It's pretty obvious for most of us that if you're
looking for a motherboard with maximum flexibility and upgrade
potential, a full sized ATX board is the way to go. However, smaller
boards have come a long way over the past few years, and the end
result has been PCs with smaller footprints that are packed with
nearly as many features as their larger sized brothers. Hence
the popularity of small form factor PCs. Weighing in much less
than full sized computers and often packing just as much processing
power, they are gaining acceptence among enthusiasts, especially
LAN gamers.
We mentioned flexibility earlier though, and that
is something of the Achilles' heel of SFF PCs. Typically, you
won't find more than two expansion slots, one of which is for
video cards. Depending on the manufacturer, the motherboard also
cannot be changed for something newer since it may be either tied
into the case's design, or they do not offer an alternative PSU.
MicroATX motherboards address that problem in two
ways. One, they allow for more upgrade peripherals than smaller,
FlexATX motherboards, and two, you can move them around relatively
easy between different cases and power supplies, including smaller
cases designed specifically for these boards. Like the larger
enthusiast level ATX boards, they often match the features and
in the case of the Foxconn WinFast 6150K8MA-8EKRS motherboard,
it offers integrated graphics. While integrated video isn't high
on the list for enthusiasts, there is plenty to get excited about
with Foxconn's latest. Will we be as excited at the end of the
review? Read on to find out.
| CPU
Support |
AMD
Socket 939, Athlon 64, Athlon X2 |
| Chipset |
Nvidia
C51PV with nForce 430GE Chipset and integrated GeForce 6150
Graphics |
| Features |
-
Integrated Nvidia GeForce 6150 Graphics
- On-board RAID-0, 1 or 5 Controller
- On-board 5.1 Sound, 1394 Firewire
- On-Board Gigabit/100/1000T Ethernet |
The Foxconn WinFast 6150K8MA-8EKRS
Foxconn throws in the usual assortment of goodies consumers should
normally expect such as manuals, driver and application CDs, and
storage related cables. There is a rear IO shield as well as a
cable attachment for S-video out. Otherwise, things are fairly
unremarkable here, but given the relatively low retail cost of
the board, this shouldn't be much of a surprise.
As we've already mentioned, the Foxconn WinFast
6150K8MA-8EKRS is a MicroATX board. In terms of chassis options,
you can use this board in almost all sizes of cases supporting
ATX and MicroATX. Overall, the layout is very good, though there
is one troublesome area which we will get to in a moment. There's
really good space around the CPU socket, and the capacitors did
not cause any problems for our Koolance water cooling kit, and
for larger coolers such as the Zalman CPNS9500.
No noise is one strength of the board as the GeForce
6150 and nForce 430 chipsets are passively cooled. The GeForce
6150 has a large heatsink handling the cooling chores which is
both good (better performance) and possibly bad. We mentioned
the Zalman fit just fine on the board, but some coolers may have
issues with the height of the heatsink used on the Foxconn.
You'll hear the codename C51 tossed around a lot,
and C51 represents the NVIDIA GeForce 6100 series GPU and nForce
400 series MCP Southbridge. This particular Foxconn board uses
the high(er) end 6150 GPU and nForce 430 combo.
NVIDIA has geared the 6100 series towards the HTPC
market, and a lot of manufacturers, Foxconn included, have designed
the smaller boards for this purpose. The 6150 GPU supports DirectX
9.0 Shader Model 3.0 and NVIDIA PureVideo Technology. The latter
will accelerate MPEG-2 in hardware, as well as Windows Media HD
Video (WMV HD). The GPU offloads video decoding from the CPU and
should provide smoother video playback and lower CPU usage. PureVideo
offers advanced de-interlacing and enhanced 3:2 and 2:2 pulldown
to cut down on the blur and ghosting which NVIDIA says is present
on competing products.
Despite the DX 9.0C support, there are only two
pixel rendering pipelines, so don't expect to blow people away
at LAN parties with the framerates. The 6150 GPU, which is clocked
at 475 MHz, supports 16:9 HD playback, but this is only partially
supported by Foxconn. Since there is only a S-Video output (Component
or HDMI are required), TV-Out will not be in HD. Hardware HD acceleration
will still be realized if you stick mainly with a PC monitor,
so all is not lost.
There are four ram slots that support Dual Channel and a maximum
of 4GB. The slots are colour coded and should make configuration
easy for those who tend to gloss over the manuals. Compatibility-wise,
all of our Corsair modules worked without a hitch, as well as
a few Kingston and Samsung ram kits. In regards to placement,
the ram slots are fairly close to the PCI Express graphics slot.
As seen above, you will have to remove the video card before any
ram upgrades.
The Foxconn WinFast 6150K8MA-8EKRS comes equipped
with one PCIE x16 slot, and three 32-bit PCI slots. Next to the
PCI slots is the NVIDIA nForce 430. The 430 MCP delivers extensive
RAID support as well as the ActiveArmor Firewall. In addition,
dual channel DDR 400, PCI-Express, Gigabit LAN, and HD audio are
all supported out of the box. The 7.1-channel Azalia HD audio
codec support is a nice addition and is a must have for those
who forego a dedicated sound card as watching DVDs on AC'97 hardware
is not as impressive.
Of course, no HTPC will be very useful with small, middling hard
drives. The nForce 430 supports Serial ATA II and can be configured
to run standalone drives, or RAID 0, 1, 0+1, and RAID 5. For networking,
media files can fly quickly via the Gigabit interface and safely
thanks to ActiveArmor, which is a hardware based Firewall. ActiveArmor
is integrated into the MCP, thus freeing up the CPU, which unlike
a software based solution, the CPU does not have to process packets.

Rounding things out are the input and output connections.
Moving from left to right, we have; two PS/2 ports, one parallel,
serial and the VGA port. Next up are the FireWire, four USB 2.0,
Gigabit Ethernet and audio connections.
The BIOS
Foxconn has taken a bit of flack with their inital
boards for missing many enthusiast required options, but this
has changed, almost 180°, for the better with their more recent
offerings. Despite the low price-point of the Foxconn WinFast
6150K8MA-8EKRS, we were pleased to see that the BIOS is very flexible
in terms of available tweaking options.
In the main BIOS Features, selecting SuperSpeed will allow you
to adjust many performance options. For exampe, the CPU Frequency
can be changed here in 1MHz increments from 200 to 450. It's unlikely
any of you can even come remotely close to that ceiling, but nothing
like a good BIOS tease to get your chops wet.
The ram allocation for the 6150 tops out at a maximum of 128MB.
Minimum is 16MB. As for the memory itself, setting things to manual
will give you access to CAS latency and other memory settings.
Voltage adjustments for memory top out at 2.85V.
Additional settings allow you to enable or disable chipset features,
as well as adjusting the PCI Express bus speeds and several HTT
options.
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