, anyway, you can take your advice from someone who has a pile of fried hardware, (Video card, mainboard, hard drive and CPU is it Rollerball?), or just go and check out the info for yourself.
Just google up the chipset comparison tests etc and reviews on those chipsets and you'll soon see supporting evidence of my ranting and raving.
In fact, if you are interested, you can spend entire weeks digging out all the info like I did so you can make your own informed choices.
I mean, you have personal experience with the VIA chipset, it sucks, it always sucked right? What more evidence do you need?
I tried for years now in these forums to teach everyone why it's so important to choose the right chipset, only to see member after member apparently totally ignore all my research and experience with this stuff, and then go out and buy a heap of inferior products. Well, it takes all kinds I guess.
PCchips make the cheapest and crappiest hardware using the junkiest chipsets, the reason they are popular is because non-techs can configure them because they have simple options intended for amateur home builders. I dare say this is why Rollerball is happy with it, because he could actually get it to work.
However, they are not performance hardware and BIOS and other options are limited. The gamer need not apply.
Socket A is not limited to 2800+ cpu's either, only on inferior chipsets....... An nForce2 chipset is capable of astounding performance and stability that only the latest 64 bit and intel chipsets will surpass.
This isn't new info, it's three year old common knowledge on tried and time proven technologies....
That board in the pic is a budget replacement with a quality brand Fozzer, you may want to read my last post again concerning some of the details.
Rollerball, while I sympathise with your current hardware frustrations, it's not in the interest of our members to make bad advice based on your recent experiences with numerous hardware failures. You bought and are continuing to buy some really cheap and nasty gear (PNY video cards, PCchips, SIS ......) and are obviously being mislead or confused by someone or something. I tried to help you resolve some of your issues in past threads, and I'm sorry it didn't help, but you are way offtrack with your above advice.
I don't want to get involved in any personal verbal brawls over this. I truly wish to help guide our members through the many pitfalls and problems that hardware issues present, and I certainly try my utmost not to furnish false information in these threads, after all, what would be the point?
These forums have been partially responsible for the knowledge I've gained about PC hardware. There are a lot of interesting people here with all kinds of PC hardware questions and problems. I have followed the progress of thousands of threads here, and have spent many all nighters seeking the answers to apparently simple questions, but alas, the answer is not often so simple as "Buy an nForce2 chipset". I have made those statements based on hundreds of hours of research and thousands of hours of personal experience, not just off the top of my head........
I'm fully aware that what I say may have a significant financial impact on the reader, and I choose my words carefully when I write here, trying to condense what I've learned into practical solutions for you all.
Now, I am limited in that this is a forum, I obviously can't watch over your hardware installation progress and check every step of the way what you are doing. I have to assume that the reader here has some basic PC hardware experience, and I do try to determine how much knowledge the poster has before getting them in too deep. Sometimes my human judgements are in error, and I have found (after it's too late!) that the individuals in question do not have the capacity or current required knowledge to be messing about with PC hardware safely. This occurs often enough to cause me some alarm, but I'm not aware that I cause serious problems by my advice. On the contrary, I get a lot of positive feedback and gestures of gratitude when problems are solved, and that is now the main reason I offer help at all.
It hurts me personally when my extensive efforts are undermined by inane and insensitive statements like some made above, especially after recently spending a lot of my personal time and effort attempting to help the person making those statements.

Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24&