NewEgg.com has the ECS G31T-M(1.0) LGA 775 Intel G31 mATX Motherboard for $40 - $10 rebate [Exp 4/15] = $30 with free shipping. Supports up to 4GB of DDR2 800 memory, 4x SATA II devices, and 4x USB 2.0 ports.
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#1
R6 - Posted 12:15 am PDT 04/10/09 (264 Posts)
over priced, for an ecs crap
if you only have 30ish dollars to spend on G31 boards, get ASRock instead. more stable, alot more of OCing
if you only have 30ish dollars to spend on G31 boards, get ASRock instead. more stable, alot more of OCing
#2
dave_c - Posted 12:40 am PDT 04/10/09 (7483 Posts)
ECS is crap, but finally there is a way to build a lowest end intel dual core system without wondering what you'll be missing if you buy a newegg refurb.
Pity they didn't even bother with a southbridge 'sink or capacitors with low enough ESR to handle much more than a 65W CPU at stock speed, but there are people out there that are both non-overclockers and low-end feeders so this would appeal to them, 'cept it doesn't even have DVI output so it's best use is for a 1280x1024 (LCD res.) office machine.
Pity they didn't even bother with a southbridge 'sink or capacitors with low enough ESR to handle much more than a 65W CPU at stock speed, but there are people out there that are both non-overclockers and low-end feeders so this would appeal to them, 'cept it doesn't even have DVI output so it's best use is for a 1280x1024 (LCD res.) office machine.
#3
Ghost Rider - Posted 3:01 am PDT 04/10/09 (1487 Posts)
ECS board might save you $30 compare to Gigabyte ones- but eventually you have to give the saving to your tech support/consultant/repair bacon not bad for PC on site service business...
#4
shomebody - Posted 5:52 am PDT 04/10/09 (92 Posts)
I actually built a system with one of those freebie ECS boards. One PCI slot was bad out of the box -- anything in that slot and the system wouldn't boot. Trash.
#5
skrymir - Posted 7:11 am PDT 04/10/09 (26 Posts)
I used to work at a major company that begins with an F as a tech. About 1/3 of the ecs boards I would get new from the box were DOA. But that was 10 years ago. Also if you did get a good one, they seemed to last just as long as any other brands. I wouldnt put one in my own system.
#6
Deathjester - Posted 8:48 am PDT 04/10/09 (102 Posts)
I own a cheap PCCHIPS board (owns ECS) and their tech support was actually not so bad. Drivers were pretty updated. I would say they are decent for running windows but if you are going with linux and are a new user, stay away. The board had some strange issues with PCI slots not working but it was a BIOS issue that could be fixed. Your not going to win any accolades for it but works OK in a media center PC or small home server.
BTW, my board was branded ECS and support was through PCCHIPS.
Thanks,
Derek
BTW, my board was branded ECS and support was through PCCHIPS.
Thanks,
Derek
#7
DH - Posted 10:53 am PDT 04/10/09 (212 Posts)
#8
onepunch - Posted 3:49 pm PDT 04/10/09 (236 Posts)
#9
onepunch - Posted 10:01 pm PDT 04/10/09 (236 Posts)





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