I'm considering a portable computer based on the Intel D875PBZLK motherboard for my SCOPE board.
Anybody know if it's worth going Serial ATA with appropriate drives? Is the technology mature enough? Does it hog PCI bandwidth? Does the RAID 0 (striping) work for a non-boot drive?
Recommend motherboard?
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I think HT doesn't work at all with our SFP software (or was it the drivers of the CW cards?)On 2003-10-12 16:59, Sunshine wrote:
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I think if necessary, HT must be disabled, just to give those cards the right IRQs. hmmm
Check one of the other threads in this forum to be sure.
BTW, you should absolutely stay away from the promise ATA/SATA/Raid controller, as it shares its bandwidth with the PCI bus. Use the ATA/SATA on the ICH5 and disable the promise. Furthermore, the Gigabit lan is, from what I understood from de ICH5 datasheets (unreadable document

Cheers,
Rob
Thanks for the advice people.
Another Q: If I wanted something even smaller (avoiding laptops for the moment) does anybody know how the micro-ATX boards behave compared with their larger ATX counterparts?
Specifically, the Asus P4P800-VM (Intel 865G chipset). It has 3 PCI slots and AGP port and supports serial ATA.
Another Q: If I wanted something even smaller (avoiding laptops for the moment) does anybody know how the micro-ATX boards behave compared with their larger ATX counterparts?
Specifically, the Asus P4P800-VM (Intel 865G chipset). It has 3 PCI slots and AGP port and supports serial ATA.
Hi TRMP8R,
Those micro form factor PCs look tempting, but the reviews I've seen all mention power supply wattages that are downright puny. And Creamware cards sure do seem to like plenty of watts.
Show me a micro form factor that will house a couple of Scopes or Pulsar IIs + clock as well as a 400 or 500 watt power supply, and I will definitely consider buying one. Until then, for portability it's 19" rack-mounts and flight cases (and a strong back).
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: jabney on 2003-10-27 23:48 ]</font>
Those micro form factor PCs look tempting, but the reviews I've seen all mention power supply wattages that are downright puny. And Creamware cards sure do seem to like plenty of watts.
Show me a micro form factor that will house a couple of Scopes or Pulsar IIs + clock as well as a 400 or 500 watt power supply, and I will definitely consider buying one. Until then, for portability it's 19" rack-mounts and flight cases (and a strong back).
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: jabney on 2003-10-27 23:48 ]</font>
So INTEL D875PBZ motherboard it is then.
Looks like the Carillon ultra-quiet rack-mount audio PC's come fitted with these little beauties anyway, so that's another endorsement. And it seems my supplier also uses this MB as the demo board of choice for their SCOPE cards.
I've given up trying to find a small case that will actually fit a SCOPE board! Mini-tower or a 4U rack mount will have to do.
Looks like the Carillon ultra-quiet rack-mount audio PC's come fitted with these little beauties anyway, so that's another endorsement. And it seems my supplier also uses this MB as the demo board of choice for their SCOPE cards.
I've given up trying to find a small case that will actually fit a SCOPE board! Mini-tower or a 4U rack mount will have to do.
As I've never met any real problems with my Creamware setup maybe I should give a little feedback. I used to have a Asus "Black pearl" CUSL2 P3-800 1 gig RAM (no probs at all)
Then I went and bought an even better one. ASUS P4G8X Deluxe Intel E7205 chipset wich I'm soooo happy with.
But If I was to buy one today. I'd probably go for Intel SE7505VB2, Server Hovedkort Dual E7505, SATA, for Xeon P4 m/533FSB, GbLAN
It's maybe just me but when the AMD64 mobos comes with a decent chipset. Then I'll maybe buy a new system
Then I went and bought an even better one. ASUS P4G8X Deluxe Intel E7205 chipset wich I'm soooo happy with.

But If I was to buy one today. I'd probably go for Intel SE7505VB2, Server Hovedkort Dual E7505, SATA, for Xeon P4 m/533FSB, GbLAN
It's maybe just me but when the AMD64 mobos comes with a decent chipset. Then I'll maybe buy a new system

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