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ASUS P7H55D-M EVO Pro Reviews

benchmarkreviews‘s review Edit

You can certainly buy cheaper H55-based boards, but this price represents an excellent value for the level of features and functionality this board offers.
9.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Feb 24, 2010

overclockersclub‘s review Edit

Even though the ASUS P7H55D-M EVO lacks RAID support this board is a great option for anyone looking for a motherboard with strong performance at a reasonable price for their Intel Clarkdale or Lynnfield processor.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jun 30, 2010

AnandTech‘s review Edit

Assuming you can get past Intel's kicker of locked single card GPU support on these boards and you really must buy now, then based upon our experience with the four boards we've looked at today you've got two reasonable choices. If your budget will stretch far enough, go for the ASUS P7H55D-M EVO. It's the smooth-operator of the bunch and should give you a trouble free time if you plan on any overclocking.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jan 31, 2010

xbitlabs‘s review Edit

The life of computer users would be much easier if every mainboard were like ASUS P7H55M-V EVO. During our tests we only noticed a few minor shortcomings but found a lot of advantages about this product. The single inconvenience in its PCB design is the position of the Clear CMOS jumper, but the mainboard keeps track of CPU over-overclocking and can restart in safe mode automatically, so you may not even have to use that jumper at all. We only used it to make sure that ASUS mainboards do not reset the date and time set in the BIOS unlike the majority of other mainboards.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
May 20, 2010

tweaktown‘s review Edit

The ASUS P7H55D-M EVO is a nice little board. You will not win any gaming or overclocking medals (although it does clock well), but it will serve you well in the function of a mid-range or business system when you combine it with one of the Clarkdale CPUs. Of course, if you are using this as an inexpensive base for a system then you can get quite a bit more from it. As a socket 1156 board you would potentially drop even a Core i7 in and then add on a great GPU. After all, with a cost of only $120 from Newegg.com you are getting a great board for not a lot of cash.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jul 02, 2010

www.trustedreviews.com‘s review Edit

Asus' P7H55D-M EVO offers an attractive design and future-proofing with USB 3.0 support, but its slightly high price and relatively poor overclocking performance mean it falls short of a recommendation.
7.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jun 17, 2010

motherboards‘s review Edit

In terms of target market, the ASUS P7H55D-M EVO board fits the bill as the cornerstone of a digital home theater PC. The integrated graphics are good enough to run Blu-ray discs when paired with a powerful processor like the Core i5-661 CPU used in the testing. The board has the HDMI outputs that most HDTVs have on the market today and also has a DVI-D and VGA for monitor connections.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jan 03, 2010

The average pro reviews rating is 8.0 / 10, based on the 7 reviews.


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