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E4g1e said:The difference between the two is in the ICH. The non-"E" version of the P4C800 Deluxe uses the ICH5, which doesn't support RAID in its native SATA channels. The "E" version, the P4C800-E Deluxe, uses the ICH5R, which supports RAID 0 and RAID 1 in its native SATA channels. However, Intel's RAID drivers and functionality require Windows 2000 or Windows XP; Intel's RAID implementation doesn't support Windows 9x or Windows Me. Both versions of that ICH include two SATA ports and two PATA/100 ports.
Both motherboards come with Promise's SATA RAID chip (which is really a PATA controller chip with a nearby converter chip for SATA support). That chip supports RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 0+1 and "RAID 10" - and the RAID functionality of that chipset is compatible with Windows 98SE or later. And two additional SATA ports and one PATA/133 port are associated with this Promise chip.
This is correct. However, the Gigabit support on the plain (non-E) P4C800 Deluxe comes from an onboard Marvell 8001 chipset that's connected to the 32-bit/33MHz PCI bus. That eats up more resources than the native Intel Gigabit solution would have.PGHammer said:Also, the E supports Intel PRO/1000CT networking natively, via the same ICH5R southbridge that the 800 Deluxe lacks.
E4g1e said:This is correct. However, the Gigabit support on the plain (non-E) P4C800 Deluxe comes from an onboard Marvell 8001 chipset that's connected to the 32-bit/33MHz PCI bus. That eats up more resources than the native Intel Gigabit solution would have.![]()
E4g1e said:This is correct. However, the Gigabit support on the plain (non-E) P4C800 Deluxe comes from an onboard Marvell 8001 chipset that's connected to the 32-bit/33MHz PCI bus. That eats up more resources than the native Intel Gigabit solution would have.![]()