I have not seen this posted...and i wanted to post it since i own an EPOX mobo and many others do.
http://www.nforcershq.com/article8056.html
http://www.nforcershq.com/article8056.html
Originally posted by: wayliff
I have not seen this posted...and i wanted to post it since i own an EPOX mobo and many others do.
http://www.nforcershq.com/article8056.html
shame that they always put their ATXPWR sockets in stupid places ...Originally posted by: tcsenter
I've always been impressed with the layout of Epox motherboards. They just look super 'clean' compared to other companies. The capacitors, MOSFETs, and voltage regulators around the CPU always seem to be neatly and thoughtfully placed in alignment,
That was my one and only complaint with lay-out, but Epox is hardly the only company to frequently place the ATX connector directly above or left of the CPU. It really ticked me off the first couple times I encountered that but I've gotten used to it now. I just use a rubber-band or cable-tie to hold the ATX power cable over to one side of the CPU instead of directly over it, and I've used a lot fewer Epox boards than ASUS, MSI, ECS, or ASRock.Originally posted by: Heidfirst
shame that they always put their ATXPWR sockets in stupid places...
Originally posted by: touchmyichi
oh man what happened :/, I remember they had an amazing Nforce 2 board (9RDA, right?). That thing was selling like hotcakes.
MTI (M-Tech) has been gone since 1998 when it merged with Soyo, but its website is still operating nearly 10 years later:Originally posted by: DasFox
They don't seem to be gone, otherwise why is the site still up and running, LOL.
Originally posted by: webley
That's the saddest news I've heard for a long time. I always thought Epox was doing well as I have a stack of motherboard boxes that all say Epox on them.. I guess I just assumed many others were also using Epox. I sure hope Supox or whatever makes a similar reliable product.
We really need some reliable boards out again as in recent times many motherboard manufacturers seem to have taken a real stumble in product reliability.