LeonardoWake up and smell the glaciersEagle River, AlaskaIcrontian
edited December 2008
I've used Abit boards for AMD and Intel processors starting with the KT7-R back in 2000. Let's see: KT7-R, KT7 133MHz FSB version, KX-333R, KR7-R, NF-7, IC7, IC7-R, IP35-E - multiples of some of them. Of all of those motherboards, I'd have to say the IC-7s I had were the best, followed by the KX-333. I know that the NF-7 was/is highly popular, but I wasn't very impressed. It was very stable and very easy to set up, but at least in my case, it was lousy overclocker. I had it paired with an AMD XP 2800+. I typically get very good air-cooled overclocks, but I just couldn't get much of anything out of the NF-7/2800+ combo.
It was a nice ride Abit. Unfortunate that bungles and mismanagement brought you down.
Since Abit started going downhill four years ago I've continued to use them, but have also branched out to Gigabyte, Asus, and MSI. As it stands now, for solid performance, moderate prices, and user tweaking options (overclocking), I much prefer Gigabyte. Maybe DFI will be in my future builds as well.
I've been running an NF-7 Version 2.0 for over 5-1/2 years now, and it's been a great motherboard. I've had a Barton core 2500+ overclocked to 2.2 Ghz all that time.
I also messed around with an Abit BP6 dual cpu MB for a while, and it did good for what it was.
Okay, that concludes the three post salute. Farewell, Abit. Your poorly translated BIOS manuals will forever burn bright in the annals of overclocking history.
Edit:
After perusing the gigantic tubs of motherboards dead and gone, I have to rescind my comment on the KT7A.
I have a Tyan Trinity KTA and an Iwill KK266-R that both preceded the KT7A.
LeonardoWake up and smell the glaciersEagle River, AlaskaIcrontian
edited December 2008
Hell, you could say this site was started on the back of an Abit motherboard and you wouldn't be very far off.
The predecessor to the original Icrontic in 1999 was Apushardware. That site got its legs - and my membership - with solid information on do-it-yourself computer building and especially their motherboard tweaking guide for the Abit KT7/-R.
I first came to this site in 2000 looking for help tweaking my KT7-RAID board and I never left, and, now that I think about it, I haven't bought or used an Abit board in years. I think the last boards I bothered with were the KG7 and the KR7A. There were hardly ever any stocked in my City and the one or two places I could find them were way over-priced and could never bring myself to fork over that much cash.
This is definitely a sad announcement for nostalgic reasons.
The predecessor to the original Icrontic in 1999 was Apushardware. That site got its legs - and my membership - with solid information on do-it-yourself computer building and especially their motherboard tweaking guide for the Abit KT7/-R.
I know, I was there in the room with mortin and celcho on launch day :-p
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LeonardoWake up and smell the glaciersEagle River, AlaskaIcrontian
My Mom's computer is still running on my old KX7-333R that I bought around 2002. It runs well, but if you demand too much from it, the computer acts up (particularly the USB bus)
Comments
I'll miss them. Some of my best headaches came from Abit motherboards.
good times
It was a nice ride Abit. Unfortunate that bungles and mismanagement brought you down.
Since Abit started going downhill four years ago I've continued to use them, but have also branched out to Gigabyte, Asus, and MSI. As it stands now, for solid performance, moderate prices, and user tweaking options (overclocking), I much prefer Gigabyte. Maybe DFI will be in my future builds as well.
Goodbye, Abit
Sigh.
I also messed around with an Abit BP6 dual cpu MB for a while, and it did good for what it was.
(Yes, I still have both of them somewhere.)
It has been in service for almost six years.
Okay, that concludes the three post salute. Farewell, Abit. Your poorly translated BIOS manuals will forever burn bright in the annals of overclocking history.
Edit:
After perusing the gigantic tubs of motherboards dead and gone, I have to rescind my comment on the KT7A.
I have a Tyan Trinity KTA and an Iwill KK266-R that both preceded the KT7A.
So on that note, peace Abit. SUCKERS!!!!
Personally I had a KT7, KT7-133, KX333, and several NF7-S. All but the original KT7 are still running.
http://web.archive.org/web/20011122070747/www.icrontic.com/index.php?page=public/hardware&hardwareId=41 (KT7A: this one has pics that work)
http://web.archive.org/web/20011122122829/www.icrontic.com/index.php?page=public/hardware&hardwareId=50 (KT7A r2)
This is definitely a sad announcement for nostalgic reasons.
I know, I was there in the room with mortin and celcho on launch day :-p
Wow, I knew you were definitely one of the old timers, but that's just awesome.