Friday, May 22nd 2009
ASUS P7P55 Pro Motherboard in Pretty Pixels
One of the first mid-range motherboards by ASUS, the P7P55 Pro smiled for the camera at XFastest. The motherboard comes across as yet another shining example of how simple Intel has made the motherboard by relocating the northbridge to the CPU package. The LGA-1156 socket CPU is powered by an 8+2 phase power circuit. Four DDR3 DIMM slots support dual-channel DDR3 memory, and use the click-slot retention mechanism the company experimented with, on the Rampage II Gene. The DIMM retention notches are available only on one side of the slot, creating uninterrupted room for a PCI-Express graphics card.
The board provides two PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slots (electrically x16, x4), two PCI-E x1, and three PCI slots. The P55 PCH provides six SATA II ports, while an extra one, along with an IDE channel and an eSATA port are provided by an external controller. 8-channel audio and gigabit Ethernet make for the rest of the mix. The way the SKU is named, tells us that this could be a successor for the P5Q-Pro, one of the most popular P45 motherboards by the company.
Source:
XFastest
The board provides two PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slots (electrically x16, x4), two PCI-E x1, and three PCI slots. The P55 PCH provides six SATA II ports, while an extra one, along with an IDE channel and an eSATA port are provided by an external controller. 8-channel audio and gigabit Ethernet make for the rest of the mix. The way the SKU is named, tells us that this could be a successor for the P5Q-Pro, one of the most popular P45 motherboards by the company.
34 Comments on ASUS P7P55 Pro Motherboard in Pretty Pixels
I like how there is no NB and that you get to use all the available slot spaces.
I also like the color scheme.
But isnt the i5/s1156 best suited to mATX and non-performance applications like "consumer" and "office" machines? Just does seem the right starting point for crossfire/SLI.
However, if these things FLY on performance, it would be great to see some benchmarks.
Didn't know about nForce. I was fairly certain that the board didn't matter as long as it was physically possible.
You can thank nVidia for keeping it to themselves for so long the greedy bathtards, they get what they deserve now not being able to have a chipset for Nehalem architecture.
I mean this sincerely, im not a hater, I actually only buy nVidia graphics, but fact is a fact and they were the ones to horde it (sli) to only their inferior chipsets for so long.
The only reason Nv let i7 do SLI, is beacuse they dont have a chipset licence for i5/i7, so they had to let someone elses chipset support SLI.
Also, LOL @ the CPU socket protection plate being made by Foxconn.