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I need a new mobo!

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2009 11:37 am
by Starmage21
The trick is finding one that fits all my specs, because I built what I have around around an ASRock P43Twins1600 which I have found out is a total piece of crap!

Ive got a Core2Quad LGA775 socket,

2 sets of 4GB DDR3. One runs at 1.5V and the other at 1.8V. Timing, however, is identical.

GeForce GTX280 with PCIE x16 2.0 interface.

ATX Form Factor.


I can find boards easily, but what I need help with is finding one thats going to support 2 sets of DDR3 running at different voltages. If there is such a thing at all, I dont even know. Felt it best to ask :D

Posted: Tue Aug 18, 2009 7:37 pm
by XMEN Gambit
Err, dunno. I'd probably hit newegg first, then a mobo review site.

Posted: Thu Aug 20, 2009 12:59 am
by Jester
does it really matter on the ram voltage? Can't you just set that in the bios. I thought ram was supposed to self adjust to the lowest speed/voltage installed anyway.

Posted: Thu Aug 20, 2009 1:00 pm
by Spinning Hat
Right, but he wants to try to run it at different voltages... I don't think there's a mobo out there that will do that/ I'd either upgrade the RAM to matched brands / voltages, or just run at the lower voltages and timings.

Posted: Thu Aug 20, 2009 6:37 pm
by XMEN Gambit
I tend to agree, since RAM doesn't cost that much right now. It's DDR3 though.

Posted: Mon Aug 24, 2009 10:26 pm
by Starmage21
Right, I wanted DIFFERENT voltages, and that meant at best there would be a specialty motherboard out there. Otherwise, youre really not supposed to mix it.

Posted: Wed Aug 26, 2009 10:04 pm
by Jester
I have not seen a mobo that allows different speeds on it. But it seems to me that that would be software driven. Try looking for a bios that allows it.

Posted: Thu Aug 27, 2009 7:35 pm
by XMEN Gambit
Jester wrote:I have not seen a mobo that allows different speeds on it. But it seems to me that that would be software driven. Try looking for a bios that allows it.
Not speeds. Voltages. :)

Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 12:39 am
by XMEN Ashaman DTM
Well, you could always take a quality piece of hardware and modify it. Granted, you'll likely end up ruining whatever hardware you start with. But with some practice, you'll do fine. :D


Could it be something where you sell one of the sets of memory and go with a board that suits the other set?

I've never heard of a motherboard that will do what you are asking. I've heard of other hardware, but that stuff won't help you here.

Sorry. :(

Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 7:15 am
by Starmage21
XMEN Ashaman DTM wrote:Well, you could always take a quality piece of hardware and modify it. Granted, you'll likely end up ruining whatever hardware you start with. But with some practice, you'll do fine. :D


Could it be something where you sell one of the sets of memory and go with a board that suits the other set?

I've never heard of a motherboard that will do what you are asking. I've heard of other hardware, but that stuff won't help you here.

Sorry. :(
Appreciate it. I'll probobly hold onto my Kingston ValueRAM and stick it in my woman's machine when she upgrades because she refuses to use any other brand. Then use my OCZ Platinum in my new board.

Also, you can get other BIOS firmware for your mobos?! Who writes this stuff, and where can you get it? I always thought you were stuck with whatever came with your mobo unless you wrote one yourself.

Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 2:57 pm
by Spinning Hat
You can upgrade your firmware depending on your model, etc. from the mainboard manufacturer. You COULD try to write your own, but it's not something I would personally try to do. Generally you wouldn't be able to overwrie a phoenix BIOS with another brand.. Do some searching online.. You might get lucky, and someone else might have written one for you. :D

Posted: Fri Aug 28, 2009 7:02 pm
by XMEN Gambit
Doesn't much matter what the BIOS says if the board itself doesn't have the capability. And if the board has the capability then the BIOS has probably already been modified to use it. Mobo vendors absolutely love to have more feature boxes to check off than the competition.