NVIDIA MCP7A Chipset Details Revealed

With the next generation processors from Intel drawing near, chipset manufacturers have been hard at work designing products around Intel's CPU architecture.

NVIDIA's upcoming MCP7A motherboard Intel chipset is expected to launch this coming April along with the 45nm Intel Core 2 Duo E8300 and the 65nm Core 2 Quad price drops.

NVIDIA claims MCP7A includes a number of improvements over the last generation products including HDMI and Hybrid SLI capabilities.

MCP7A will be offered in 8 different SKUs, seven of them with onboard DirectX 10-based GPUs that will feature high-definition video processing at 1080p support and integrated HDCP on the higher-end MCP7A-GL and MCP7A-J. There is no word yet on how powerful the onboard graphics processors will be, however, they will all support Shader Model 4.0 and DirectX 10.

Other oddities include a MCP7A chipset that offer a workstation-class GPU from NVIDIA's Quadro line.

The MCP7A line will support a 1333 MHz front-side bus and 20 PCIe 2.0 lanes in a possible 16x1 + 4x1 setup. This would allow a single GPU expansion card to be used in conjunction with the GPUs in seven of these chipsets for a Hybrid SLI setup. The only two SLI boards, the MCP7A-SLI and MCP7A-GL, will feature 2 x8 PCIe 2.0 slots for dual expansion card capabilities.

Each of the chipsets with onboard GPUs will feature 2 analog and 2 digital display heads, with the notable exception of the high-end MCP7A-J which will feature 2 analog and 3 digital heads. Motherboards based on the MCP7A line will have the potential to support DVI/HDMI/Dual Port and RGB formats of video output, while the MCP7A-J chipset will support LVDS.

Other standard features on all boards will include support for up to 6 SATA 3.0 GB/sec ports, up to 12 USB 2.0 ports, integrated 10/100/1000 Mb/sec LAN and RAID 0, 1, 0+1, and RAID 5 support on the SATA interface.

News Source: http://www.dailytech.com/NVIDIA+MCP7A+Chipset+Details+Revealed/article10921.htm
 
mcp7aug7.png


http://www.hkepc.com/?id=1430&fs=c1n
 
Compared to a 780i I dotn see anything that would make me go and buy one of these...other than the 12 USB ports....
 
I hate it when IHVs rename IGPs to reuse in successive generations. ATi did that for the longest time with the express 200/1xx0/2xx0 families.
 
well, three uses I can see :

- make an intel system with a relatively powerful IGP and use it for what it's worth
- switch off that huge G92 or GT200 when not gaming
- use the IGP and a 8400GS to work on three or more displays, casual gaming (or just gaming within the possibilities) with the IGP+8400GS SLI.
 
well, three uses I can see :

- make an intel system with a relatively powerful IGP and use it for what it's worth
- switch off that huge G92 or GT200 when not gaming
- use the IGP and a 8400GS to work on three or more displays, casual gaming (or just gaming within the possibilities) with the IGP+8400GS SLI.

I believe ATi has supported multi-display with Radeon + IGP for many years now, as I know it's worked since at least the Express 200 + Radeon X generation. As for the power savings, ATi's powerplay (when it works) is quite efficient from a power consumption perspective.
 
I believe ATi has supported multi-display with Radeon + IGP for many years now, as I know it's worked since at least the Express 200 + Radeon X generation. As for the power savings, ATi's powerplay (when it works) is quite efficient from a power consumption perspective.

Multi-display with discrete Geforce + NV IGP is supported at least since the old Geforce 6150 chipset...
 
Back
Top