P55 On Boost: Five LGA 1156 Boards Between $200 And $250

Features Comparison Tables

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Sub-$250 Core i5/i7 Motherboard Features
Row 0 - Cell 0 Asus P7P55D DeluxeEVGA P55 FTWGigabyte P55A-UD6
PCB Revision1.06G1.01.0
ChipsetIntel P55 ExpressIntel P55 ExpressIntel P55 Express
Voltage Regulator19 Phases14 Phases24 Phases
BIOS0711 (09/24/2009)080016 (10/23/2009)F4 (10/26/2009)
133.3 MHz BCLK133.7 MHz (+0.28%)131.9 MHz (-1.09%)132.9 MHz (-0.32%)
Clock GeneratorICS 9LPRS140CKLFICS 9LPRS139AKLFICS 9LPRS914EKLF
Internal Interfaces
PCIe 2.0 x163 (x16/x1/x4, x8/x8/x4)3 (x16/x4/x1, x8/x4/x8)3 (x16/x1/x4, x8/x8/x4)
PCIe x1/x42/01/02/0
Legacy PCI222
USB 2.03 (6-ports)3 (6-ports)2 (4-ports)
IEEE-1394111
Serial Port1None1
Parallel PortNoneNoneNone
FloppyNoNoYes
Ultra-ATA 1331 (2-drives)None1 (2-drives)
SATA 3.0 Gb/s966
SATA 6.0 Gb/sNoneNone2
4-Pin Fan212
3-Pin Fan264
FP-AudioYesYesYes
CD-AudioYesNoYes
S/PDIF I/OOutput OnlyBothBoth
Power ButtonYesYesYes
Reset ButtonYesYesYes
CLR_CMOS ButtonJumper OnlyYesYes
Diagnostics PanelPass/Fail LEDsNumericNumeric
I/O Panel
P/S 2211
USB 2.087 (1 Shared w/eSATA)8 (2 Shared w/eSATA
USB 3.0NoneNone2
IEEE-1394112
NetworkDual (with teaming)DualDual (with teaming)
eSATA022
CLR_CMOS ButtonYesYesNo
Digital Audio OutOptical+CoaxialOptical+CoaxialOptical+Coaxial
Digital Audio InNoneNoneNone
Analog Audio666
Mass Storage Controllers
Chipset SATA6x SATA 3.0 Gb/s6x SATA 3.0 Gb/s6x SATA 3.0 Gb/s
Chipset RAID Modes0, 1, 5, 100, 1, 5, 100, 1, 5, 10
Add-In SATAJMB363 PCIe, 1 x SATA 3.0 Gb/s, 1 x SATA to JMB322, JMB322 to 2 x SATA88SE6121 PCIe, 2 x eSATA 3.0 Gb/s88SE9128 PCIe, 2 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s, JMB362 PCIe, 2 x eSATA 3.0 Gb/s
Add-In Ultra ATAJMB363 PCIeNoneITE IT8213 PCIe
IEEE-1394VT6308P PCI 2 x 400 mb/sTSB43AB22A 2 x 400 mb/sTSB43AB23 PCI 3 x 400 Mb/s
Gigabit Ethernet Controllers
Primary LANRTL8112L PCIe88E6057 PCIeRTL8111D PCIe
Secondary LANRTL810SC PCI88E6057 PCIeRTL8111D PCIe
Audio Codec
HD Audio CodecVIA VT2020ALC889ALC889
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Sub-$250 Core i5/i7 Motherboard Features
Row 0 - Cell 0 Intel DP55KGMSI P55-GD80
PCB RevisionE47218-4021.1
NorthbridgeIntel P55 ExpressIntel P55 Express
Voltage RegulatorSix Phase DigitalTen Phases
BIOS3822 (09/28/2009)1.5 (09/25/2009)
133.3 MHz BCLK133.3 MHz (+0.0%)133.7 MHz (+0.28%)
Clock GeneratorSLG505YC264CTMSI LRS4116AL
Internal Interfaces
PCIe  x163 (x16/x1/x4, x8/x8/x4)3 (x16/x1/x4, x8/x8/x4)
PCIe x1/x42/0*2/0
Legacy PCI22
USB 2.02 (4-ports) +1 port3 (6-ports)
IEEE-139411
Serial PortNoneNone
Parallel PortNoneNone
FloppyNoNo
Ultra-ATA 133None1 (2-drives)
SATA 3.0 Gb/s88
SATA 6.0 Gb/sNoneNone
4-Pin Fan41
3-Pin FanNone4
FP-AudioYesYes
CD-AudioNoYes
S/PDIF I/OOutput OnlyOutput Only
Power ButtonYesYes
Reset ButtonNoYes
CLR_CMOS ButtonJumper OnlyYes
Diagnostics PanelNumericNumeric
I/O Panel
P/S 2None2
USB 2.088 (1 Shared w/eSATA)
USB 3.0NoneNone
IEEE-139411
NetworkSingleDual
eSATA21
CLR_CMOS Button*Back to BIOSNo
Digital Audio OutOpticalOptical+Coaxial
Digital Audio InOpticalNone
Analog Audio66
Mass Storage Controllers
Chipset SATA6x SATA 3.0 Gb/s6x SATA 3.0 Gb/s
Chipset RAID Modes0, 1, 5, 100, 1, 5, 10
Add-In SATA88SE6145 PCIe, 2 x SATA 3.0 Gb/s, 2 x eSATA 3.0 Gb/sJMB363 PCIe, 1 x eSATA 3.0 Gb/s, 1 x SATA to JMB322, JMB322 to 2 x SATA
Add-In Ultra ATANoneJMB363 PCIe
IEEE-1394TSB43AB22A 2x 400 mb/sVT6315N PCIe 2x 400 Mb/s
Gigabit Ethernet Controllers
Primary LANIntel WG82578DC PHYRTL8111DL PCIe
Secondary LANBluetooth PANRTL8111DL PCIe
Audio Codec
HD Audio CodecALC889ALC889
Thomas Soderstrom
Thomas Soderstrom is a Senior Staff Editor at Tom's Hardware US. He tests and reviews cases, cooling, memory and motherboards.
  • liquidsnake718
    Always the question in mind. Is it possible for the manufacturers to make a P55 with FULL SLI 16x 16x? I wouldn’t know. I do know tests have proven that the difference in a 8x, 8x isnt all that bad but If I were going to invest next year on a motherboard Id want the best possible one for the best possible "upgradability".

    Also for just $50 more one could get a reasonable X58 board and the core i7 920 would be a great buy. The only motherboard here that would be a "smart" buy with "long term" in mind would be the Gigabyte UD6 since it at least sports USB3.0 AND Sata 6.0. One would not need to purchase any expansion card for this feature as it will be used in the years to come. Also knowing that X58 will be used for 6core chips way ahead is comforting as these boards then will still be around and mainstream by the time those processors will even be relevant for avid/regular PC users.

    I just have a few questions you may be able to answer, do you guys also choose motherboards from other countries? I have seen Foxconn and Emaxx in some reviews but I also know that they may not be the best quality boards but it would be great to compare those boards as well. Its also good that you placed a reference Intel P55 so people would know the standard in which to compare with. Also how come we still dont have a P55 or X58 XFX board? Has XFX stopped making mb's and only started to focus on GPU's?


    Reply
  • nerrawg
    liquidsnake718"Is it possible for the manufacturers to make a P55 with FULL SLI 16x 16x? I wouldn’t know."

    In the article first page:" Can any LGA 1156 system truly be considered high-end? After all, there’s no practical way to supply two graphics cards with a full 16 lanes of bandwidth. However, only the most expensive graphics cards need more than eight PCIe 2.0 lanes, and not every high-end buyer wants a gaming system."

    The reason for this is the GPU - CPU bridge on core i5 systems, which in previously intel boards was part of the southbridge chipset, is now integrated onto the CPU. Therefore it isn't the boards that limit GPU lanes to a maximum of x16 lanes total, but it is the p55 core i5 & i7 CPUs that do this.

    Check this link for more on the CPU-motherboard layout:
    http://www.tweaktown.com/articles/2920/intel_s_p55_express_lynnfield_chipset_overview/index2.html
    Reply
  • I not quite agree with Gigabytes UD6 being the best choice with "long term" in mind. If using USB3.0 or SATA3, your VGA will run at 8x PCIe 2.0 instead of 16x. That might not be a problem with mainstreamcards, but would you rather have your high end GTX295, R5870 or R5970 run at 8x or 16x? I know what I want when buying a topdog card.

    Also see this artice on VR-Zone which explains the pitfalls of Gigabytes USB3/SATA3 implementation: http://vr-zone.com/articles/gigabyte-p55a-boards-usb3-sata3-issues-analysis/8158.html
    Reply
  • tacoslave
    the 8x pci was the only thing that kept me from buying an i5 but instead i got a phenom II 955 and never looked back and i got a great deal with a bundle from newegg. gotta love em.
    Reply
  • kumaiti
    I would like to suggest a little more depth on the software features of each board. Performance tests are nice and everything but the differences are so small that often the features are the main deciding factor on getting a Mobo. It would be nice to know, for example, which boards support Dolby Digital Live.
    Reply
  • Crashman
    kumaitiI would like to suggest a little more depth on the software features of each board. Performance tests are nice and everything but the differences are so small that often the features are the main deciding factor on getting a Mobo. It would be nice to know, for example, which boards support Dolby Digital Live.
    Good point, perhaps the features comparison chart could be expanded a little.
    Reply
  • apache_lives
    1156 platform is mid-range, if you want the full 16x + 16x you go for 1366 its that simple, and nativly there are not enough lanes for dual 16x slots btw and nvidia chips can open them up to almost 16 16 but no real benifit anyhow

    who would buy a Phenom II rig to get 16 16? not comparing AMD but you would see better performance from a high model i5 with 8 8 lol good one
    Reply
  • donkeykong2009
    It will be great to see the performance impact on the Games for the Gigabyte board when USB 3.0 and SATA 3 is enabled.
    Reply
  • Crashman
    donkeykong2009It will be great to see the performance impact on the Games for the Gigabyte board when USB 3.0 and SATA 3 is enabled.
    You can't enable USB 3.0 and SATA 6.0 Gb/s at the same time.
    Reply
  • I'm not talking about full speed CrossFireX or SLI at two times 16x PCIe speed. I'm talking about single VGA solutions. I want my HD5970 to run at fullspeed 16x PCIe express and that's not happening if I connect a USB3 or SATA3 device. Even in single VGA setups, the speed will be cut in half on my PCIe 16x slot to 8x.

    I'd rather have the ASUS or MSI (GD85) solution who use an additional PLX chip. The question was about being future proof and the Gigabyte solution is not as future proof as it seems.

    Unfortunately Intel seems to be steering away from the X58 platform. There are more and more P55 motherboards coming out which have high end features. The top end Lynnfield CPUs have no problem outrunning the lower end Bloomfield CPUs. So saying a 1156 is midrange... that's giving it less credit than it deserves.

    Btw, there are P55 mainboards from ASUS, MSI and EVGA with an NF200 chipset which do offer fullspeed dual CrossFire/SLI at 16/16. And those definitely don't have midrange prices. :o
    Reply