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ECS PF22 Extreme

Feature-packed, well-priced board with Crossfire support

Recommended by PCW
Price: £123
Manufacturer: ECS
Technical specifications



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Value for money: Value for money
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Verdict

Pros: Feature set; good price
Cons: No SLI support
Overall: The PF22 has a rich set of features, including Crossfire support, at a good price


Simon Crisp, Personal Computer World 14 Dec 2005

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ECS is no stranger to innovative motherboards. The PF88 Extreme hybrid board, with its ability to run both AMD and Intel processors, springs to mind (see PCW August 2005).

The company’s latest design, the PF22 Extreme, continues this trend, being the first Intel-based board to support ATI’s Crossfire dual-graphics setup.

While the jury may be still out over the virtue of the Crossfire technology, it’s always good to see a company offering alternatives to the usual ATI chipset that, until now, has been the norm for Crossfire motherboards. The only cloud on the horizon for this board is that Intel’s 975X chipset is fast approaching, and it may or may not support both SLI and Crossfire.

The PF22 is built on the now familiar ECS purple printed circuit board. It shares the same sparse look of recent ECS boards, which leads you to think it lacks features. Once again, though, this is far from the truth.

Built around Intel’s 955X Northbridge and ICH7R Southbridge combination, the board supports all Intel’s 1,066/800MHz FSB processors, including the Pentium D dual core, and has four Dimm slots supporting up to 8GB of dual-channel 667/533MHz DDR2 memory.

The Northbridge is cooled actively by a small fan while the Southbridge uses a passive heatsink. As the board uses the R version of the ICH7 Southbridge there is Raid support (Raid 0, 1, 5 or 10) for the four Sata2 ports controlled by the chipset. Another two Sata2 ports are controlled by a Silicon Image chip.

The PF22 is a well-featured board with Crossfire support. Sadly, we were unable to test the dual-card support in time for this review due to a lack of Crossfire Master Cards, but keep an eye on the Test Bed for an update.

Full performance results

Compare against other motherboards

See also:

A competitively priced motherboard  05 Dec 2005
A motherboard for serious gamers  07 Nov 2005
Abit Fatal1ty AN8A stylish board with overclocking potential  26 Aug 2005
ECS PF88 ExtremeAt last, a way to combine CPU technologies  16 Aug 2005
Aopen i915GMm-HFSA good starting point for a quiet PC  05 Aug 2005
ECS 915-ADual 3D display makes this a winner  04 Jul 2005

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