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ASUS P5AD2-E Premium

Date: 2005-2-12

[Abstract]
   ThoughtsASUS has effectively made its i925X-based P5AD2 Premium board redundant with the newer P5AD2-E Premium. The latter carries all the feature nicities of the former but adds in support for...

[Content] PCDigitalMobileGame

Bundle and presentation

ASUS P5AD2-E Premium


A cool, understated finish from ASUS. The P5AD2-E' package weighs in at the near-3kg mark, suggesting that, like the board, it's jam-packed full of goodies. More cables than is healthy first catch the eye. You actually do need them all. Remember just how much storage the P5AD2-E offers.

ASUS P5AD2-E Premium


Feature-rich boards need excellent documentation if the user is to get the most out of them. ASUS' manuals have always been well above average for the motherboard industry. That quality carries on through to this model. The manual is written in easy-to-understand English and covers every major point I could think of in decent detail. ASUS' alliance with InterVideo bears fruit with a comprehensive WinDVD Platinum Edition suite. The driver CD, too, is easy to use and software installation of all the board's components went off without any problems whatsoever.

ASUS P5AD2-E Premium


A total of 10 SATA cables don't make intuitive sense until you realise tha a SATA extender board is bundled in. The extra couple increase the length of SATA connection for, presumably, larger cases where drives may be housed up to a metre away from the board. ASUS should have included a further couple black ATA cable for connecting the ITE RAID controller's 2 ports up, though.

ASUS P5AD2-E Premium


An additional bracket is used due to a lack of I/O room. 2 further FireWire ports and the second RJ45 port for dual Gigabit duties are housed on a plate that will obstruct either PCI or PCIe slots.

ASUS P5AD2-E Premium


Further obstruction can be caused by another two brackets. This time, they provide 2x USB 2.0, GAME, and Serial connections.

ASUS P5AD2-E Premium


Last but not least is a WiFi antenna that attaches to the screw-in socket on the I/O section. The cabling is long enough for the antenna to sit on the tallest of cases, and connection was excellent from over 30 feet and 2 intervening walls away from a 54g access point.






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