DFI Lanparty DK P45-T2RS Plus

Introduction & Specification

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Introduction
 
DFI are a company that need no introduction on a site such as this. Producing quality motherboards designed for enthusiasts for years, they made their name with what is arguably the best board ever produced - the NF4 SLI-DR. However, I can't help but feel that they have struggled under the weight of their own reputation, with enthusiast expectations being raised to extremely high levels. Still, while the boards that they have produced in recent months may not be able to brand themselves into the memories of enthusiasts as the SLI-DR was, they have been extremely competent and very good performers.
 
Today we have the opportunity to take a good look over a mid-range orientated board. Designed for people who want good performance without the price tag, this has take form of the DFI Lanparty DK P45-TR2 Plus. The DK (short for dark) has been a relatively new line of DFI boards under the Lanparty header that appeared around the time Intel's P35 chipset was adopted, with the intention being to fill the mid-range gap referred to above. It's occupying a space that I for one have felt DFI have been missing for a while, sitting nicely between the Infinity and Lanparty UT (and more recently the LT) ranges. The range, like its elder UT, can be found in all of Intel's chipset flavours, both DDR2 and DDR3 variants, but bears a fraction of the price tag.
 
So let's see what the mid-ranged board has to offer us with a look at the specifications taken directly from DFI's own web page:
 
CPU
# LGA 775 socket for: - Intel® Core2 Quad and Intel® Core2 Duo
# Supports Intel Enhanced Memory 64 Technology (EMT64T)
# Supports Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology (EIST)
# Supports Intel Hyper-Threading Technology
# Supports 1333/1066/800MHz FSB

Chipset
# Intel® chipset - Northbridge: Intel® P45 Express chipset Intel® Fast Memory Access technology - Southbridge: Intel® ICH10R

System Memory
# Four 240-pin DDR2 DIMM sockets
# Supports DDR2 1066MHz (O.C 1200MHz)
# Delivers up to 12.8Gb/s bandwidth
# Supports dual channel (128-bit wide) memory interface
# Supports up to 8GB system memory
# Supports unbuffered x8 and x16 DIMMs

Expansion Slots
# 2 PCI Express (Gen 2) x16 slots dimensionally with x16 transfer rate lanes for PCIE2 and x8 transfer rate lanes for PCIE4 (16-lane ports, 8-lane ports) - 2-way CrossFire: One slot operating at x16 (16-lane port) or two slots each operating at x8 (8-lane ports) bandwidth
# 2 PCI Express x1 slots
# 2 PCI slots

BIOS
# Award BIOS
# 8Mbit SPI flash BIOS
# CMOS Reloaded

Audio
# Realtek ALC885 High Definition audio CODEC
# 8-channel audio output
# DAC SNR/ADC SNR of 106dB/101dB
# Full-rate lossless content protection technology
# Optical S/PDIF-out and coaxial RCA S/PDIF-out interfaces

LAN
# Marvell 88E8053 PCIE Gigabit LAN controller
# Fully compliant to IEEE 802.3 (10BASE-T), 802.3u (100BASE-TX) and 802.3ab (1000BASE-T) standards

Serial ATA with RAID
# Intel Matrix Storage technology
# Supports up to 6 SATA devices
# SATA speed up to 3Gb/s
# RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 0+1 and RAID 5

IDE
# JMicron JMB368 PCI Express to PATA host controller
# Supports up to 2 UltraDMA 33/66/100Mbps IDE devices

Rear Panel I/O
# 1 mini-DIN-6 PS/2 mouse port
# 1 mini-DIN-6 PS/2 keyboard port
# 1 optical S/PDIF-out port
# 1 coaxial RCA S/PDIF-out port
# 6 USB 2.0/1.1 ports
# 1 RJ45 LAN port
# Center/subwoofer, rear R/L and side R/L jacks
# Line-in, line-out (front R/L) and mic-in jacks

Internal I/O
# 3 connectors for 6 additional external USB 2.0 ports
# 1 connector for an external COM port
# 1 front audio connector
# 1 CD-in connector
# 1 IrDA connector
# 6 Serial ATA connectors
# 1 40-pin IDE connector
# 1 floppy connector
# 1 24-pin ATX power connector
# 1 8-pin 12V power connector
# 2 4-pin 5V/12V power connectors (FDD type)
# 1 front panel connector
# 4 fan connectors
# 1 download flash BIOS connector
# 1 diagnostic LED
# EZ touch switches (power switch and reset switch)

Power Management
# Ultimate 4-phase digital PWM with 12 MOSFETs
# ACPI and OS Directed Power Management
# ACPI STR (Suspend to RAM) function
# Wake-On-PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse
# Wake-On-USB Keyboard/Mouse
# Wake-On-LAN
# Wake-On-Ring
# RTC timer to power-on the system
# AC power failure recovery

Hardware Monitor
# Monitors CPU/system/Northbridge temperature and overheat alarm
# Monitors Vcore/Vdimm/Vnb/VCC5/12V/V5sb/Vbat voltages
# Monitors the speed of the cooling fans
# CPU Overheat Protection function monitors CPU temperature and fan during system boot-up - automatic shutdown upon system overheat

PCB
# 4 layers, ATX form factor
# 24.5cm (9.64") x 30.5cm (12")
 
An impressive specs list with a few features I'm very glad to see on there, like the mass of USB ports (6 on the I/O plate + 6 internal), both optical and coaxial SPDIF out and 8 internal SATA ports (6 on chip, 2 controlled by the J-Micron controller). These are often areas that miss out when it comes to budget boards.
 
Next we take a look at the board itself and the packaging it came in...
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Most Recent Comments

19-12-2008, 15:34:26

Ham
To be perfectly honest Rast I've not used a 775 board that tops the IP35 Pro yet. This does come rather close though, and is available in pretty much any flavour you want (P45/X48, DDR2/DDR3). And all at a reasonable price.

I could comapre the two with a E7200 if you wanted to see some results based newerish chip. But said E7200 is a terrible overclocker really.

19-12-2008, 15:35:39

Rastalovich
One thing u can't mock is the price.

19-12-2008, 22:56:32

Kempez
And the fact that DFI aren't out of business ;)

Looks lush :D

20-12-2008, 03:32:34

Ghosthud1
have the same board and ive no trouble getting my q6600 too 4ghz, the real selling point is the looks lolz, looks top dog anyways great review keep em up

20-12-2008, 11:22:00

Rastalovich

And the fact that DFI aren't out of business ;)

Looks lush :D



Doesn't bode well for us or the industry if those who don't cease creating mobos produce shoddy products in comparison to the predecessors.

Again tho, historically with tech, it's not about what's the best, it's about cash.

02-01-2009, 03:39:59

baron210
I'm pleased to find this motherboard, Would seem to have everything in place for me until I get to go with a Core I7 with whatever chipset's out in Mid 2010.
I have (at the moment), a broken Asus P5K Pro (fails in Raid 0 , AHCI and even IDE compatability mode's in SATA with three makes of HDD's - Maxtor/ Seagate 500gb 3rd gen drives and WD Raptor 74GB's).
I don't want a repeat of these issue's, and am avoiding any board with the Intel ICH9R southbridge as a result, and sincerely hope that it's fixed in the ICH10R?

Asus Tech support suck's basically, and they don't acknowlege the problem at all, despite loads of threads complaining about this problem, also, I managed to recently break a SATA port off of my P5K Pro (they are the straight mounted type rather than the 90 deg. type of this DFI board), and very breakable, just by pulling it off, although lucky 4 me, it didn't short out the connector, and i gingerly replaced it back as a temporary measure (Ironically, I was removing my SATA devices to replace with a Silicon Image PCI-Express SATA controller card, which didn't totally fiix my issue's because there is apparently a problem with PCI-Express timing with the board, that throws SATA into dissarray).

Look forward to running my Q6600 at 3.6 ghz (with my 120 extreme cpu cooler and 120mm fan).

Happy 2009 - Baron210. :yumyum::)

(PS - I have a 8800 GTX Nvidia, and a 7600GT Nvid I would like to run in both PCI E Slot's to enable three monitors to be run, anyone know if this'll work, or would the 7600 hold back the performance of the 8800 ???).
Not talking SLI (I know its purely for ATI X Fire), just three outputs - must require some custom software too i'd imagine?

18-07-2009, 04:49:51

windwithme
DFI Lanparty DK P45 can OC CPU 600~630Mhz on air:)

13-09-2009, 10:12:07

XcvX
The review failed to mention the advanced BIOS mode on this DFI board which is hidden by default, you need to hit the F9 key to see all the BIOS options available so I'm not suprised at the poor overclocking results in the review. I agree with the previous post by windwithme who's also tested this board, overall it's an excellent motherboard for overclocking.

13-09-2009, 11:55:42

w3bbo
Yup, the X58 boards are the same. F9 opens up a new menu but that said, the options in there are not exactly all that and are not likely to suddenly boost overclocking by any huge margin. They are more for stabilising and fine tuning imo.

13-09-2009, 18:01:09

Ham
The review was based on the experience i had with the board with the limited time we have to get reviews out. During that time the extra options never made them selves apparent.

I'd hope that the board received a good enough review for anyone to shortlist it and I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it even before I knew about the extra settings (which were used a fair while after the review went like to get 5ghz out a very, very stubborn chip). So really they just make a great board even better!
x

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