rawcomputers
New Member
Hi Everyone,
I thought i'd share my experience with my new build using the 990fx Sabertooth from Asus.
Got the board last week from my work (Ontario Chain of Computer Stores) as soon as it came in to stock. This thing is a beauty, looks just like the x58 Sabertooth. Ceramic heat sync's, USB3, 6 Sata 3 + 2 Sata 2 ports, 4 PCI-E for quad Crossfire OR SLI and obviously the AM3+ Socket with full Bulldozer support.
I built it when I got home, and things went as per usual. Put it in a new Antec DF-35, used a Mushkin 60gb Callisto SSD and a WD Cav Black 1tb. Memory is a 2 x 4gb kit of G.Skill 1866 Sniper's 9-10-9-28 (I know i've bad mouthed GSkill before, but i've come to appreciate them recently as good bang for buck ram, and not too bad for reliability.)
Currently using an Athlon II x2 260 - cheap sub until the 8130p FX chip comes out this Fall.
So I flipped the switch and entered the EFI Bios, set date, time, DRAM Timings, Voltage, upped the clock on the 260 to 3.8, and then saved and booted off my Patriot 16gb USB to install OS.
SYSTEM FREEZE!
So i turned off the power at the TP-750 PSU's switch, restarted, and was presented with a "Press F1 to recover CMOS settings". Odd, I thought.
Anyways, ended up setting everything to factory except RAM timings, pulling my hair out all night, and a few things came to light.
The system freeze was not caused by the overclock, or any incorrect settings on my part - the AMI BIOS has ECC Set to Y under Northbridge Settings/DRAM Config. Setting this to N provides a really great, stable system, which I'm currently typing on with the Athlon clocked at 3.8.
I've confirmed this to be true on all the current 990 chipset Asus boards (the other one available as of today is the Crosshair V Formula).
I've submitted a ticket to ASUS, not much help (they're recommendation for solving my CMOS reset issue is resetting the CMOS lol) and asked that they set ECC to N in the next bios revision.
As for the CMOS resetting itself, might be a dud board, changed my batter with a new one, still does it. Doesn't bother me that much since I don't usually turn off the power at the PSU or unplug it, but I'm definitely not happy about getting a Defective part.
I'm still thinking about what to do, might swap this board for a Crosshair V.... just can't wait to get my hands on a Bulldozer!
I thought i'd share my experience with my new build using the 990fx Sabertooth from Asus.
Got the board last week from my work (Ontario Chain of Computer Stores) as soon as it came in to stock. This thing is a beauty, looks just like the x58 Sabertooth. Ceramic heat sync's, USB3, 6 Sata 3 + 2 Sata 2 ports, 4 PCI-E for quad Crossfire OR SLI and obviously the AM3+ Socket with full Bulldozer support.
I built it when I got home, and things went as per usual. Put it in a new Antec DF-35, used a Mushkin 60gb Callisto SSD and a WD Cav Black 1tb. Memory is a 2 x 4gb kit of G.Skill 1866 Sniper's 9-10-9-28 (I know i've bad mouthed GSkill before, but i've come to appreciate them recently as good bang for buck ram, and not too bad for reliability.)
Currently using an Athlon II x2 260 - cheap sub until the 8130p FX chip comes out this Fall.
So I flipped the switch and entered the EFI Bios, set date, time, DRAM Timings, Voltage, upped the clock on the 260 to 3.8, and then saved and booted off my Patriot 16gb USB to install OS.
SYSTEM FREEZE!
So i turned off the power at the TP-750 PSU's switch, restarted, and was presented with a "Press F1 to recover CMOS settings". Odd, I thought.
Anyways, ended up setting everything to factory except RAM timings, pulling my hair out all night, and a few things came to light.
The system freeze was not caused by the overclock, or any incorrect settings on my part - the AMI BIOS has ECC Set to Y under Northbridge Settings/DRAM Config. Setting this to N provides a really great, stable system, which I'm currently typing on with the Athlon clocked at 3.8.
I've confirmed this to be true on all the current 990 chipset Asus boards (the other one available as of today is the Crosshair V Formula).
I've submitted a ticket to ASUS, not much help (they're recommendation for solving my CMOS reset issue is resetting the CMOS lol) and asked that they set ECC to N in the next bios revision.
As for the CMOS resetting itself, might be a dud board, changed my batter with a new one, still does it. Doesn't bother me that much since I don't usually turn off the power at the PSU or unplug it, but I'm definitely not happy about getting a Defective part.
I'm still thinking about what to do, might swap this board for a Crosshair V.... just can't wait to get my hands on a Bulldozer!