DFI Lanparty LP UT P35-T2R Kaneohe HI

The PCB of the Lanparty is crammed with slots, including what appears to be three 16x PCI-E slots. One of these slots has 16 PCI-E lanes, the second has four PCI-E lanes, and the third a single PCI-E lane, which means that the board supports CrossFire.

Local Companies

Best Buy
(808) 525-7182
478 Alakawa St
Honolulu, HI
Blue Planet Software
(808) 539-3900
2800 Woodlawn Dr
Honolulu, HI
Tor Technologies
(808) 545-3441
1188 Bishop St Suite 709
Honolulu, HI
Acme Computer Services
(808) 545-1543
1302 Pali Hwy
Honolulu, HI
Oahu Computers
(808) 524-1111
670 Auahi St A4
Honolulu, HI
Personal Touch Computers
(808) 524-7253
311 Keawe St
Honolulu, HI
Apple Store
(808) 949-1075
1450 Ala Moana Blvd
Honolulu, HI
Art & Science
(808) 942-1160
2615 S King St
Honolulu, HI
Hawaii Kai Computer Guy
(808) 356-0672
PO Box 26262
Honolulu, HI
Extreme Performance
(808) 674-9990
91-579 Farrington Hwy Ste 206
Kapolei, HI

Provided By:

It's been quite a while since we've seen, let alone reviewed, a DFI motherboard, as the company has found it very hard to set up a reliable distribution chain the UK. This may sound very boring and businesslike, but it's crucial if the motherboards are going to be competitively priced, properly supported and easy to buy.

This particular model belongs to the infamous Lanparty series that's designed for extreme overclockers, such as those who favour water-cooling or phase-change coolers. Water or phase-change cooling might be a good idea, if only because the board didn't support our standard CPU HSF - the Northbridge heatsink is too close to the CPU socket and gets in the way. In the end, we had to file away around 7mm from the lower left corner of the plastic fan mount of the Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro to make it fit. Staying with the cooling theme, DFI bundles what it calls a Transpiper in the box. This strange assembly can be screwed into the Southbridge or VRM heatsinks in order to conduct heat out of the back of the case via a pair of extra-long heatpipes, which is a great idea.

The PCB of the Lanparty is crammed with slots, including what appears to be three 16x PCI-E slots. One of these slots has 16 PCI-E lanes, the second has four PCI-E lanes, and the third a single PCI-E lane, which means that the board supports CrossFire. Also included are eight RAID-capable S-ATA II ports, and coaxial S/PDIF inputs and outputs for the Intel HD Audio codec that resides on a separate daughterboard.

Not surprisingly, the Lanparty easily maxed out our test CPU. Thanks to a wealth of BIOS options, including the ability to overvolt its clock generator chip (the first motherboard we've ever seen with this option), the Lanparty was a superlative overclocker and happily ran with a stable FSB of 535MHz. This was achieved by boosting the CPU PLL to 2.15V, the VTT to 1.6V, the Northbridge to 1.9V and the clock generator to 3.75V.

The Lanparty is amazingly overclockable but, with so many good P35 motherboards from which to choose, it's hard to justify its incredibly steep price of £169.99. Unless you plan on performing extreme overclocking with a phase-change cooler or LN2, you don't need to buy this extortionately expensive motherboard.

Author: James Gorbold

DFI Lanparty LP UT P35-T2R

Featured Local Company

Best Buy

(808) 525-7182
478 Alakawa St
Honolulu, HI

Related Local Events
Plant Biology 2009
Dates: 7/18/2009 - 7/22/2009
Location: Hawaii Convention Center
Honolulu, HI
View Details

Plant Biology 2009
Dates: 7/18/2009 - 7/22/2009
Location: Honolulu Convention Center
Honolulu, HI
View Details

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History