eVGA X58 SLI Classified is a motherboard. This product is available from eVGA. The eVGA X58 SLI Classified has been tested via the Phoronix Test Suite in the configurations listed below.
The eVGA X58 SLI Classified product can be found for approximately $376 USD. Shop on: Amazon.com - NewEgg.com.
Test 1 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Ubuntu 9.10, Intel Core i7 920, ATI Device 6898, EVGA X58 SLI Classified, ATI Radeon HD 5700, ASRock X58 Super
Test 1 - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2010.1, Intel Core i7 920, ATI Device 6898, EVGA X58 SLI Classified
test4 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Core i7, ATI Radeon HD 5900 2048MB CrossFire, EVGA X58 Classified 4-Way SLI
test2 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Intel Core i7, ATI Radeon HD 5900 2048MB CrossFire, EVGA X58 Classified 4-Way SLI
hjh-30897-32256-17235 - Tests on Ubuntu 8.10, Ubuntu 9.04, Debian 5.0.1, AMD Phenom 8650 Triple-Core, ATI Radeon HD 3200, FOXCONN A7GM-S 2.0, Intel Atom N270, Intel Mobile 945GME IGP, Dell Inspiron 910, AMD Athlon II X2 250, ATI Radeon HD 3300, ASRock, Pentium E6300, Intel 4 IGP, ASRock G41M-LE, Intel Core i7 920, GeForce GTX 285, EVGA X58 SLI Classified
ThoreauHD - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2009.3, Intel Core i7 920, NVIDIA Device 05eb, EVGA X58 SLI Classified
ThoreauHD - Tests on PTS Desktop Live 2009.3, Intel Core i7 920, NVIDIA Device 05eb, EVGA X58 SLI Classified
NVIDIA 1.0-8751 + EVGA 7900GT: Now that last week we presented the world with our findings for the NVIDIA GeForce 7900GT 256MB, we are back with our complete Linux gaming benchmarks. Although the 7900 supportive drivers are not yet in the hands of the public, we have obtained the Linux drivers from NVIDIA and are numbered 1.0-8751.
eVGA e-GeForce 7800GT CO 256MB: Two months ago we took a look at eVGA's e-GeForce 6800GT 256MB PCI Express part, and now with last week's release of the NVIDIA 1.0-8174 display drivers, our focus of attention today is on their new 7800GT CO 256MB part. Battling up against the eVGA 7800GT in this review is the 7800GTX, GeForce 6 SLI, and the previously reviewed 6800GT.
eVGA e-GeForce 6800GT PCI-E: Although the NVIDIA 7800GTX has a definitive advantage over the 6800GT, the GeForce 6800GT remains a respectable card for enthusiasts not wishing to shell out nearly $500 USD for a graphics upgrade. With us today we have the eVGA GeForce 6800GT 256MB and will see just how well this card can fare through overclocking and just how the card can fare against a 7800GTX in a dual-core environment.
hardwarelogic.com: The X58 Classified motherboard steps into the ring with the ability to house 3-way SLI + PhysX + 1x PCIe at the same time, two 8-pin 12V connectors, 10 phase Digital PWM, and a nice bundle to get you going. Is this the motherboard to rule them all? Find out as HardwareLogic tosses the Classified on the test bench to see if this board is the real deal or something that should've been kept a secret.
hothardware.com: EVGA commonly produces their mainstream motherboard products first, while in tandem, begins work on their high-end enthusiast product. It's taken roughly four months since the time EVGA launched their first Intel X58 motherboard (the more than worthy X58 3X SLI) to follow it up with their enthusiast-class product, which we'll be looking at today.
hardwaresecrets.com: EVGA Classified SR-2 (the "SR" on the name stands for "Super Record") is an enormous dual socket 1366 motherboard based on Intel 5520 chipset with seven PCI Express x16 for you to build the fastest gaming PC in the world.
motherboards.org: EVGA has taken all of the best features of the P55 chipset and improved it for the ultimate tweaker. The P55 Classified 200 motherboard has six PCIE slots, which supports 3-way SLI with PhysX or CrossfireX and the addition of the NF200 bridge chip splits the bandwidth effectively among video cards.
legitreviews.com: What is there to say? The EVGA X58 E761 Classified is like an over-the-top blockbuster movie; it wows you on all fronts all the while costing an arm and a leg to produce. Core i7 is a new processor and motherboard and BIOS engineers are still figuring it out, but the team at EVGA has clearly stumbled across something to be able to release a board that pushes these chips past the notorious 220MHz base clock wall.