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Date: 22 November 2009
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ABIT AT7 MAX2 Motherboard  

Details of ABIT AT7 MAX2 Motherboard

Today though isn't an ordinary motherboard day, as the AT7-MAX2 has defiantly broken the mould as far as Socket A boards go.

Another day, another motherboard. It seems as if a day doesn't go by without another motherboard announcement. Today we're looking at the ABIT AT7-MAX2 motherboard - a Socket A motherboard using the new VIA KT400 chipset. Today though isn't an ordinary motherboard day, as the AT7-MAX2 definitely has broken the mould as far as socket A boards go.

ABIT's philosophy with the MAX line is to do away with the old legacy ports and in its place put more modern, useful ports. It was quite a shock to the hardware community when ABIT first released the MAX series. ABIT had always gone for minimalist overclockers board designs - no onboard sound, graphics, LAN or anything of that nature; after all, onboard usually meant poor quality. However, the onboard features they added were far from poor quality and were very good replacements for real cards.

The MAX2 follows on where the original MAX left off - just like before, you wont find any serial or parallel ports, but what you will find is probably one of the greatest selection of interfaces ever to be built directly onto the motherboard. You name it, it's got it - USB 2, Firewire, 6 Channel Audio, Optical Audio Out, LAN, Serial ATA, RAID. Unlike ABIT's previous MAX line, the PS/2 ports are back!

The MAX2 has been geared for the enthusiast in mind. The overclocking options are the best i've seen in any socket A board. When ABIT designed this board, they did so with style in mind - it's certainly a looker :)

Lets have a look at exactly what this board has to offer...

Specification

Processor

Every AMD Socket A processor, from the Duron 600 to Athlon XP 2200+

Chipset

VIA KT400 Socket A North Bridge and VT8235 South Bridge
AGP 3.0 compliancy with 1x,2x,4x,8x support

IDE Controllers

Supports UDMA 33, 66, 100, 133 transfer modes
RAID 0/1/0+1 via Highpoint HPT 374 Controller
Dual Serial ATA Channels supporting speeds up to 150 MB/sec

Memory

Four 184 pin DIMM sockets for Un-buffered & Non ECC DDR DRAM
Maximum of 2 modules for DDR 333/400 support (2GB Maximum)
Maximum of 4 modules for DDR 200/266 support (3.5GB Maximum)

BIOS

SoftMenu technology for totally jumplerless setup
Award PnP BIOS with APM and DMI support
ACPI (Advanced Configuration Power Interface)

Onboard Audio

Realtek ALC650 6-channel audio
Digital audio out supporting 24-bit SPDIF

Onboard LAN

VIA VT6102 MAC Controller and VT 6103 physical layer
10/100 Mb speeds with ACPI and Wake On Lan support

I/O Connectors

AGP, 5 PCI slots
Floppy port
4x IDE connectors
2x Serial ATA 150 connectors
2x USB Headers, 1x IEEE 1349a header
1x CD-in, 1x Aux-in

Back Panel

PS/2 Keyboard and mouse
4x USB, 2x Firewire (IEEE 1394)
S/P DIF output
Front speaker, line in, Mic in, Center/Sub, Surround Speaker jacks
2x USB, 1x RJ-45 LAN

There is also an option to add the ABIT Media XP front bay panel, of which you can find a review of here Media XP. The sheer number of connectors and features of this board is incredible. The only card you would need to add to this motherboard to make it a complete system is a graphics card, nothing else is required.

Unlike previous MAX boards this board has a full 5 PCI slots, so you can really pack it out with extras if you wanted to. Onboard USB 2.0 and Firewire is a welcome addition, although there are not many USB 2.0 products out there at the moment. With USB 2 ports starting to appear on motherboards like this, we should start to see it more on consumer products. Firewire is already widely used on camcorders, external storage devices and more recently on MP3 jukebox like players.

I'm personally glad that ABIT decided to bring back the PS/2 ports. There are a lot of people out there with very good PS/2 keyboards and mice that don't feel the need to go out and purchase USB ones. Further more a lot of people don't realise that in terms of update speed, PS/2 is more responsive for mice. The maximum sampling rate of USB is only 100-120Hz, where with proper software you can set the PS/2 sampling rate to 200 Hz - which in my opinion gives you a slightly smoother mouse response in first person shooter games.

The lack of the old 9-pin Serial and 25-pin Parallel ports isn't too much of a loss. Beware though as some people forget they may have a few devices still using these legacy ports - mainly external analogue modems and small add on's, like remote control unit's commonly found packaged with DVD cards etc.

The number of hard drive options is endless, with 2 normal UDMA 133 channels, 2 RAID-able channels and a further 2 Serial ATA channels you are completely spoilt for choice on your storage options. This is the first time that Serial ATA has popped up on motherboards (or just about anywhere for that matter). At present there are hardly any hard drives available that support Serial ATA natively, but ABIT didn't want to leave you in the dark until support takes off, so they included the Serillel™ ATA converter.... 

 

 

 

Category: Computer Hardware, Software and Peripherals
Type: Glossaries and Dictionaries
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