Audio Performance

Both the Gigabyte and Foxconn motherboards include high-definition audio chipsets, but Foxconn has opted for the ALC882D while Gigabyte is using the newer ALC888. There are a few differences between the two chips, but few people will actually notice a difference in normal use. The ALC882D does feature Dolby Digital Live support, so despite the lower model number it is technically superior. However, if you absolutely require the best possible audio from your computer, you'll still want to add in a discrete sound card. Before you go that route, though, you might also want to make sure you're using high-quality speakers/headphones.

Audio Performance - Empty CPU - RightMark 2.2


Audio Performance - Hardware 2D Audio - 32 Buffers


Audio Performance - DirectSound 3D H/W Audio - 32 Buffers


Audio Performance - DirectSound 3D EAX2 - 32 Buffers


In terms of RightMark CPU utilization, all of the audio solutions appear similar. It should also be noted that the Realtek solutions only support up to 32 hardware streams, whereas X-Fi supports 64. Either way, it's hard to be concerned with a 1-2% increase in CPU utilization caused by audio driver overhead. As you will find in our gaming audio results, most games do a lot of the work internally, so you will experience a significant performance hit by enabling audio regardless of what soundcard you use.

Game Audio Performance - BattleField 2


Game Audio Performance - F.E.A.R. - Performance Test


Game Audio Performance - Serious Sam II - Branchester Demo


Game Audio Performance - Splinter Cell - Lighthouse


There are minor differences in performance with audio enabled, and in many of the games you will incur a significant performance hit. Of course, few gamers would want to play with the audio disabled, but testing without audio at least allows us to isolate system performance. What we would really like to see is games beginning to use multiple threads for handling audio, so that at least on dual core systems you would be far less likely to incur a performance hit. That may be easier said than done, but you only need to look at the 32% performance increase Serious Sam 2 could get or the 25% performance increase Battlefield 2 could get to understand why this would be desirable.

Why don't all games show as much of a performance hit? Because some of them are already GPU limited, so the processor has extra time that it can spend working on audio. If you happen to run multiple graphics cards, the performance hit of audio can be even more substantial. Here are some reference numbers using the Foxconn system in SLI mode. (Note that these scores are not run with identical settings compared to the earlier results, but they are internally consistent.)

SLI Audio Performance - 1600x1200 4xAA/8xAF
No Sound Sound
Battlefield 2 101.48 78.13
Call of Duty 2 75.7 74.3
Day of Defeat: Source 67.79 57.68
Far Cry 70.84 70.26
F.E.A.R. 80 76
Half-Life 2: Lost Coast 99.6 72.57
Serious Sam 2 151.3 115.1
Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory 108.6 108.2


Some games are still GPU limited, but a few of the games (BF2, HL2) almost entirely eliminate the benefit a running multiple graphics cards in the first place. With multiple processing cores becoming the way of the future, it is imperative that applications begin to make use of multiple threads if they're going to substantially increase performance. Call of Duty 2 and Quake 4 have both managed to benefit from SMP, and Oblivion also has at least some support for SMP. We can only hope that future games will begin to show real benefit for dual core and the upcoming quad core processors, as clock speed increases seem to be becoming far less frequent or significant.

Gaming Performance Conclusion
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  • archcommus - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    As the article conclusion mentions, I have a Epox 9NPA+ right now. Should I stick with this board and socket and just pick up a cheap X2 sometime soon instead of switching to this new platform?
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    Probably. In a month prices should be at much more reasonable levels, and while DDR2-800 with all other parts being more or less equal will be 5-10% faster, unless you're after maximum performance you're better off just upgrading your current CPU to dual core.
  • archcommus - Friday, June 23, 2006 - link

    Thanks. The only crappy part about that is having to invest in another gig of DDR memory instead of putting my money towards DDR2, but I guess if it'd last me all of next year, it's not a big deal.
  • Myrandex - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    I was surprised from reading the specs list that the Foxconn has ieee1394b and the giga-byte doesn't. Traditionally Gigabyte has been the only manufacturer to consistently include this ont heir boards and it was a factor with me in the past wanting Gigabyte motherboards. Those clamp SATA connectors are nice though as the traditional ones are somewhat flimsy.
    Jason
  • R3MF - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    that is an absolute winner, and Gigabyte deserve praise for it.

    i am still waiting for a mATX 570SLI motherboard which has the same third 16x (8x) expansion slot.

    preferably a fourth 1x slot as well, but i appreciate the crusties may want at least one legacy PCI slot.
  • glennpratt - Friday, June 23, 2006 - link

    While I appreciate the thought, there is nothing but video cards and a handful of middle of the road devices that work with PCIe. Kinda sucks.
  • MacGuffin - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    But something strikes me odd: Compare Page 4 of this review with Page 4 of the Biostar/MSI roundup. The HTT Overclocking Charts from the Biostar and the Foxconn are IDENTICAL (except the Memory Settings row: 9x332HTT=DDR2 665/9x332HTT=DDR 664)! Maximum CPU & Maximum FSB are the exact same!

    Max CPU Overclock: 258HTTx12 (3100 MHz) +29%
    Max FSB Overclock: 332HTTx9 (2989 MHz) +66%
  • MacGuffin - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    Also on Page 9, right after the Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory chart,
    "All three of the nForce4 590 SLI"
    Should be nForce 590 SLI.:-)
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    That one I can entirely blame on Dragon NaturallySpeaking... though of course I have to blame my eyes for not catching the extra number as well.
  • MacGuffin - Thursday, June 22, 2006 - link

    Hehe...no problemo. Finish up reviews on MSI K9N Diamond, and ASUS M2N32-SLI Deluxe within 2 weeks and I won't ask for my money back ;-)

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