Sunday, March 2nd 2008
Foxconn ELA P45 Motherboard Unveiled
Foxconn "ELA" P45 will be typical representative of a high-end Intel motherboard powered by Intel's P45 performance chipset paired with the ICH10R south bridge. As seen in the pictures and board specs, the "ELA" P45 will support the latest 45nm Intel Core 2 processors with FSB up to 1333MHz, up to 8GB of 1066MHz DDR2 memory and three PCI-e 2.0 16x graphics slots. The board's design and color scheme does not differ much from other Foxconn products. The remaining part of the lies beneath.
Source:
DH
24 Comments on Foxconn ELA P45 Motherboard Unveiled
trog
trog
It doesn't work like that, even Nvidia's "magical" n200 chip doesn't do that.
If you knew shit about what you're talking about, then you could add a clever comment next time.
www.idt.com/?id=162 <- That's the kind of products IDT makes and even in the case of the n200, you can't create something out of thin air. The n200 communicates with the chipset via a x16 PCIe interface, hence the dual x16 PCIe slots on say a 780i board, only has 16 lanes worth of bandwidth in total. Currently there's no bottle neck doing this, but what happens when you add a pair of 9800 GX2 cards? Each of those cards have an n200 chip as well, which means that you're taking 16 lanes of bandwidth and splitting it 3 times...
In this case you're simply just getting a x8 and two x4 slots.
You could have kindly explained what you meant.
And I do agree with you there, you can't get lanes out of no where, and as far as I'm aware there is no chip that can do that.
I do however feel that I was wrong in my earlier comment about the P45 supporting only 16 lanes. I think it would be closer to 20, mainly because the P35 has a 16x and a 4x slow (20 lanes), and the P45 can have either 1 16x slot, or 2 8x slots, so it needs extra lanes to cover any other PCI-E slots on the board, so if there are 3 PCI-E slots, I would think the layout would be 8x - 8x - 4x and no other PCI-E slots usable.
while you make a fair point, you make it in a bit of a nasty way at the start. he said probably, which means he had doubts himself and was merely pointing out a possibility.
What's the PCI-E slot configuration like? x16 , x16 , x16 or x16, x8, x8 ? I can see a IDT PCI-E switch there, makes things interesting.
I *think* it will either be 16/16, 16/8, or 8/8 - it has to be better than P35, and i see three slots - its possible you can switch them around. (16/16/0 16/8/8 etc)