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ASRock P43R1600Twins-WiFi Pro Reviews

tweaktown‘s review Edit

The P43R1600Twins-WiFi board, while almost a mirror image of the P45R2000-WiFi, it lacks Crossfire support. So this is eliminated for dual GPU users unless you settle on a HD 3870X2 or HD 4870X2 (when it arrives). Next; again due to the dual memory controllers, you lose out on power connector placements. And the routing of the SATA cable to run the single eSATA port means more cable clutter and the loss of one internal SATA port.
7.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Aug 04, 2008

HardwareZone‘s review Edit

Though it costs just as much as some entry-level P45 boards, ASRock's P43 board comes with DDR3 support, WiFi functionality and then some. Furthermore, its performance is right up there with the best P45 boards we've tested. If multi-GPUs are a definite no-no for you, and you need a feature-packed board to tide you over if you don't intend to upgrade to Core i7 anytime soon (the mainstream variant, also known as Core i5, should start appearing in the later half of this year), or require a no-nonsense platform to setup secondary systems with upgradeability in mind, then you can do little wrong with the ASRock P43R1600Twins-WiFi.
9.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Feb 25, 2009

phoronix‘s review Edit

The ASRock P43R1600Twins-WiFi only has a single Gigabit Ethernet port, one PCI Express x16, and uses the Intel P43 Chipset. The ASRock P45R2000-WiFi on the other hand tacks on an extra Gigabit Ethernet port and a second PCI Express x16 port, but with limiting these slots to less PCI-E lanes, and it's backed by the higher-end Intel P45.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Sep 21, 2008

The average pro reviews rating is 8.0 / 10, based on the 3 reviews.


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