Compare Gadgets Vs. Compare

ASUS P5Q3 Deluxe/WiFi-AP @n Pro Reviews

hardocp‘s review Edit

ASUS looks to have again built a monster of a motherboard that is not based on a “flagship” chipset. The P5Q3 showed to have a great layout, extremely good overclocking prowess, and was stable as well. While the P5Q3 showed some of the best performance we have seen in a motherboard to date, there is no doubt that improvements can be made in the areas of ease-of-overclocking, stability, and certainly hard drive compatibility. We will likely take another look at this board when ASUS can report to us that these nagging issue have been attended to.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jun 05, 2008

AnandTech‘s review Edit

The ASUS P5Q3 Deluxe definitely has all the makings of one of our favorite boards: a quality design with quality components, an elegant layout with plenty of room for two full-sized graphics cards, DDR3 memory for maximum performance, a robust stock cooling system, and enough onboard features to choke a horse.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
May 13, 2008

xbitlabs‘s review Edit

The new Intel P45 Express chipset has no evident advantages over its predecessors. Nevertheless, it is extremely interesting as a very new solution and for a number of objective reasons, such as the use of more advanced production process. Therefore, enthusiasts pin a lot of hopes on Intel P45 expecting the boards on this new chipset to become one of the best overclocker platforms out there.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Aug 05, 2008

HardwareZone‘s review Edit

Additionally, ASUS has continued to pile on the extras for its Deluxe motherboards, with the P5Q3 inheriting the Express Gate and EPU feature found on the best of the last generation ASUS boards. The ASUS Express Gate may not be necessary for most users, but for those who do, they are certainly getting something useful. The EPU chipset also has substantial energy savings, though we must say that the 65nm P5Q3 is already a rather cool board. Add to that the newest feature, Memory OC Charger, and one can see this P45 board overtaking its competitors with its ease of overclocking.
9.0 Rated at:

Published on:
May 08, 2008

www.pcper.com‘s review Edit

All three of these P45 motherboards reviewed today are competent offerings for anyone looking to build or upgrade an Intel Core 2 processor-based system. Depending on your budget and feature desires, either the MSI, Gigabyte or ASUS board is going to have what you need.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Dec 24, 2008

ExtremeTech‘s review Edit

ASUS, an ET favorite, stumbles in the compatibility department but comes up strongly in performance.
7.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jul 08, 2008

The average pro reviews rating is 8.0 / 10, based on the 6 reviews.


How we do it

We humanly agregate professional reviews from a number of high quality sites. This way, we are giving you a quick way to see the average rating and save you the need to search the reviews on your own. You want to share a professional review you like?