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ECS KN1 SLI Extreme ECS KN1 SLI Extreme: SLI, Overclocking, BIOS restoration and a funky colour scheme make up some of this boards features. Does it have the performance to back it up? We find out.
Date: November 2, 2005
Manufacturer: ECS
Written By: Brook Moore
Price: $125 USD

ECS has been making motherboards for sometime now, you couldn't really say they were enthusiast overclocking machines, as they have always been more focused on the inexpensive end of the spectrum. Not long ago there was rumor that ECS was looking to acquire a more “enthusiast” oriented motherboard manufacturer. It appears that they have instead, decided to go this route on their own terms by introducing the “EliteGroup” series.

Today I am writing about the ECS KN1 SLI Extreme motherboard which is a part of that enthusiast’s lineup that ECS has developed. Among some of the features built into this main board are 7.1 (8ch) surround sound audio, 10/100/1000Base-Tx and a BIOS recover mechanism called “Top-Hat Flash”. Let’s look over all of the specifications.

Specifications

Form factor: ATX
Chipset: nVidia nF4 SLI
CPU: Socket 939 supporting the AMD Athlon 64, AMD Athlon 64FX (55 and 57) AMD and Athlon 64 X2
FSB: 2000 MT/s HyperTransport Interface
BIOS: Award BIOS with 4MB Flash ROM
Memory: 4 DDR DIMMS / Max 4GB / Dual Channel capable
PCIe: 2 – x16 / 1 - x1
NIC: Realtek 10/100 and Marvell 10/100/1000
IDE: nF4 SLI - 2x ATA133 / 4x SATA-II (RAID 0/1/0+1)
SiL3132 – 2x SATA-II (RAID 0/1)
Audio: Realtek ALC850 8-Channel CODEC with S/PDIF Optical/Copper Out
Ports: USB 2.0 (4 rear, 3x2 headers) / PS2 (2) / IEEE-1394 (2 headers)
Misc: Anti-Burn LED / PCI LED Indicator / Top-Hat Flash BIOS recovery / Rounded Corners for strength and safety / Full Color Manual


ECS has not skimped when it comes to what’s on the motherboard. ECS packages the motherboard box within a sleeve, with everything decorated nicely, I do like the new scheme they have chosen. Once inside we see the motherboard and all of the goodies sent along, let’s do a quick inventory here to see what we have.

1 SLI bridge connector
1 Top-Hat Flash
1 Dual USB / Dual FireWire cable w/rear bracket (also a 3.5” front mount substitute bracket)
4 Orange SATA cables
1 LPT cable
1 FireWire cable w/rear bracket.
2 IDE Ribbon cables
1 Floppy ribbon cable
1 Molex to (2) SATA power cable
1 Driver CD
1 Software Application CD
1 Manual

I must admit, I am impressed with what ECS has included in their packaging. Not that there are highly touted games or high end UV reactive cables, but an inclusive package of goodies none the less.

I like the ability to use either a rear bracket or the optional 3.5” drive bay mount bracket for my USB ports, not all cases have front USB ports, or ones you want to use anyway. The driver CD has just that, nF4 drivers and interestingly, a few utilities. These include the nF4 utilities -

Cool'n'Quiet
nTune
SmartLAN
and an Award BIOS utility, WinFlash.

The Utilities CD includes -

Adobe reader
DPU – Helps to ensure the safety of important data
Pro-Magic Plus – Similar to WinXP system restore
ShowShifter – Turns your PC into a multimedia device
I'm In Touch – Remote control your PC's from anywhere
Media Ring – Make calls over the internet (to people with the same software)
WinCinema – Includes WinDVD / WinDVD Creator / WinRIP

The manual supplied with the KN1 SLI is shaped similar to coupon book and is in full color print, this does assist you in determining what they are talking about on the motherboard as almost everything is identified by color. The manual is well done and easy to read / follow.

The motherboard is ECS purple with yellow, blue, red, purple, green and even white highlights. I would have liked to see a few lesser colors, although that is not going to deter me from picking a motherboard, some people require good looks as much as performance, so they could have an issue with the slew of colors used.

The socket used on the ECS KN1 SLI Extreme is of course of the 939 format and is located on the right rear quadrant as with most solutions today. Care must be taken when choosing a HS as there are several capacitors around the socket retention mechanism, if your HS protrudes outside of the mechanism, there is some likelihood that you will hit or bend one of these capacitors.

Above the socket is a noticeable difference from your average motherboard, you see a Fan with an air-duct surrounding it to pull air across the voltage regulation capacitors, as well as some of the heat pushed out by the CPU HS/Fan. Moving to the left of the socket is a 4 pin 5v/12v Molex connector (residing awfully close to PCIe x16 slot 1 mind you) which should be used along with the standard 24pin power and the 4 pin ‘P4’ power. All of these power connections are there to aid in stability, especially when using two PCIe graphics cards. The 4pin P4 sits above and right of the 939 socket, the 24pin ATX connector sits bottom right. My only issue here is the Rear I/O cover plate only has a parallel port cutout for the fan to blow air out of. It should have been more of a made to fit solution, it does however work.

To the left of the 24 pin power connector are 2 IDE ports with a further floppy port situated directly under the 24 pin connector. Not an ideal position for the floppy port but can not be entirely omitted from a motherboard, despite it being for a device that is used less and less as time goes by. Next to the IDE connectors are 3 Fan power connectors, we can also see the 4 nForce4 SLI SATA-II headers and the actively cooled MCP. Installing the Main graphics card you can see the active cooling fan for the chipset is could be in the way with large graphics cards. Just to the left of the HS/Fan for the chipset is the 2 SiL3132 SATA-II headers.

The PCI/PCIe area has 3 PCI slots at the left of the board, 2 PCIe Graphics slots and 1 PCIe 1x slot. The 2 graphics slots are separated by the small 1x PCIe slot. In between the 3 PCI and 1x PCIe slots is a flashing purple light, although I attributed this to “show” the manual actually states there is a purpose for these lights; it appears if they are blinking, then there is nothing installed in the slot. There is no where in the BIOS the ability to shut these off, so if you hate them, let’s hope you don't have a window on your case. I take it as they are looking at this being a troubleshooting mechanism, to allow you to see if the PCI card was installed properly... mmmk.

The Rear I/O Panel for the motherboard features (from left to right) 2 PS2 ports for your mouse and keyboard, RS-232, exhaust fan, S/PDIF for sound, 4 USB slots, 2 RJ45’s and the 6 connector Audio panel.

Installing the ECS KN1 SLI Extreme, like many motherboards, is rarely an event especially if you happen to have a tech-station as your test-bed. The chipset fan is located between the PCIe x16 slots and could cause an issue with double wide video cards. Memory is inserted from the front most slots (farthest from the CPU) if you want to run them in DDR mode. To the right of the memory modules is a LED called “Anti-Burn LED”, this is to ensure that you do not remove the memory modules until the light has turned off. Question here, has anyone reading experienced electrostatic shocking your memory when pulling it out because a capacitor still had a charge applied to it delivering voltage to you memory modules? Can't say as I have either, but nonetheless it is a nice touch. ECS has used the standard nForce4 mounting bracket for the 939 socket, highlighted in orange. The rear IO plate fits well, although a few too many tabs for my liking, even the IO fan has a place for exhausting the hot air. Almost everything is labeled and/or color coded well, however don't lose that manual or have another machine with Internet access, as the front panel connectors are not labeled directly on the motherboard.

My initial install I built the system using a Hitachi 80GB SATA Drive. I do not have a SATA-2 HD, yet, so I am unable to perform testing in the respect. There are 4 SATA connectors using the nForce4 chipset on this motherboard; these support either 1.5Gb/s or 3.0Gb/s independently of each other. This allows you to have a mix and match of SATA and SATA-2 Hard Drives in your system without limiting the performance of your SATA-2 drives. The nForce4 based SATA connectors also support Full Tagged Command Queuing (TCQ) and Native Command Queuing (NCQ). What do these mean to you? In a motherboard that supports these, there is a definite ability to see improvement in performance. This of course depends on your system build and how you as an end user your machine (NCQ increases performance in multitasking scenario’s mainly). TCQ allows the IO Host controller to open and close the communication channel during drive operations, this allows the system to make requests and receive data from/to other drives in the system. A non TCQ system will maintain an open channel until a request is fulfilled. NCQ basically allows for improved reading of a hard drive through physical mapped reading of data rather then in-line request data reading, i.e. if data I requested had 4 areas on the hard drive, 1st and 3rd bit on the outer track, 2nd and 4th on the inner track. NCQ would recognize this and read the 1st and 3rd bit while on the outer track, then go read the 2nd and 4th on the inner track. A non NCQ system would go outer track, inner track, outer track, inner track, not very efficient, especially when seek times are much greater then read or write times. There are also 2 more SATA risers using the SiL3132 RAID chipset, the manual states that these are Generation 2 connectors supporting 3.0Gb/s, it does not mention 1.5Gb/s support. I would imagine, however, SATA-2 has SATA support built in by default. These connectors also support NCQ but add eSATA (external SATA) functionality, which requires a special shielded cable to run the distance needed to get outside of your case. The eSATA standard also supports hot plugging of your external hard drives although you will of course need an OS that also supports hot plugging.

The IDE, 24 pin Power and Floppy cables plug into the front most section of the motherboard, you will need support underneath as you are going to be applying some pressure here when installing the cables. ECS has interestingly placed 3 fan headers on the front most middle of the motherboard, it definitely makes them easier to find (not that this is typically an issue), I have to wonder if there might be a scenario where they are to far away from a fan on the rear of the case?

Nothing truly glares out about the installation of Windows XP Pro with the possible exception to the nVidia IDE drivers as it relates to the SATA drive. I used the nVidia nF4 drivers, The XP embedded MS IDE drivers proved to work flawlessly, if not slower, compared to their nVidia nF4 counterparts. Neither NIC was found on install, as well as the sound drivers. When you have a newer system that is to be expected. Although, I do have to say I was surprised the Realtek 8100C was not detected as it is an older 10/100 NIC (/me shrugs), such is Windows XP. After all of my testing was done, and because I am glutton for punishment, I decided I would see how well Top-Hat works :). Without anyone’s approval (remember, testing is done) I started to upgrade the flash from floppy and pulled the power cord half way through... Like I said, punishment. Of course, the system would not boot, no matter how many CMOS resets I performed, she was not coming back. So I plugged on top of the Phoenix BIOS chip good ole Top-Hat, powered on the system and watched her boot to floppy. At this point, according to the manual, I am to remove the Top-Hat chip. Needless to say, I was more nervous about this then losing my BIOS in the first place; removing live chips is not my favorite thing to do. I proceeded to flash the BIOS back to what she should be without issue. Hrmmm, it actually works as stated... Just a few words here: #1 – Where was this in the nF2 days? #2 – How friggin cool is this?

NEXT

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