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Thread: Sapphire Pure Black P67 Hydra Motherboard (LucidLogix Chipset) Now Available!

  1. #1
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    Thumbs up Sapphire Pure Black P67 Hydra Motherboard (LucidLogix Chipset) Now Available!

    After many long months of waiting for the Sapphire Pure Black P67 Hydra, Newegg has become the first hardware etailer to sell this incredible enthusiast LGA 1155 motherboard in the United States. The board features a LucidLogix Hydra chipset rather than a traditional Intel chipset and allows a mix of graphics configurations to be used with varying GPU types, brands and architectures. Notably, however, is the fact that this board promises enthusiasts highly efficient GPU load balancing with near-linear performance increases for multi-GPU configurations (particularly for Triple CrossFireX, Quad-CrossFireX, Triple-SLI and Quad-SLI).

    Newegg - Sapphire Pure Black P67 Hydra Motherboard - $229.99









    "The implementation of the Hydra engine is done in ASIC hardware with the support of a software driver. The ASIC is located between the Northbridge and the GPUs, as shown in the figure. The Hydra engine scales performance of multi-GPU configurations from any GPU vender and will scale relative to each GPU's individual performance. In other words, the GPUs do not need to be identical. The Hydra ASIC handles all connectivity between the CPU, the GPU, and between the GPUs through a full-duplex wired speed implementation. As such, the solution is connector free and does not require any GPU to GPU connector." - Lucid


    A buddy of mine is ordering this board and I will be doing some EVGA GeForce GTX 590 Classified Quad-SLI benchmarks with the Lucid Hydra chipset in comparison to an EVGA X58 SLI Classified E759 nForce 200 Limited Edition motherboard. \m/
    Last edited by AuDioFreaK39; 04-04-2011 at 09:13 PM.
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  2. #2
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    only complaint is the red sata ports, couldn't they have used a gray or blue?
    it wouldn't stand out so much and i would love the board even more.

    now since sapphire makes amd video cards the new question is will we see a 990FX board from them?

  3. #3
    Xtreme Addict Chrono Detector's Avatar
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    Needs more SATA ports but other than that it looks nice.
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    Uhm... its not pure black, its also blue and red
    Quote Originally Posted by iddqd View Post
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    how many version of lucid chips?
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    Good luck with getting it to work properly:
    http://www.kitguru.net/components/mo...2p67-review/5/

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    Quote Originally Posted by nijel View Post
    Good luck with getting it to work properly:
    http://www.kitguru.net/components/mo...2p67-review/5/
    you actually read kitguru to do moore than just laugh?

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    That was the only Hydra test I found. And buddy of mine has the same problems with hydra on this board. It's so software dependant I don't think Lucid can keep up with all the games and video cards on the market. Hydra chip is just useless IMO.

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    When I think of a black motherboard I think of the UD4. Not that blue/red/black thing.

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    Thanks for the post, was really looking forward to seeing some more news in regards to this board.
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    Heatsink look super cheap...
    Incredible enthusiast board?
    Are there any non "incredible enthusiast" boards at all? :P

  12. #12
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    hydra lucid nice, been waiting for a board with it in the p67 range! Any reviews??

    Another thing I find funny is AMD/Intel would snipe any of our Moms on a grocery run if it meant good quarterly results, and you are forever whining about what feser did?

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    Quote Originally Posted by AuDioFreaK39 View Post
    Notably, however, is the fact that this board promises enthusiasts highly efficient GPU load balancing with near-linear performance increases for multi-GPU configurations (particularly for Triple CrossFireX, Quad-CrossFireX, Triple-SLI and Quad-SLI).
    Who are they trying to fool? Hydra has long ago been proven to be just as Softwre dependant as SLI and Crossfire, so other than the removed Vendor limitation it offers absolutely nothing new.

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    Not a bad board. Been a while so don't know how the price falls with this and others.

    Quote Originally Posted by Chrono Detector View Post
    Needs more SATA ports but other than that it looks nice.
    It has 7, SATA III ports. Decent amount.
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    Quote Originally Posted by naokaji View Post
    Who are they trying to fool? Hydra has long ago been proven to be just as Softwre dependant as SLI and Crossfire, so other than the removed Vendor limitation it offers absolutely nothing new.
    on amd boards Hydra gives better scores than hacked SLI

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    Quote Originally Posted by stangracin3 View Post
    you actually read kitguru to do moore than just laugh?
    Regardless of what you think of the site it doesn't take a rocket scientist to put two cards in a system and install some drivers. Quite obviously they couldn't get it to work in even ideal conditions (Pairing two GTX 460's).

    They tried mixing NVIDIA + NVIDIA, ATI + ATI and NVIDIA + ATI in a multitude of different configurations with different level of card from both companies and they could not get it working reliably.

    Their main complaint was constant crashes and considering how even legitimate vendor drivers can sometimes cause crashes in specific games I bet Lucids job is 10x more hard at making a stable system.

    Looks like a giant fail in my opinion.

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