Asus P5Q-E
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: intel, p45, chipset
Asus P5Q-E
The P5Q-E is the upper-mainstream P45 motherboard by Asus, offering decent features and Asus’s controversial EPU power saving feature. We will look into that in a separate comparison.
The eight phase voltage regulators are kept cool by copper heat sinks—four of them connected to the northbridge heat sink by a heat pipe. Asus also supports DDR2 memory with support for 1066 and 1200 speeds, dual Gigabit Ethernet ports and a Firewire controller. This is the only motherboard in this roundup that is not ready to run two PCI Express graphics cards. Instead, the single x16 slot monopolizes all 16 lanes running at PCIe 2.0 speeds.
There are two additional storage controllers: the Marvell 88SE6121 offers one eSATA port and an UltraATA/133 channel for legacy devices, and the SteelVine Sil5723 by Silicon Image provides two more SATA 3 Gb/s ports that support cascading through virtualization of attached drives. Check out more details on this technology in our article Silicon Image Brings Virtualization to eSATA.
Asus’ Express Gate stands for the feature-limited operating system Splashtop by DeviceVM, which is capable of booting in as little as five seconds. This feature launches a Linux OS and a browser, sufficient to check email or to chat. Thanks to Flash support, you can even watch videos on YouTube or other platforms. However, since the Express Gate Splashtop OS is launched from within the Flash ROM, it is not possible to make changes or to store anything except bookmarks.
Asus has many other features listed on its website, which we recommend checking out.
- Previous page P45 Boards
- Next page ECS Black Series P45T-A
- X48 Motherboard Comparison, Part 2
- X48 Motherboard Comparison, Part 2
- High-End Chipset Battle
- NFORCE 780a SLI Motherboards Compared
- AMD's Athlon Stepping Improvements
- AMD 780G Chipset- Full-HD Playback with a Sempron
- X48 Motherboard Comparison: Meet the new boss
- Intel Skulltrail II - Overclocking and Power Consumption
- Intel Skulltrail I - Feeling the Power of 8 Cores
- Intel Skulltrail III - Eight against Four Performance Comparison







Check out Ramdisk from SuperSpeed yet?

Solid state HD's are limited to the Sata connection, partitioning your ram to run games on isn't, love to see some benchmarks (not to mention MetaRam)
We had 32gb MB's ages ago (fatality) just not the DIMMs
Good to see native 16gb, some nice improvements but nothing ground breaking. Probably saving the best for the next socket in 6+ months.
Nice review
According to the MSI's website the P45 Diamond supports DDR3 and not DDR2.
See http://www.msicomputer.com/product [...] d&class=mb