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MSI X58 Eclipse: Welcome Back Turbo Button

btarunr

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Oct 9, 2007
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Location
Dublin, Ireland
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 AORUS Elite V2
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 16GB DDR4-3200
Video Card(s) Galax RTX 4070 Ti EX
Storage Samsung 990 1TB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
The high-end offering by MSI based on the upcoming Intel X58 chipset and the 1366-pin land grid array (LGA 1366) is pictured in its full capacity. It brings with it a fascinating set of features and is slated for Q4 2008. Like all the other X58 motherboards, the Eclipse supports QuickPath Interconnect, an FSB-replacement by Intel for the LGA 1366 processors, offering system bus bandwidth around twice as that of FSB 1600 MHz, 25 GB/s.



The board is a sprawling metropolis with 6 + 4 phase power circuitry, additional SATA interfaces. It's becoming a common feature for motherboard vendors to provide switches for power, reset, and sometimes clear CMOS functions. The ASUS Rampage Extreme saw that being taken to the next level with manual overclocking controls on the board. This board shows a button labeled "Turbo1", word is that system chassis manufacturers will also be including this button on their cases soon. Perhaps it has something to do with the "Turbo Mode" CPU parameter adjustment feature (covered here). So it's back to using a quick turbo button to make your CPU act differently to different situations like it used to be in the good old days of the pre-Pentium computing. Also can be seen are DIP switches, going by the switch-cluster's label on the PCB that reads "CPU CLK1", it should have something to do with CPU parameters, again, merely to tune it, not to configure your motherboard to a new CPU. Remember, back in those days, if you upgraded from say a 33 MHz 486 DX to a 66 MHz DX2, you had to change a lot of jumpers and tune those DIP switches to make the board support a the newer CPU, updates to the BIOS handle CPU support these days, those switches are merely to tune a supported CPU.

MSI lavishly used heatsinks and heatpipe arrays to keep sensitive parts of the motherboard under thermal control. As with other X58 boards, this one features 6 DDR3 DIMM slots for 3-channel DDR3 memory. There are three PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slots, though the third blue slot doesn't seem to have lane parity with the other two black ones, which should be full electrical 16-lane interfaces. There are contradicting images of the third slot, only with official specs. being relased from MSI can there be some clarity. The board provides a total of 12 SATA interfaces, with two being eSATA. With ASUS, Gigabyte and MSI ready with their premium offerings to pave way for a new architecture, these are exciting times for the PC enthusiast.



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Wow... they split the whole cooling system into two parts. Wonder why there is a SB though, I thought the NB was sufficient.

I must say this is one of the more better looking boards i've seen from MSI... i like the colour scheme. 4 Phase for NB is absolute total overkil... On the memory side though, only two phase.
 
How are you supposed to get to that CPU power connector??
 
How are you supposed to get to that CPU power connector??

No worse than my Striker Extreme... Dang heatpipes all in the way. :banghead:

I seriously like the look of this board, nice job MSI.
 
I dont like the design of the backplane. Could be rearranged to have 6 connector stacks:

1./ Legacy key/mouse (good), reset switch at top
2./ COM (upright)
3./ 2 eSATA, firewire
4./ 4 USB
5./ 2 USB/ethernet
6./ 2 USB/ethernet

Reset switch in the middle of the backplane... when fully populated... is an idiotic position. You'd never be able to reach it with everything plugged in!
 
Looks like 3 phase for the mem,there are 3 chokes near the ram.
 
looks nice bit i stil wait for abits Ix58-max :P
 
wow man... these words... 33 MHz 486 DX, 66 MHz DX2 :eek:
:respect:

my first one was a 286/12MHz and no turbo button for me :D

then a 386 without a math processor! :p

I still have these mobos :D
 
hey i have a use for my old ATX case you know the ones where the side panel is a giant C, it has a turbo switch woot
 
Looks very nice from the photos at least. Clean component arrangement and easy on the eyes. I'm not too impressed with the chipset it's using. Myself I prefer nVidia IC's and platforms.
 
USB connections galore! That's awesome.
 
hey i have a use for my old ATX case you know the ones where the side panel is a giant C, it has a turbo switch woot

Last case i had like that was a AT, ATX have been Door based.
 
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