Mega Test: 14 Boards with KT266A and nForce 420D
Table of contents
- 1. Chipset Duel - VIA Vs. Nvidia
- 2. VIA Changes Their Naming Convention
- 3. 12 Boards With VIA KT266A - Fastest Chipset For AMD & Duron
- 4. Asus A7V266-E - No Surprises Here
- 5. Azza 366A-AV - Plain Jane
- 6. Chaintech CT-7VJDA- Ideal For Overclocking
- 7. DFI AD70-SR - Inexpensive Alternative
- 8. Epox EP-8KHA+ - Overclocking On Shaky Ground
- 9. Gigabyte GA-7VTXH - Problems With Dual-BIOS
- 10. MSI K7T266 Pro2 (MS-6380) - Only Skin-Deep
- 11. QDI KD7-A (KuDoz 7) - Standard OEM Board
- 12. Soltek SL-75DRV2 - The Overclocking King
- 13. Soyo SY-K7V (Dragon Plus!): Well-Deserved Winner
- 14. Shuttle AK31 V3.1 - Lackluster
- 15. 2 Boards With Nvidia nForce 420D - Disappointing
- 16. MSI K7N420 Pro - Targeting The End Consumer
- 17. Test Setup: Comparing 14 Motherboards
- 18. OpenGL Performance: Quake 3 Arena
- 19. Direct3D Performance: Unreal Tournament
- 20. MP3 Audio Encoding: Lame MP3
- 21. Office Performance: Sysmark 2000
- 22. 3D Rendering Performance: SPECviewperf
- 23. Up Close & Personal: Features For All Boards Tested
- 24. Up Close & Personal: Features For All Boards Tested, Continued
- 25. Conclusion: KT266A Trounces nForce 420D - Soltek Is Front-runner

The selection of chipsets for Socket 462 (Socket A) is growing wider. Having presented an under-performer in the KT266 chipset , VIA followed up straightaway with a newcomer dubbed the KT266A . The only difference between it and its predecessor lies in the KT266A's memory interface, which was designed to be a real speed demon. Rumor has it that it has been copied from the SiS 735 . However, there's no official statement to that effect - not from VIA itself, anyway.
The idea behind it, however, is sound: until recently, the benchmark results had been labeling the SiS 735 the best performer with AMD Athlon & Duron. The VIA Apollo KT266A chipset is clearly intended for use en masse, while the Taiwanese competition SiS and ALi have a much smaller slice of the pie, installing considerably fewer chipsets.
Now there's a new kid on the block joining the three Far East incumbents: Nvidia, well known for its graphics chips, is offering a highly integrated chipset by the name of nForce . It's available in various flavors, the most important difference being support for either single or dual-channel memory. Both of the boards we tested use the nForce 420D (formerly known as Crush 12), which has optimum performance with classic DDR SDRAM in a dual-channel configuration.
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