Technology content trusted by users in North America and around the world.
4,960 Articles | 29,957 Posts
Select Your Edition:  
Tweakipedia
A wealth of
tech information!

TRENDING NOW: EA Vice President says PS4 and Xbox One are a generation ahead of the current fastest gaming PC on the market
USA EditionYou are located: Home > Articles > Motherboards > Closer Look at GIGABYTE's DES System

Closer Look at GIGABYTE's DES System

By: (more) | Motherboards Content | Posted: Jan 16, 2008 5:00 am
Comment | Print | Email | Font Size: AA

Does It Actually Work? - Part 2

 

 

As you might have noticed from the picture above, the board we used for testing comes with a different looking application than the one on GIGABYTE's website, and the explanation is simple; the P35-DS3P rev 2.1 board used only has six phases. The ones used in the examples on GIGABYTE's website are from the X48 boards which feature 12 phases and this is why things look different. One thing we didn't expect though was the fact that the motherboard dropped down to as little as two phases in Windows, which seemed very low even considering the far from cutting edge specifications on the test system. Each of those little yellow cylinders and crank shafts (correct me if I'm wrong here, cars aren't my specialty) represents one power phase and are animated to show that they're working.

 

Other parts worthy of noting is the Dynamic Frequency menu which allows you to throttle the CPU in a similar way to speed step, but it seems to do it a little bit different to Intel's take on it. Then there's the little green light just under the word beneath the Dynamic Energy Saver logo, this turns on and off the motherboard LED's. There's also an @ sign towards the top of the application and this connects to GIGABYTE's website to check for updates for the software. Finally we have the power saving meter which measures how much power you have saved. This isn't quite working on the early revisions of the software as it'll reset itself if you close down the application or reboot the system.

 

The test system consisted of the aforementioned GIGABYTE P35-DS3P rev 2.1 motherboard, a Core 2 Duo E6700, 2GB of DDR2 800 memory, a Radeon X1950 Pro, four SATA hard drives, an Ageia PhysX card, an X-Fi Elite Pro, two optical drives and three 120mm fans. Maybe not the most power hungry system around, but at least something that would draw a fair bit of power you'd think. Well, surprise surprise, using a plug-in power meter the peak power draw topped out at 280W. Makes you feel kind of stupid for using an 800W power supply, the only excuse we have was that it was free.

 

After about two days of uptime the system used had saved close to 400W of power, not much in the big scheme of things, but if you have a PC up and running 24h a day then you can save a lot of power in the long run. The actual number for this system was about 189W a day, which turns out to be close to 69,000W 69kWh a year, since power is normally measured in kWh. To make the calculations easy here, let's say for the sake of it that you pay 10 cents per kWh which seems to be close to the average US electricity price for 2007, you'd save $6.90 over a year. Not a lot of cash? No, not really, but electricity prices are on the rise and a saving is a saving at the end of the day.

 

Consider this, you run a business, you have 100 computers that are on 24/7/365 and suddenly we're talking a saving of $690 from our example, but it's likely to be a lot more since business pay more for electricity than consumers. And if you add other power saving components to your system such as a more efficient power supply that operates at peak efficiency, a new low power hard drive and what not, then this could add up to being a lot more.

 

In actual fact, DES saved a lot more power than 189W per day, as this was just for the CPU and motherboard which are both measured after the PSU has converted the power. This is about 8W per hour, but in actual fact the real power saving was somewhere between 15-20W, although as the plug-in power meter we used changed frequently it was hard to get the average power saving. At idle with DES enabled the system used about 145-150W while with DES disabled at idle it was between 160-165W, although it varied constantly.

 

Using a 15W saving per hour, you're looking at almost 131.5kWh over a year which is a lot of power and a bit more money in your pocket. With electricity prices going up all over the world, this might just be a wise investment for the future and it looks like GIGABYTE might have a winner on its hands for anyone that's interested in saving some money on their electricity bill. We're definitely all for it, let's just hope they manage to churn out a version of DES that works with your system overclocked as well, as it would be great to be able to push the system a bit when you play games and still enjoy the power saving otherwise.

 


Right of Reply

We at TweakTown openly invite the companies who provide us with review samples to express their opinion of our content and thoughts. If any company representative of this product wishes to respond, we will publish the response here.


Page 2 of 2

Prev

Further Reading: Read and find more Motherboards content at our Motherboards reviews, guides and articles index page.

TweakTown RSS FeedDo you get our RSS feed? Get It!

Post a Comment about this content



Check out our
RSS feeds!
  • Upcoming Content: Scythe Mugen 4 Tower CPU Cooler Review
  • Upcoming Content: NZXT Grid 10 Port Fan Hub Review
  • Upcoming Content: MSI Z77A-GD65 Gaming Series (Intel Z77) Motherboard Review
  • Upcoming Content: HGST Travelstar 7K1000 1TB 2.5" Hard Drive Review
  • Upcoming Content: Western Digital My Passport Edge for Mac 500GB External HDD Review
  • Upcoming Content: PQI Air Card 4GB Wi-Fi SDHC Review
  • Upcoming Content: LaCie CloudBox 1TB Personal NAS Review
  • Upcoming Content: Star Trek: The Next Generation - Season Three (1989) Blu-ray Review
  • Upcoming Content: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012) Blu-ray Movie Review
  • Upcoming Content: Whatever happened to Comodo Time Machine?
  • Upcoming Content: ADATA DashDrive Elite UE700 USB 3.0 Flash Drive Review
  • Upcoming Content: MyDigitalSSD BP4 240GB mSATA Review


Motherboards News Posts

View More Motherboards News Posts


TweakTown Web Poll

Question: What new stuff are you most excited to see at Computex Taipei 2013?

Cases, Coolers & PSU’s

CPU's

Gadgets

GPU's & Video Cards

Keyboards & Mice

Laptops, Tablets & Phones

Motherboards & Chipsets

New Tech

SSD's & Memory

Booth Babes

or View the Results

View More Polls

Forum Activity

View More Forum Posts

Motherboards Press Releases

View More Motherboards Press Releases