We
have all see the changes over the last year. In both the Intel
and nVidia line, PCIe/PCI is phasing out AGP/PCI. With that change,
the expected next step would be the mATX motherboards to follow
suite.
Interesting
enough, the first motherboard I get to test out in the mATX arena
is an nForce4 AMD based motherboard.
Last
year I had done a review on an Intel based solution from a little
known manufacturer (in the motherboard space anyway) called Foxconn.
It appears they have re-branded themselves as WinFast. Although
Foxconn (therefore WinFast) has been in the tech industry for
years, they only have recently started producing the entire motherboard.
On
tap for today's review is the latest mATX motherboard from WinFast
based on the nForce4 AMD chipset. This is the WinFast NF4K8MC,
let's look at the specifications before moving on.
| CPU |
AMD
Socket 939 FX/64 |
| Chipset |
NVIDIA
nForce4 |
| Memory |
-
Dual channel, unbuffered, 2.5V DDR266/333/400
-
(2) 184-pin DIMM sockets, max 2GB
|
| Expansion
Slots |
1
x PCI Express x16, 1 x PCI Express x1 |
| LAN |
Integrated
Ethernet (10/100) |
| Audio |
Integrated,
5.1 channel AC97 (Realtek) |

Unpacking
the WinFast NF4K8MC you see the manual, various cables, Driver
CD/Floppy and the cardboard cover that protects the mATX motherboard.
Pulling out the motherboard we see there is the single x16 connector
for the graphics card, one x1 PCIe slot on the right and two PCI
slots to the left of it. The first thing I noticed was there are
only 2 RAM slots on this motherboard, second, unfortunately there
is an active cooling solution in place for the chipset.

Cables
included in the package are your garden variety USB 2.0 riser
cables, Molex to SATA power converter, a floppy cable, two standard
ATA-133 and two SATA cables. You would think they would give you
4 SATA cables so you could build the RAID, as this is capable
of doing up to 4 SATA drives but maybe that's just me. As
to "Give Me's" in the software department, don't hold
your breath, with exception to "Norton Internet Security"
and Adobe Reader 6.0 (free from the web anyway), the only thing
on the Utility CD is Drivers and you guessed it, Utilities.
Looking
over the motherboard itself, the 939 pin ZIF socket tends to
stand out on a mATX motherboard. You notice the 2 lonely RAM
slots, plenty of SATA connectors and one more thing I missed
on initial overview of the motherboard. Yes Dorothy, that is
a 24 pin ATX Power Supply connector. Although I have heard rumors
of a 450W+ 20 pin PSU being able to power a 24 pin (m)ATX motherboard,
I have yet been able to prove this out. My 500W generic was
not up to the task.

Flipping
the motherboard over we see a metal plate situated underneath
the ZIF socket. Although Asus uses a much grander and graphically
pleasing design, Asus at least announces that its intention is
to maintain cooler temperatures for the surrounding components.
No such mention here, making me assume it is for reinforcement
of some sort.

Looking
at the rear of the board we see the now standard slew of connectors,
with one exception, there is an RS-232 port here, something we
don't see that often. You see the standard fare PS2, Parallel,
USB/NIC riser, USB/IEEE-1394 riser and the audio connections riser.
There is also an S/PDIF connector on the motherboard, although
WinFast has chosen not to supply you with the riser cable for
this.

In
terms of storage, WinFast has given you flexibility as well as
versatility in the NF4K8MC. With support for two PATA connections
(4 devices) and four SATA connections, you will be hard pressed
to run out of drive connections. RAID is supplied by the "NVIDIA
RAID" solution. This supplies the end user with RAID 0 /
1 / 0+1 and Spanning (JBOD). JBOD basically allows you to mix
drives of differing sizes into one large logical drive.

The
NF4K8MC uses the REALTEK ALC655, an AC' 97 2.3 Specification compliant
audio chip. There is simple support for L/R audio with Mic in,
and using the included Audio utility, you can emulate 6 channel
surround sound. There is also an S/PDIF connection on the motherboard
to off-load such tasks to an external Amplifier that will more
than likely perform better. Unfortunately, unlike the Intel chipset
counterpart, the jack connections on the rear I/O are hardwired,
and not software selectable.
Installation

Physically
installing the motherboard goes without fanfare. This should go
without saying, as it is a mATX form factor, and my HSPC Tech
Station is a breeze to install even a BTX motherboard into. Installing
the 939 processor and filling up the RAM slots I come to x16 PCIe
slot to install the HIS X850XT Graphics card. I was astonished
that there is no retention mechanism included on the x16 slot.
This is especially true in that I have seen several gamers use
a mATX motherboard solution as their LAN Party machine, meaning
travel. The HIS X850XT slipped out over 4 times during this review
process, and I didn't move it once. All 4 times of re-seating
it properly were only noticed because of the error beeps on boot
up, and failure to POST. This is NOT a good thing, and probably
does not conform to the PCIe standard for an x16 slot.

The
headers on the WinFast NF4K8MC were labeled poorly, to the point
that I had to reference the manual to figure out what plugged
where. A trend I thought we were moving away from, as manual's
are nice, but they also get lost. The SATA connectors are all
placed near the rear edge of the board and nicely in a row keeping
those cables away from the rest of the components while assisting
you in keeping cable design clean. Note also that the IDE connectors
are kept to the rear edge, neither of which is mounted actually
on the edge, which I would not expect in a mATX solution, as footprint
is very limited.
Next
I installed Windows XP, the install went smoothly and as expected,
XP did not recognize the NIC, Video, Audio or chipset. I popped
in the WinFast utility CD and proceeded to install the drivers.
Here is where WinFast shines, as I am able to install all of the
drivers with one click, and one reboot later, everything but Video
is ready to go. I have yet to see the major players in this space
do this. It's usually install this piece, reboot, install the
next, reboot wash rinse repeat.
WinFast
uses their Super Utilities to monitor and update the motherboard.
I am showing here the basic information anyone would want to
know about their motherboards current situation, as it relates
to heat, fans and VCore etc. I played a few games to make sure
that the monitoring programs did not interfere with the operation
of the system, from what I could tell, they did not.

I
checked to see current BIOS status from their Super Update utility
to find that there was a newer version available, lucky me, I
get to test and show how an upgrade is accomplished within windows.
Several manufacturers are now doing this, and it is definitely
a nice touch away from the DOS boot disk and flash utility of
old.
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