Our Take

If we look at this review as an evaluation of the SiS 755FX chipset, we have to say that we remain impressed with what SiS has done in the Athlon 64 chipset market. In the transition to Socket 939 and dual-channel memory, SiS has kept the fast performance that made the 755 chipset a standout. This is basically the same chipset that we tested almost a year ago and it still holds its own against the latest nForce 4 and updated VIA chipsets. It seems as of late that our tests of SiS chipsets leave us wondering what they could really do in a top-of-the-line motherboard design, but we will likely have to keep wondering, since we do not know of any SiS boards in the works right now except those geared for value price points.

That should take absolutely nothing away from the excellent performance of the Winfast 755FXK8AA. The board is very fast at stock speeds. When you consider it is designed to sell for less than $100, we are impressed at the very complete feature set and excellent layout that Foxconn have managed to build into this motherboard. You don't even expect to be able to buy a top performing 939 motherboard for $100, let alone a board with Gigabit LAN, Firewire and 8-channel on-board audio. Foxconn has done a very good job of delivering value in the Winfast, and you won't feel like you have compromised on features at all if you choose the 755FXK8AA for your new 939 Athlon 64 system.

For the capabilities it does have in overclocking, the Winfast is rock solid. It can run at 233 all day long without any issues. The CPU voltages with both + and - ranges also allow the board to be used for both modest overclocking as well as modest underclocking. Some users do underclock to reduce noise and heat to the lowest possible levels and it is not always easy to find a board that will underclock. The Foxconn will fit those users very well.

Disappointment comes into play in considering overclocking and what might have been with the Winfast. The lack of a clock generator that supports more than 233 and the missing memory voltage adjustments limit a board that could have been so much more. The 755FX is so good to 233 that we are severely disappointed that it doesn't have the stuff to let us see where the SiS755FX chipset can really go. There is also the frustration that this is perilously close to the magic sub $100 Socket 939 board that everyone is looking for. A different clock generator, memory voltage adjustments, a BIOS fix for 4 DS dimms, and a bit more attention to what the Athlon 64 enthusiast is looking for would have made this board a huge sales success.

As it is, the Foxconn is still easy to recommend. It is solid, fast at stock speeds, and filled with the features most users want. It is an incredible bargain when the selling price is considered. You can easily reach 233 even with the limitations, which make it a decent match to a 90nm 3500+ or faster processors for overclocking. That is because you can reach near 2.6GHz with the 3500+ combination even with the 233 limitation. For overclockers looking to push the 3000+ or 3200+ to 2.6 to 2.8GHz, however, you need to look elsewhere as 233 is just not enough. It is also not a board we would choose if we planned to run 4 DS dimms, but we suspect Foxconn could fix the 4 DS dimm issue with a BIOS update that offered 200 as a memory speed choice.

If you're not an overclocker or only have modest needs for overclocking, then by all means, go for the Winfast 755FXK8AA. It is a fast performer and you will not be disappointed. If we could just get past what might have been . . .

Workstation Performance
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  • ChineseDemocracyGNR - Tuesday, December 28, 2004 - link

    The SiS755FX adds 1000MHz HTT support. So it's a chipset for socket 939 processors.

    The SiS756 is a new chipset, supporting PCI-E graphics.
  • RAINFIRE - Sunday, December 26, 2004 - link

    I wasn just wondering if the SiS 756 is replacing the 755FX chipset. This seems to be the case with me. Anyone know if this is what is happening?
  • RAINFIRE - Sunday, December 26, 2004 - link

    I was just wondering if the SiS 756 chip is better/replacing the 755FX. This seems to be the case as far as I can see. Any thoughts, conments on that? I've been keeping a Next Gen Motherboard list and want to get it right.
  • Cygni - Sunday, December 19, 2004 - link

    The 755 had solid performance and i was very surprised that more board makers didnt use it. The 755FX/756 seems to be another step in that direction. Realistically, because the Nforce4 and ATI Xpress 200 are STILL not on the market, it is still possible for the 756 to be the first PCI-Ex capable AMD chipset.
  • ChineseDemocracyGNR - Friday, December 17, 2004 - link

    Yes, the board is available here:
    http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?desc...

    Price is $101. The Foxconn is $69, the ASRock is $77 but it has overclocking options (the Gigabyte doesn't).
  • Peter - Friday, December 17, 2004 - link

    I've seen that ... they did actually go ahead and made it available WITH the dedicated VGA RAM? Good then. But at $30 more than the same thing in shared-RAM configuration, they've missed the price point ... I mean, $30 buys me an entire Xabre graphics card.
  • ChineseDemocracyGNR - Friday, December 17, 2004 - link

    #20, that is great news! Are you going to test the K8Upgrade-760GX (SiS760GX, mATX) or the K8Upgrade-1689 (ULI M1689, ATX)?

    #22, Gigabyte makes a board with dedicated memory. It does improve performance but it's considerably more expensive too (at least $30).
    There's a review:
    http://www.ocworkbench.com/2004/gigabyte/K8S760M/K...
  • Peter - Friday, December 17, 2004 - link

    Wesley, I wrote this _after_ reading the article ;) Head still on shoulders.

    SiS integrated video for the A64 platform looks particularly interesting because it can have dedicated (!) VGA RAM attached to the north bridge chip. This is because they left the RAM controller in there - exclusively for the integrated VGA this time, since the CPU brings its own.
    Now if only the board makers adopted that feature ... all I've seen so far (ASRock, ECS, PC-Chips) run it in shared-RAM mode, and so does my shiny new Averatec 5500 notebook. History repeating - even back in the Pentium and early PII days, the integrated SiS chipsets (530, 620, 630) supported dedicated VGA RAM, but practically nobody made boards that used it.

    As for clock synthesizer chips, well if this piece of hardware doesn't support what you want it to do, then no update of BIOS or other software will make it.

  • Calin - Friday, December 17, 2004 - link

    #17, I would like to have an Athlon64 board with integrated video... but not with SiS integrated video. I would wait until (hopefully) some ATI-based board appears here in Romania. (I know I might be wrong about not buying a SIS with integrated video, but I prefer not to take the chance)

    Calin
  • Wesley Fink - Thursday, December 16, 2004 - link

    #17 - We have been talking with Asrock, and we will be reviewing a ASRock K8Upgrade, and the upgrade module, which is based on the SiS 760GX. We also requested a ULI chipset board but we have not received any info yet on when that board may be available for review.

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