Massman Posted January 11, 2011 Share Posted January 11, 2011 (edited) Here's a complete list of all the LGA1155 mainboards we currently have in our database. We're constantly updating the database and adding more boards. Please feel free to reply if we missed a product! Last update: 21/01/2012 LGA 1155 facts and stats: - 42733 overclocking results - 1663 overclockers - 378 mainboards - 168 mainboards used - 19 mainboard manufacturers - 12 chipsets - Top-5 most popular mainboard (result): Maximus IV Extreme, P8P67 Pro, P8P67 Deluxe, GA-P67A-UD7, Maximus IV Gene-Z, GA-P67A-UD4, GA-P67A-UD4-B3, P67A-GD65, P8P67, Maximus IV Extreme-Z. - Top-5 most popular mainboard (user): Maximus IV Extreme, P8P67 Deluxe, P8P67 Pro, GA-P67A-UD7, P67A-GD65, Maximus IV Gene-Z, GA-P67A-UD4, P8P67, GA-P67A-UD4-B3, Maximus IV Extreme-Z. - Top-5 most popular LN2 mainboard (user): Maximus IV Extreme, P8P67 Deluxe, Maximus IV Extreme-Z, GA-P67A-UD7, Maximus IV Gene-Z, P8P67 Pro, Z68A-GD80 (B3), GA-Z68X-UD4-B3, GA-P67A-UD4, GA-P67A-UD4-B3. - Top-5 most popular brand: Asus, Gigabyte, MSI, Asrock, Biostar. - Top-5 most popular cpus: Core i7 2600K, Core i5 2500K, Core i7 2700K, Core i7 2630QM, Core i3 2100. - Top-5 most used CPU cooling: Water Cooling (38,66%), Air Cooling (30,98%), Single Stage Phase Change Cooling (15,25%), Standard Stock Cooling (7,18%), Liquid Nitrogen (5,26%) - Most results with Sandy Bridge (user): Teemto (663 results) - Most results with Sandy Bridge (team): Overclock.net (3160 results) - Most different CPUs used (user): 04ahgy (7 cpus) - Most different CPUs used (team): Xtreme 3D Team Hungary (12 cpus) - Most different mainboards used (user): 04ahgy (20 mainboards) - Most different mainboards used (team): Overclock.net (57 mainboards) SELECT COUNT(*), COUNT(DISTINCT user_id), COUNT(DISTINCT mb_model_id) FROM result JOIN mb_model ON (mb_model.model_id = result.mb_model_id) WHERE socket_id=309; SELECT COUNT(*), COUNT(DISTINCT chipset_id), COUNT(DISTINCT manufacturer_id) FROM mb_model WHERE socket_id=309; SELECT manufacturer.name, COUNT(*) FROM result JOIN mb_model ON (mb_model.model_id = result.mb_model_id) JOIN manufacturer USING (manufacturer_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY mb_model.manufacturer_id ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC; SELECT cpu_model.model, COUNT(*) FROM result JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE cpu_model.socket_id=309 GROUP BY cpu_model.cpu_id ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC; SELECT cooling.name, COUNT(*) FROM result JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) JOIN cooling ON (cooling.cooling_id = result.cpucooling_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY cpucooling_id ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC; SELECT user.name, COUNT(*) FROM result JOIN USER USING (user_id) JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY user_id ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC; SELECT team.teamname, COUNT(*) FROM result JOIN USER USING (user_id) JOIN team ON (user.team_id = team.team_id) JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY team.team_id ORDER BY COUNT(*) DESC; SELECT user.name, COUNT(DISTINCT cpu_id) FROM result JOIN USER USING (user_id) JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY user_id ORDER BY COUNT(DISTINCT cpu_id) DESC; SELECT team.teamname, COUNT(DISTINCT cpu_id) FROM result JOIN USER USING (user_id) JOIN team ON (user.team_id = team.team_id) JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY team.team_id ORDER BY COUNT(DISTINCT cpu_id) DESC; SELECT user.name, COUNT(DISTINCT mb_model_id) FROM result JOIN USER USING (user_id) JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY user_id ORDER BY COUNT(DISTINCT mb_model_id) DESC; SELECT team.teamname, COUNT(DISTINCT mb_model_id) FROM result JOIN USER USING (user_id) JOIN team ON (user.team_id = team.team_id) JOIN cpu_model USING (cpu_id) WHERE socket_id=309 GROUP BY team.team_id ORDER BY COUNT(DISTINCT mb_model_id) DESC; List of all B65 MAINBOARDS - GIGABYTE GA-P65A-UD3 - GIGABYTE GA-P65A-UD3-B3 - Intel DB65AL List of all C202 MAINBOARDS - Intel S1200BTS - Supermicro X9SCL - Supermicro X9SCL+-F - Supermicro X9SCL-F List of all C204 MAINBOARDS - Asus P8B-E/4L - Asus P8B-M - Asus P8B-X - Intel S1200BTL - Supermicro X9SCA - Supermicro X9SCA-F - Supermicro X9SCI-LN4 - Supermicro X9SCI-LN4F - Supermicro X9SCM - Supermicro X9SCM-F - Tyan S5512 List of all C206 MAINBOARDS - Asus P8B WS - Portwell ROBO-8110VG2AR List of all H61 MAINBOARDS - Asrock H61DE/S3 - Asrock H61DE/SI - Asrock H61DEL - Asrock H61iCafe - Asrock H61M - Asrock H61M-GE - Asrock H61M-GS - Asrock H61M-HVGS - Asrock H61M-HVS - Asrock H61M-ITX - Asrock H61M-S - Asrock H61M-VS - Asrock H61M/U3S3 - Asus P8H61 - Asus P8H61 Evo - Asus P8H61 Plus - Asus P8H61 Pro - Asus P8H61-I - Asus P8H61-M - Asus P8H61-M Evo - Asus P8H61-M LE - Asus P8H61-M Le/USB3 - Asus P8H61-M LX - Asus P8H61-M Plus - Asus P8H61-M Plus V2 - Asus P8H61-M Pro - Asus P8H61-V - Asus P8H61/USB3 - Biostar H61MGC - Biostar H61MH - Biostar H61MHB - Biostar H61ML - Biostar H61MLB - Biostar H61MLC - Biostar H61MU3 - Biostar TH61 - Biostar TH61 ITX - Biostar TH61A - Biostar TH61U3+ - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-A - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-I2 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M12 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M13 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M2 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M3 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M5 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M6 - Ecs Elitegroup H61H2-M7 - Foxconn H61A - Foxconn H61MX - Foxconn H61MX EL - Foxconn H61MXV - Foxconn H61S - Gaida MI-H61 - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-D2-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-D2P-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-S2-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-S2H - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-S2P-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-S2V-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H61M-USB3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H61N-USB3 - GIGABYTE GA-HA65M-D2H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-HA65M-UD3H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P61-DS3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P61-S3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P61-USB3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-PA65-UD3-B3 - Intel DH61AG - Intel DH61BE - Intel DH61CR - Intel DH61DL - Intel DH61WW - Jetway MIH61M-D - Jetway MIH61M-DO - Jetway MIH61M-DS - Jetway MIH61M-DU3 - Jetway MIH61M-HU3 - Jetway TI61AG - Jetway TI61AG3 - Jetway TI61MG - MSI H61I-E35 (B3) - MSI H61M-E23 (B3) - MSI H61M-E33 (B3) - MSI H61M-P21 (B3) - MSI H61M-P22 (B3) - MSI H61M-P23 (B3) - MSI H61M-P33 (B3) - MSI H61MU-E35 (B3) - MSI PH61-P33 (B3) - MSI PH61A-P35 (B3) - Soyo SY-H61U3+节能版 - Soyo SY-I6H-G - Soyo SY-I6H-L - Supox IH61MB-Q3 - Supox IH61MY-Q3 - Supox IH61MY-Q7 - Supox IP61AX-Q7 - Zotac H61 - Zotac H61-ITX WiFi List of all H67 MAINBOARDS - Asrock H67DE3 - Asrock H67M - Asrock H67M-GE - Asrock H67M-GE/HT - Asrock H67M-ITX - Asrock H67M-ITX/HT - Asus P8H67 - Asus P8H67-I - Asus P8H67-I Deluxe - Asus P8H67-M - Asus P8H67-M Evo - Asus P8H67-M LE - Asus P8H67-M LX - Asus P8H67-M Pro - Asus P8H67-V - Asus P8H67D-M - Biostar H67MH - Biostar H67MU3 - Biostar TH67+ - Biostar TH67A+ - Biostar TH67B - Biostar TH67XE - Ecs Elitegroup H67H2-A3 - Ecs Elitegroup H67H2-I - Ecs Elitegroup H67H2-M - Ecs Elitegroup H67H2-M2 - Ecs Elitegroup H67H2-M3 - Ecs Elitegroup H67H2-M4 - Foxconn H67A - Foxconn H67A-S - Foxconn H67M - Foxconn H67M-S - Foxconn H67M-V - Foxconn H67MP - Foxconn H67MP-S - Foxconn H67MP-V - Foxconn H67MXV - Foxconn H67S - Gaida MI-H67 - GIGABYTE GA-H67A-D3H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67A-UD3H - GIGABYTE GA-H67A-UD3H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67A-USB3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67M-D2 - GIGABYTE GA-H67M-D2-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67M-UD2H - GIGABYTE GA-H67M-UD2H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67MA-D2H - GIGABYTE GA-H67MA-D2H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67MA-UD2H - GIGABYTE GA-H67MA-UD2H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67MA-USB3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-H67N-USB3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-PH67-DS3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-PH67-UD3 - GIGABYTE GA-PH67-UD3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-PH67A-D3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-PH67A-UD3 - GIGABYTE GA-PH67A-UD3-B3 - Intel DH67BL - Intel DH67CF - Intel DH67CL - Intel DH67GD - Intel DH67VR - Jetway IH65 - Jetway MIH67M-HU3 - MSI H67MA-E35 - MSI H67MA-E35 (B3) - MSI H67MA-E45 - MSI H67MA-E45 (B3) - MSI H67MA-ED55 - MSI H67MA-ED55 (B3) - MSI H67MS-E23 (B3) - MSI H67MS-E33 - MSI H67MS-E33 (B3) - MSI H67MS-E43 - MSI H67MS-E43 (B3) - MSI PH67A-C43 - MSI PH67A-C43 (B3) - MSI PH67S-C43 - MSI PH67S-C43 (B3) - Sapphire PURE Platinum H67 - Soyo SY-H67+节能版 - Supox IH67AX-Q7 - Zotac H67-ITX WiFi List of all P67 MAINBOARDS - Asrock Fatal1ty P67 Performance - Asrock Fatal1ty P67 Professional - Asrock P67 Extreme3 - Asrock P67 Extreme4 - Asrock P67 Extreme4 Gen3 - Asrock P67 Extreme6 - Asrock P67 Pro - Asrock P67 Pro3 - Asrock P67 Pro3 SE - Asus Maximus IV Extreme - Asus P8P67 - Asus P8P67 Deluxe - Asus P8P67 Evo - Asus P8P67 LE - Asus P8P67 Pro - Asus P8P67 WS Revolution - Asus P8P67-M - Asus P8P67-M Pro - Asus P8P67D Evo - Asus Sabertooth P67 - Biostar TP67B+ - Biostar TP67XE - Ecs Elitegroup P67H2-A - Ecs Elitegroup P67H2-A2 - Ecs Elitegroup P67H2-A3 - Ecs Elitegroup P67H2-A4 - Evga P67 Classified - Evga P67 FTW - Evga P67 Micro - Evga P67 SLI - Foxconn P67A - Foxconn P67A-S - Foxconn Rattler - GIGABYTE GA-P67-DS3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-D3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3P - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3P-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3R - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD3R-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD4 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD4-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD5 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD5-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD7 - GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD7-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67X-UD3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-P67X-UD3R-B3 - Intel DP67BA - Intel DP67BG - Intel DP67DE - Jetway HI08 - MSI Big Bang Marshal - MSI Big Bang Marshal (B3) - MSI P67A-C43 - MSI P67A-C43 (B3) - MSI P67A-C45 - MSI P67A-C45 (B3) - MSI P67A-G43 (B3) - MSI P67A-G45 (B3) - MSI P67A-GD53 - MSI P67A-GD53 (B3) - MSI P67A-GD55 - MSI P67A-GD55 (B3) - MSI P67A-GD65 - MSI P67A-GD65 (B3) - MSI P67A-GD80 - MSI P67A-GD80 (B3) - MSI P67A-GD80 (B3) - MSI P67A-SD60 - MSI P67A-SD60 (B3) - MSI P67S-C43 - MSI P67S-C43 (B3) - MSI P67S-GD53 - Sapphire Pure Black P67 Hydra - Supermicro C7P67 List of all Q67 MAINBOARDS - Asus P8Q67-M DO - Asus P8Q67-M DO/TPM - Foxconn Q67M - Foxconn Q67M-S - GIGABYTE GA-Q67M-D2H-B3 - Intel DQ67OW - Intel DQ67SW - Portwell RUBY-D712VG2AR - Portwell WADE-8012 - Supermicro C7Q67 - Tyan S5515 List of all Z68 MAINBOARDS - Asrock Fatal1ty Z68 Professional Gen3 - Asrock Z68 Extreme3 Gen3 - Asrock Z68 Extreme4 - Asrock Z68 Extreme4 Gen3 - Asrock Z68 Extreme7 Gen3 - Asrock Z68 Pro3 - Asrock Z68 Pro3-M - Asrock Z68M-ITX/HT - Asrock Z68M/USB3 - Asus Maximus IV Extreme-Z - Asus Maximus IV Gene-Z - Asus P8Z68 Deluxe - Asus P8Z68-M Pro - Asus P8Z68-V - Asus P8Z68-V Le - Asus P8Z68-V LX - Asus P8Z68-V Pro - Biostar TZ68A+ - Biostar TZ68K+ - Evga Z68 FTW - Evga Z68 SLI - Evga Z68 SLI Micro - Foxconn Z68A-S - GIGABYTE G1.Sniper 2 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68A-D3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68A-D3H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68AP-D3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68M-D2H - GIGABYTE GA-Z68MA-D2H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68MX-UD2H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68P-DS3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD3-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD3H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD3P-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD3R-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD4-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD4H-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD5-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68X-UD7-B3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68XP-D3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68XP-UD3 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68XP-UD3-iSSD - GIGABYTE GA-Z68XP-UD3R - GIGABYTE GA-Z68XP-UD4 - GIGABYTE GA-Z68XP-UD5 - Intel DZ68DB - Jetway MIZ68M-H - MSI Z68A-G43 (B3) - MSI Z68A-G45 (B3) - MSI Z68A-GD55 (B3) - MSI Z68A-GD55 (G3) - MSI Z68A-GD65 (B3) - MSI Z68A-GD65 (G3) - MSI Z68A-GD80 (B3) - MSI Z68A-GD80 (G3) - MSI Z68A-SD60 (B3) - MSI Z68MA-ED55 (B3) - MSI Z68MA-G45 (B3) - Sapphire PURE Platinum Z68 - Zotac Crown Edition-ZT-Z68 U1DU3 SuperOverclocking - Zotac Z68-ITX WiFi - Zotac Z68-ITX WiFi Supreme SELECT "- [url=http://hwbot.org/hardware/motherboard/",mb_model.safe_name,"]", manufacturer.name, mb_model.name, "[/url]" FROM mb_model JOIN manufacturer USING (manufacturer_id) JOIN mb_chipset USING (chipset_id) WHERE (socket_id=309) ORDER BY mb_chipset.name, manufacturer.name, mb_model.name ASC; Edited May 11, 2011 by Massman Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted January 11, 2011 Author Share Posted January 11, 2011 res. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted January 26, 2011 Author Share Posted January 26, 2011 Query'd the database for some OC results (K-sku only) (based on ~2500 entries): AVG CPU OC (min. 10 unique users) Average MHz | # unique overclockers | mainboard 5302 | 31 | P67A-GD65 5296 | 14 | P8P67 Evo 5296 | 31 | P8P67 Pro 5288 | 31 | P67A-UD7 5270 | 13 | P8P67 5227 | 12 | TP67XE 5210 | 31 | Maximus IV Extreme 5205 | 12 | P67A-UD5 5095 | 16 | P67A-UD4 5072 | 31 | P8P67 Deluxe AVG MEM OC (min. 5 unique users, exclude all results >DDR3-2400) Average MHz | # unique overclockers | mainboard 1019 | 16 | Maximus IV Extreme 983 | 19 | P8P67 Pro 975 | 6 | TP67XE 969 | 7 | P67A-UD5 959 | 16 | P67A-UD7 944 | 6 | P8P67 Evo 942 | 9 | P67A-UD4 942 | 17 | P67A-GD65 920 | 17 | P8P67 Deluxe 812 | 6 | P8P67 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hondacity Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 what if we filter top 20 results from each board...? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnidaol Posted January 26, 2011 Share Posted January 26, 2011 what if we filter top 20 results from each board...? Good point.. or even just top 5 for each board... It would be good to take stock results away and other outliers... Anyway... Everything seems pretty much the same to me until now... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dinos22 Posted January 27, 2011 Share Posted January 27, 2011 LOL the 5205 is that all my UD5 overclocks hahahah Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spacemaster Posted January 27, 2011 Share Posted January 27, 2011 CPU= 2600K 3D (single card) and 2D test... 13= ASUS 1= GIGABYTE ... MODBREAK: removed useless comparison from ASUS MKT that bases brand quality comparison based on the result of a single golden CPU[/url] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted January 27, 2011 Author Share Posted January 27, 2011 No need to prove you work for ASUS, Spacemaster ;-). Jumping to conclusions based on a SINGLE score is just wrong. You damn well know this is just about RoccoESA's CPU and not about the superiority of the P8P67 Pro (or even ASUS) mainboards. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spacemaster Posted January 27, 2011 Share Posted January 27, 2011 Come on Please check first three results for all shown benchmarks and make conclusion. This MSI calculation is not saying anything Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted January 27, 2011 Author Share Posted January 27, 2011 Your stats make even less sense ... using just one score to 'calculate' brand quality The conclusion is pretty clear: NO BRAND STANDS OUT. If you spend enough time on your setup, you can use any board to reach 95% of the max results. Whether you hit 100% (which doesn't happen too often) depends on bios/memory/experience/time/... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dinos22 Posted January 27, 2011 Share Posted January 27, 2011 Lmao Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spacemaster Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 (edited) @Massman If you look closely all data, all records, you can find this: http://www.hwbot.org/hardware/motherboard/p8p67_pro http://www.hwbot.org/hardware/motherboard/ga_p67a_ud7 http://www.hwbot.org/hardware/motherboard/p67a_gd65 ASUS have more records (more than 20% comparing to GIGABYTE), and UD7 is competing with P8P67 PRO for first place!? This is no showing anything? If you say NO, in that case this post has even less sense- http://www.hwbot.org/forum/showpost.php?p=91725&postcount=3'>http://www.hwbot.org/forum/showpost.php?p=91725&postcount=3 Just to be 100% precise, I am not challenging you, you know that I respect you. My point is that this post (http://www.hwbot.org/forum/showpost.php?p=91725&postcount=3) do not showing anything and for the overclockers this is not important at all. But from MSI point of view this is OK for marketing, because they using this to make noise like "we have best P67 MB in the whole world for overclokers" - http://forum.benchmark.rs/showthread.php?244834-MSI-Sandy-Bridge&p=2444585&viewfull=1#post2444585 All of you know that this is not true. So my question is: HW BOT is agreeing with this MSI statement? One more time: “MSI have best P67 MB in the whole world for overclockers” Edited January 29, 2011 by Spacemaster Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted January 29, 2011 Author Share Posted January 29, 2011 This is no showing anything? Numbers are just numbers. I can generate random charts which prove Dinos22 is the best overclocker. Doesn't mean it's true Just to be 100% precise, I am not challenging you, you know that I respect you. My point is that this post (http://www.hwbot.org/forum/showpost.php?p=91725&postcount=3) do not showing anything and for the overclockers this is not important at all. But from MSI point of view this is OK for marketing, because they using this to make noise like "we have best P67 MB in the whole world for overclokers" - http://forum.benchmark.rs/showthread.php?244834-MSI-Sandy-Bridge&p=2444585&viewfull=1#post2444585 All of you know that this is not true. So my question is: HW BOT is agreeing with this MSI statement? One more time: “MSI have best P67 MB in the whole world for overclockers” Marketing is just marketing. Very few marketeers who work for hardware vendors understand how to properly use overclocking results, so they just use everything and hope to be right once. As for this particular case, look at what I wrote about these numbers: The conclusion is pretty clear: NO BRAND STANDS OUT. http://kingpincooling.com/forum/showpost.php?p=13278&postcount=42 http://twitter.com/#!/hwbot/status/30558616545132544 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spacemaster Posted January 29, 2011 Share Posted January 29, 2011 Dinos22 is the best overcloker in the world and you will not convince me that this is not true. Dinos you know that I love you man, and I will not believe to this Massman person. Massman thank you one more time, and sorry for whole "noise". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted February 18, 2011 Author Share Posted February 18, 2011 Query'd the database for some OC results (K-sku only) (based on ~2500 entries) Latest query: 5964 results. Still the same unoptimized query. AVG CPU OC (min. 10 unique users) Average MHz | # unique overclockers | mainboard 5302 | 31 | P67A-GD65 5296 | 14 | P8P67 Evo 5296 | 31 | P8P67 Pro 5288 | 31 | P67A-UD7 5270 | 13 | P8P67 5227 | 12 | TP67XE 5210 | 31 | Maximus IV Extreme 5205 | 12 | P67A-UD5 5095 | 16 | P67A-UD4 5072 | 31 | P8P67 Deluxe Current standing: Average MHz | # unique overclockers | mainboard 5453 | 21 | P8P67 Evo 5430 | 51 | Maximus IV Extreme 5399 | 23 | P8P67 5397 | 61 | P67A-UD7 5394 | 16 | TP67XE 5382 | 10 | P67A-UD7 5358 | 23 | P67A-UD5 5356 | 54 | P8P67 Pro 5325 | 43 | P67A-GD65 5322 | 29 | P67A-UD4 5309 | 12 | P67A-GD55 5297 | 49 | P8P67 Deluxe AVG MEM OC (min. 5 unique users, exclude all results >DDR3-2400) Average MHz | # unique overclockers | mainboard 1019 | 16 | Maximus IV Extreme 983 | 19 | P8P67 Pro 975 | 6 | TP67XE 969 | 7 | P67A-UD5 959 | 16 | P67A-UD7 944 | 6 | P8P67 Evo 942 | 9 | P67A-UD4 942 | 17 | P67A-GD65 920 | 17 | P8P67 Deluxe 812 | 6 | P8P67 Current standing: Average MHz | # unique overclockers | mainboard 1028 | 11 | P8P67 Evo 1020 | 10 | TP67XE 1018 | 30 | Maximus IV Extreme 1009 | 5 | P67A-UD7 1005 | 37 | P67A-UD7 994 | 13 | P67A-UD5 993 | 32 | P8P67 Pro 968 | 34 | P8P67 Deluxe 954 | 23 | P67A-UD4 942 | 28 | P67A-GD65 908 | 5 | P67A-UD3P 899 | 6 | P67A-GD55 887 | 13 | P8P67 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dancop Posted February 18, 2011 Share Posted February 18, 2011 Where did you collect all these results? All handmade by HW-Bot results? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted February 18, 2011 Author Share Posted February 18, 2011 Based on all 2500K/2600K results in the HWBOT database. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TaPaKaH Posted February 18, 2011 Share Posted February 18, 2011 why are there two P67A-UD7 ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
topdog Posted February 19, 2011 Share Posted February 19, 2011 why are there two P67A-UD7 ? I was going to ask the same question Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted March 15, 2011 Author Share Posted March 15, 2011 Updated list: 184 boards. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted March 15, 2011 Author Share Posted March 15, 2011 I can't understand how hardware vendors can justify making 184 boring variants and not have the balls to make just 1 board that has high-end PWM components, decent bios and basic amount of features. Well ... I can. They want overclockers to pay too much for the basic stuff they want. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
knopflerbruce Posted March 15, 2011 Share Posted March 15, 2011 Say helly to EVGA Classified:D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Massman Posted March 15, 2011 Author Share Posted March 15, 2011 Classified has the same amount of useless features on board ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
redmax Posted March 15, 2011 Share Posted March 15, 2011 I can agree that mobo makers have gotten soft in their designs, there are a few "good" designs but are usually price exclusive to the point that nobody wants to afford them. Then again it's a huge gamble to design a board "just" for overclocking or just for submitting scores to HWBot. Yes that is every enthusiasts wet dream but seriously that is a ton of money to spend on motherboard that maybe less than 26k people would buy (divided by x number of vendors). btw I love stats like what you have provided, however I might suggest weighted scores over straight up numbers. For instance # above average and # below average across each board. That would at least tell us if there is one really high score shifting the average over a bunch of crappy ones. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TaPaKaH Posted March 15, 2011 Share Posted March 15, 2011 same reason why you don't see boards with 2 crappy phases but seven PCIe plus six heatpipes - marketing people like smooth transitions in features from the bottom to the top of the range. The reason why you see so many mid-end variants is because transition from ~UD3 to ~UD4 level can be done in multiple ways - there's an UD3P with better PWM, for example. Making an OC dedicated P67 board would be an extremely stupid thing to do, IMO ... unless it costs <$100 since even the ~$150 stuff has all what it takes to max out any 1155 cpu. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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