Friday, October 10th 2008
ASUS Ready with Workstation-class X58 Motherboards
After flaunting the P6T Series motherboards, and the monstrous Rampage II Extreme, ASUS decided to expand its Bloomfield CPU-supportive motherboard lineup with its workstation-class offerings. ASUS is known for bringing in workstation boards on desktop platforms. They have had Intel 975P based workstation boards, just as they had nForce 590 SLI boards. These desktop-thru-worksation platforms are usually single CPU socket platforms, with certain workstation features, such as PCI-X interface, enterprise-grade storage controllers, among other features that make them durable and suitable for mission-critical environments. They don't sport enterprise chipsets, and hence carry batch-leading desktop chipsets.
With Nehalem and the new Socket 1366, ASUS did just that, with the inclusion of two single-socket workstation boards. These motherboards, at the outset support the upcoming Core i7 processors, and have the potential to support Xeon processors that use the same socket, or even the same core. There are two models lined-up: P6T6 WS Revolution and P6T6 WS Pro. The P6T6 WS Revolution is the flagship board. It features six full-length PCI-Express slots, which might have variable number of available PCI-Express lanes, depending on the number of PCI-E cards connected. It features a 16+2 phase CPU power circuit. The board features the Tylersburg X58 chipset, along with an ICH10 series southbridge. There is passive cooling for the VRM area, northbridge, and a large southbridge block, that could be possibly cooling a supplementary PCI-Express switch chip. Storage options include Serial-attached SCSI (SAS), SATA II and e-SATA ports.As for the P6T6 WS Pro, it is a value-ended workstation board. It comes with only two full-length PCI-E x16 slots that have full electrical bandwidth. It sports two PCI-X slots. It offers essentially the same storage options as the Revolution board. Indications are, that these boards won't be available right upon launch of other X58 chipset boards.
Source:
XFastest
With Nehalem and the new Socket 1366, ASUS did just that, with the inclusion of two single-socket workstation boards. These motherboards, at the outset support the upcoming Core i7 processors, and have the potential to support Xeon processors that use the same socket, or even the same core. There are two models lined-up: P6T6 WS Revolution and P6T6 WS Pro. The P6T6 WS Revolution is the flagship board. It features six full-length PCI-Express slots, which might have variable number of available PCI-Express lanes, depending on the number of PCI-E cards connected. It features a 16+2 phase CPU power circuit. The board features the Tylersburg X58 chipset, along with an ICH10 series southbridge. There is passive cooling for the VRM area, northbridge, and a large southbridge block, that could be possibly cooling a supplementary PCI-Express switch chip. Storage options include Serial-attached SCSI (SAS), SATA II and e-SATA ports.As for the P6T6 WS Pro, it is a value-ended workstation board. It comes with only two full-length PCI-E x16 slots that have full electrical bandwidth. It sports two PCI-X slots. It offers essentially the same storage options as the Revolution board. Indications are, that these boards won't be available right upon launch of other X58 chipset boards.
25 Comments on ASUS Ready with Workstation-class X58 Motherboards
www.pcisig.com/specifications/pcix_20/
Altho the Revolution posted above does look mighty tempting. I am so ready to get rid of PCI slots. And on a pure PCIe board, it only makes sense to use full length slots to maximize placement options.
On Topic
Ever since I've seen the revolution it makes me want it more and more every time I see it again. One heck of a board.
Asus, here is a blank check with my name on it, write any amount of money on it and I will pay!
Apart from that, PCI-X is being phased out like PCI. It's just a slightly slower process. Mostly not due to bandwidth though, more due to tracing on the motherboards.
Say hello to 144 GB system memory. That's the Foxconn board. There's another one with 4 DIMM slots /socket:
Athlon MP that was just a Athlon XP Wired DIfferently by the Bridges
fab51.com/cpu/barton/athlon-e24.html
Wouldnt be surprised if someone could overclock 2 of the Athlon-MPs (Modified AXPs) with a mod bios and get 2.5-2.7 GHz out of each.
Thanks for the great explanation.
I beat that if I was paying to obtain this kind of info. would take longer and maybe not that well explained.