<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Epic Traffic Systems &#187; Asus Sabertooth 990Fx &#8211; Am3+ &#8211; Tuf Series &#8211; Atx Amd 990Fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards</title>
	<atom:link href="http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/feed/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>http://epictrafficsystemshub.com</link>
	<description>Epic Traffic Systems</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Sun, 20 May 2012 14:36:41 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1</generator>
		<item>
		<title>Asus Sabertooth 990Fx &#8211; Am3+ &#8211; Tuf Series &#8211; Atx Amd 990Fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards</title>
		<link>http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/</link>
		<comments>http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Jan 2012 12:48:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Brodie Rice</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Pc Supplies]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Asus Sabertooth 990Fx - Am3+ - Tuf Series - Atx Amd 990Fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2><a href="http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&amp;field-keywords=asus+sabertooth+990fx+am3+tuf+series+atx+amd+990fx+ddr3+1800+motherboards&amp;tag=epictraffic-20" rel="nofollow">Find Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards @ Amazon.com</a></h2>
<table width="100%">
<tr>
<td> <br />
<table width="100%">
<tr>
<hr />
<p>Most  helpful  client  reviews</p>
<p>13  of  13  persons  found  the  following  review  helpful.<br /><img height="11" width="56" style="margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px" class="custReviewStars" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/associates/network/star50_tpng.png" alt="5">Good  choice  for  the  AMD  Phenom  II  x6<br /><span>By  J.  S.  Green<br />Overall,  I  find  this  board  to  be  very  well  constructed,  simple  to  install,  splendid  for  overclocking,  and  very  well  stocked  with  I/O  options.</p>
<p>I  have  paired  this  motherboard  with  the  AMD  Phenom  II  X6  1100T  Processor.  I&#8217;m  using  a  Thermaltake  VL10001W2Z  case  and  an  Antec  EA-750  Green  power  supply.  My  memory  configuration  is  two    Corsair  XMS3  8  GB  1333  MHz  PC3-10666,  for  a  total  of  16Gb.</p>
<p>Pro:<br />Very  simple  or  very  sophisticated  overclocking.  The  basic  &#8220;turbo&#8221;  mode  in  the  BIOS  setup  steps  the  Phenom  II  x6  up  to  3.8  Ghz,  just  like  that.  If  one  wants  to  do  a  lot  of  overclocking,  then  the  innovative  BIOS  choices  concede  just  in regards to  anything.  If  the  overclock  doesn&#8217;t  work,  the  BIOS  will  let  you  know  after  a  manual  power  off.  This  board  is  an  overclocker&#8217;s  dream.  There  is  likewise  a  commodious  &#8220;clear  BIOS&#8221;  button  on  the  board,  in  case  you  REALLY  goof  it  up.</p>
<p>Many  of  the  board  parts  are  tested  to  &#8220;MIL  SPEC&#8221;,  which  means  military  standards.  They  will  survive  higher  than  normal  temperature  conditions  and  still  work.  Many  constituents  are  covered  with  special  materials  for  extra  cooling,  and  metal  parts  have  micro  sized  distortions  (like  the  dimples  on  a  golf  ball),  which  develop  more  cooling  area,  and  therefore  better  efficiency.</p>
<p>The  manual  is  very  good  and  rather  clear.  Along  these  lines,  the  internetlocation  has  all  the  drivers,  updates,  and  manuals  within  easy  web  browsing.</p>
<p>The  board  rear  output  has  a  single  powered  (and  two  non  powered)  Esata  ports,  two  USB-3,  10  USB  2,  a  1394  port,  plus  the  general  sound  &amp;  etc.  There  are  an  further and added  two  USB-3  pins  on  the  motherboard.  Internally,  it  sports  6  600  mb/sec  SATA  and  two  300Mb/sec  SATA  ports.  It  comes  with  4  SATA  cables  and  a  crossfire  cable.</p>
<p>The  board  supports  three  high  speed  PCI-e  cards.</p>
<p>One  in truth  nice  feature  (for  the  system  builder)  is  that  there  is  a  little  removable  block  containing  the  pins  for  power,  HDD,  etc.  One  conveniently  plugs  in  the  case  cables  to  this  block,  then  slides  the  block  onto  the  motherboard  pins.  This  makes  it  a  lot  more comfortable  to  connect  them.</p>
<p>The  bios  is  visual,  and  runs  a  mouse.  The  &#8220;EZ&#8221;  version  has  basic  settings,  while  the  &#8220;Advanced&#8221;  version  offers  more  choices.  One  thing  that  you  might  note  is  that  if  you  are  upgrading,  the  board  is  set  by  default  to  ACHI  for  the  SATA,  which  means  that  Windows  may  not  boot  unless  you  initial  set  the  BIOS  to  &#8220;IDE&#8221;.  For  Windows  7  users,  there  is  a  way  to  change  the  registry  to  enable  ACHI  (google  it).  This  is  not  important  if  the  former  installation  had  ACHI.  </p>
<p>The  board  has  lights  for  each  of  the  main  functions  (memory,  bood  device,  CPU,  etc).  If  for  some  reason  it  won&#8217;t  boot,  you  may  look  inside  and  see  which  light  is  lit,  saving  a  lot  of  trouble  shooting  time.  </p>
<p>There  are  various  nice  utilities  that  run  underneath  windows  (I&#8217;m  on  Win  7  Pro).  These  concede  one  to  set  respective  settings,  and  view  data  with regards to  the  board  status.  One  worthful  display  shows  the  entire  motherboard,  with  temperature  colors  for  critical  locations.  This  would  be  nice  to  trouble  shoot  cooling  issues.</p>
<p>In  the  &#8220;way  cool&#8221;  section,  the  board  has  utilities  that  grant  one  to  alter  the  boot  image,  so  you  may  put  your  bestloved  picture  up  there  when  the  computer  starts  up.</p>
<p>Con:<br />I  think  the  BIOS  is  miscalculating  the  CPU  temperature.  The  temperature  has  to  be  calculated  from  selective information  provided  by  the  Northbridge  chip.  I  have  seen  temperatures  in  the  BIOS  that  exceed  the  specs  for  my  CPU!  I  am  trusting  the  ones  provided  by  CoreTemp,  which  use  calculations  provided  by  AMD.  I  don&#8217;t  know  how  ASUS  calculates  the  temperatures  it  reports,  but  I  don&#8217;t  trust  the  results  they  present.</p>
<p>Sometimes  the  BIOS  was  a  bit  confusing,  but  that  is  for the most part  because  I  am  employed  to  older  BIOS.</p>
<p>The  board  is  designed  around  the  AMD  990  chipset,  but  they  chose  to  comprise  the  bequest  SATA  (two  ports  on  board  and  the  three  ESATA  ports  on  the  back)  by way of  a  dissimilar  chipset  from  Jmicron  inc.  It  is  a  bit  strange  to  see  the  Jmicron  looking  for  gadgets  on  the  SATA  (it  shows  up  before  the  AMI  bios  page).  I&#8217;m  not  sure  why  they  did  this  for  the  SATA,  since  the  newer  600  mb/sec  frequent  is  backwards  compatible,  but  perhaps  that  is  just  the  easiest  way  for  them  to  do  it.  Not  actually  a  &#8220;con&#8221;,  but  surprising  in  such  an  progressed  board.</p>
<p>I  have  not  yet  managed  to  get  the  AMD  &#8220;cool  n  quiet&#8221;  feature  of  the  Phenom  II  x6  to  work.  I  suppose  there  is  a heap of  way  to  modify  the  settings  to  concede  it  (I  have  already  enabled  it  in  the  modern  BIOS),  but  either  my  computer  is  always  using  the  cores,  or  the  motherboard  merely  isn&#8217;t  invoking  it.  Actually,  this  CPU  runs  cool  sufficient  that  I  may  not  pursue  it  further.  EDIT:  OK,  the  board  utilities  indicate  that  the  CPU  cores  are  using  Cool  N  Quiet,  but  CoreTemp  monitoring  is  not  showing  it.</p>
<p>The  board  has  a  bequest  serial  connector  on  the  board,  but  no  serial  port  on  the  back.  There  is  a  mouse  port,  but  if  you  actually  need  serial  (9  pin  or  other),  you  will  need  an  adaptor  card.</p>
<p>Overall,  the  board  works  great  out  of  the  box  or  with  altered  settings.  Recommended.</p>
<p>4  of  4  humans  found  the  following  review  helpful.<br /><img height="11" width="56" style="margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px" class="custReviewStars" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/associates/network/star50_tpng.png" alt="5">Runs  Linux  Like  a  Champ!<br /><span>By  electronics  guy<br />Just  so  people  know,  even  with  the  noise  not so long ago  when it comes to  UEFI  BIOS  only  permitting  OEM  Microsoft  productions  to  boot,  this  board  runs  Linux  like  a  champ.  I  don&#8217;t  believe  this  version  of  UEFI  BIOS  even  supports  the  boot  effigy  signing  but  it  might  in  the  future  with  an  update.  Either  way,  if  it  does  get  added,  it  must  grant  disabling  that  feature  so  other  OSes  besides  Winderz  may  load.</p>
<p>Everything  was  recognized  by  OpenSuSe  11.4  just  fine.  I&#8217;d  imagine  it  would  be  the  same  for  other  distros.  The  only  thing  I  couldn&#8217;t  figure  out  right  off  was  how  to  RAID  my  drives.  I  plan  to  revisit  that.  I  could  RAID  them  but  not  get  Linux  to  use  the  onboard  RAID  controller.    Might  just  do  software  RAID  in  Linux  itself.  But  the  networking,  audio,  USB,  and  everything  else  was  fine.  It  just  works.</p>
<p>One  thing  that  has  been  an  issue  with  Linux  and  BIOS  upgrades  is  a  number  of  the  makers  use  Windows-based  BIOS  upgrade  apps  or  you  have  to  boot  from  a  diskette.  This  board  allows  you  to  grab  a  BIOS  effigy  from  a  USB  drive  and  do  the  update  in  the  BIOS  itself.  Nice.</p>
<p>Overall  quality  looks  great.  The  power  supply  division  is  low  profile  so  a large total  of  cooling  solutions  ought to  fit  well.  It  seems  to  run  cool  for  all  the  horsepower,  it  makes  it  very  quiet  as  well.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s  a  nice  board  and  I  must  be  set  for  a heap of  time.</p>
<p>3  of  3  people  found  the  following  review  helpful.<br /><img height="11" width="56" style="margin-left:0px;margin-right:10px" class="custReviewStars" src="http://images.amazon.com/images/G/01/associates/network/star50_tpng.png" alt="5">OpenSUSE  12.1  needs  network  driver  update  to  work  right&#8230;<br /><span>By  Craig  Arno<br />I  installed  OpenSUSE  12.1  x86_64  KDE  on  this  motherboard  with  a  AMD  Phenom  II  T1100  6  core  processor,  Corsair  Vengeance  8GB  DDR3  1600  RAM,  OCZ  Solid  3  SATA3  60GB  SSD  connected  to  MB  connector  SATA3G_E1  in  with regards to  7  minutes.    Everything  works  except  the  RTC8111E  based  network  adapter  [and  later  I  ran into  USB  2.0  and  RAID  HD  Partitioning,  described  below].    Downloading  the  8111E  Linux  driver  from  Realtek  solved  the  problem.    The  Realtek  driver  was  trivial  to  install,  just  unpack  and  (as  root)  run  the  autoinstall  &#8220;./autorun.sh&#8221;  script.    The  problem  is  the  r8169  driver  shipped  with  a good deal of  Linux  kernels  (including  12.1&#8242;s  3.1.0  kernel)  incorrectly  identifies  itself  as  the  right  driver.    The  Realtek  driver  r8168-8.027.00.tar.bz2  builds  and  installs  the  rectify  8168  driver  which  works  perfectly  with  DHCP  on  my  IPv4  network.    This  is  a  problem  that  needs  to  be  fixed  at  kernel  dot  org  for  all  distributions.</p>
<p>The  installed  r8169  driver  set up  with  a  Static  IP  address  worked  well  sufficient  to  download  the  8168  driver  from  Realtek.</p>
<p>This  board  likewise  worked  fine  with  Windows  7  Enterprise  x64.</p>
<p>I  exceptionally  like  this  board  because  it  is  built  with  high  reliability  components,  the  type  I&#8217;d  want  in  a  server  that&#8217;s  likely  to  run  non-stop  for  5  years.    An  enclosed  &#8220;Certificate  of  Reliablity&#8221;  explains  what  motherboard  parts  meet  which  standards  to  achieve  &#8220;reliability&#8221;.    I  also  employed  a  ($160)  Kingwin  550W  supply  with  power  element  of  1.0  and  Plus  80  &#8220;Platinum&#8221;  rating  so  this  new  box  will  run  as  expeditiously  as  possible  (92%)  over  the  next  5  years&#8230;  the  power  savings  even  at  $0.08/KWH  will  recompense  for  the  supply  in  5  years.    Read  reviews  of  these  new  furnishes  as  &#8220;modified  sine-wave&#8221;  UPS&#8217;s  may  have  to  be  substituted  with  more  highpriced  sine-wave  output  UPS  to  function  correctly  with  newer  high  efficacy  supplies.</p>
<p>Update  7-JAN-2012<br />=================<br />I  encountered  two  more  difficultnesses  which  were  resolved  by  upgrading  the  delivered  0705  BIOS  to  version  0901;</p>
<p>  1)  My  USB  keyboard  and  mouse  [and  anything  else  USB]  only  worked  on  the  two  USB  3.0  ports  under  OpenSUSE  12.1  x64.    Upgrading  the  BIOS  from  delivered  0705  to  0901  permitted  OpenSUSE  12.1  x64  to  recognize  all  USB  widgets  on  all  USB  3.0/2.0  ports.    The  USB  keyboard/mouse/flash-drive  did  work  on  the  USB  2.0  ports  when  only  talking  to  the  BIOS  (no  OS  loaded).</p>
<p>  2)  OpenSUSE  12.1  x86_64  wouldn&#8217;t  manage  the  partitions  with  GNU  &#8220;parted&#8221;  on  two  500GB  hard  drives  connected  to  SATA5  &amp;  SATA6.    This  wouldn&#8217;t  grant  me  to  set up  RAID-1  for  the  system.    Upgrading  BIOS  from  0705  to  0901  solved  this  problem.</p>
<p>Of  course  with  USB  2.0  ports  not  working,  using  a  USB  pen  drive,  USB  DVD-ROM  writer,  USB  floppy,  USB  Mouse,  USB  Keyboard  or  anything  else  on  the  2.0  ports  beneath  OpenSUSE  12.1  x64  didn&#8217;t  work  [they  do  now  after  upgrading  BIOS  to  0901]</p>
<p>UPGRADING  THE  DELIVERED  BIOS  was  easy,  dealing  with  the  anxiety  of  upgrading  BIOS  was  not&#8230;    I  downloaded  the  SABERTOOTH-990FX-ASUS-0901.ROM  effigy  from  ASUS  web  website  as  a  ZIP  file.    Unpacked  the  4MB  .ROM  file  to  a  4GB  FAT32  formatted  USB  stick  on  an  older  working  system.    Placed  the  USB  stick  in  one  of  the  USB  2.0  slots  on  the  back  of  the  motherboard.    Rebooted  and  entered  BIOS  &#8220;Advanced  Mode&#8221;.    Went  to  &#8220;Tools&#8221;  and  EZ  BIOS  Upgrade.    Pressed  F2  and  saved  the  delivered  0705  BIOS  to  a  file  I  called  &#8220;Delivered_BIOS_0705.ROM&#8221;  (this  file  saved  to  the  same  USB  Pen  Drive  the  0901  upgrade  was  on).    After  this  said  it  was  done,  I  told  it  to  upgrade  using  the  SABERTOOTH-990FX-ASUS-0901.ROM  file  on  the  Pen  Drive.    It  took  a  little  while,  but  not  almost  as  long  as  I  expected,  then  told  me  it  had  to  reboot.    I  clicked  &#8220;OK&#8221;  and  waited.    The  power  supply  even  turned  off.    While  I  was  contemplating  pressing  the  &#8220;POWER&#8221;  button,  regarding  10  seconds  later  the  scheme  turned  itself  back  on.    i.e.  from  the  time  I  clicked  &#8220;OK&#8221;  with  the  mouse  to  reboot  until  the  system  rebooted  by  itself  was  all  hands  off,  just  wait  and  watch.</p>
<p>The  BIOS  said  it  necessitated  to  enter  set up  to  re-save  settings,  so  press  F1.    I  did.    Checked  a  few  settings  (my  memory  was  set  back  to  DDR3-1333,  and  I  set  it  back  to  DDR3-1600  {what  I  bought},  for  instance).    After  this,  I  did  a  SAVE/Reboot  and  booted  into  OpenSUSE  12.1  x86_64.    My  network  driver  wasn&#8217;t  working  right,  so  I  did  a  reinstall  of  the  8168  driver  {as  described  above}  and  now  all  appears  to  be  working.    My  earlier  USB  and  hard  disk  RAID  difficulties  were  solved  by  a  0901  BIOS  upgrade!</p>
<p>And  I&#8217;m  using  this  new  scheme  to  update  this  review.    With  6  processors  and  x64  Linux,  this  scheme  is  lightning  fast  (even  Firefox  and  Chrome  load  in  the  blink  of  an  eye  from  the  Solid  State  Disk-SSD)!</p>
<p>Now  that  I  recognise  everything  works,  I&#8217;ll  finish  scheme  setup  and  order  another  board  for  hardware  backup.    What  I&#8217;ve  learned  over  decades  of  computing  is  motherboard  designs  only  last  in regards to  3-6  months.    So  if  you  need  a  drop  in  substitute  for  something  critical  [like  a  SOHO  server  system],  buy  the  second  motherboard  after  you  recognise  this  configuration  is  going  to  work.    I  genuinely  had  an  older  ASUS  board  fail  once  and  this  doctrine  minimized  my  down-time  and  frustration.    Failures  seldom  occur  at  commodious  times.</p>
<p>Update  17-JAN-2012<br />==================<br />I  went  to  order  a  second  system  a  few  days  ago  and  encountered  the  Phenom  II  x6  1100T  processor  is  no  longer  available.    AMD  set  the  end  of  life  on  these  processors  for  Dec  2011.    The  AMD  web  website  is  a  mess  for  figuring  this  stuff  out,  so  a  day  of  exploration  which  included  hard  technical  data  and  client  reviews  to  come  up  with  the  answer  I  needed.    The  AMD  FX-8120  8-core  processor  is  a  suitable  substitute  for  most  apps  if  you  have  an  AM3+  socket  board.    The  Sabertooth  990fx  is  an  AM3+  is  such  a  critter.</p>
<p>From  the  reviews  I  read,  the  Phenom  II  processor  is  a  better  number  cruncher,  and  the  FX  is  a  better  selective information  mover.    Since  I  need  both,  the  FX  chip  will  go  in  the  server  since  that  needs  scads  of  threading  and  not  much  number  crunching.    In  the  development  system,  I&#8217;ll  use  the  Phenom  II  x6  I  in the first place  bought.    So  it  turned  out  well,  and  the  Sabertooth  990fx  motherboard  after  a  month  of  use  is  still  a  winner!</p>
<p>If  any individual  is  mesmerized  I  also  found  a  G-Force  ASUS  GT-520  video  card  for  around  $50  which  does  1080p  HD  in  hardware,  runs  two  monitors,  and  is  supposed  to  work  well  with  Linux.    It  also  doesn&#8217;t  have  a  fan,  so  no  extra  noise!</p>
<p><span><a href="http://www.amazon.com/product-reviews/B00539LU3E?tag=imagetrastore-20&amp;linkCode=sb1&amp;camp=212353&amp;creative=380553" target="_blank">See  all  30  client  reviews&#8230;</a></span></div>
</tr>
</table>
<table width="100%">
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/91OsX-91DCL._AA1500_.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/91OsX-91DCL._AA1500_.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Pic</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://cdn.overclock.net/3/3c/100x100px-LS-3ce03787_qpPylnBQ3VqlbaGP_500.jpeg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://cdn.overclock.net/3/3c/100x100px-LS-3ce03787_qpPylnBQ3VqlbaGP_500.jpeg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Photo</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/415n-HK0MXL._SL500_SS100_.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/415n-HK0MXL._SL500_SS100_.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Picture</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ZGE3Rl9bL._SL500_AA300_.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ZGE3Rl9bL._SL500_AA300_.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Picture</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://www.promax.co.nz/store/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/a/s/asus_sabertooth_990fx_socket_am3_atx_sb950_ddr3-1866_raid_usb3.0_sata3_crossfirex_sli_1394_3.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://www.promax.co.nz/store/media/catalog/product/cache/1/image/9df78eab33525d08d6e5fb8d27136e95/a/s/asus_sabertooth_990fx_socket_am3_atx_sb950_ddr3-1866_raid_usb3.0_sata3_crossfirex_sli_1394_3.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Image</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61HqP7rb6SL._SL500_SS120_.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61HqP7rb6SL._SL500_SS120_.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Photo</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61ePjeV8umL._SL500_AA300_.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/61ePjeV8umL._SL500_AA300_.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Picture</p>
</div>
<div class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 145px"><a href="http://www.avertek.com.sg/images/Amd%2520mb/M4A785T-M.jpg" class="lightbox"><img src="http://www.avertek.com.sg/images/Amd%2520mb/M4A785T-M.jpg" alt="Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards" class="alignleft" width="145"></img></a>
<p class="wp-caption-text">Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards Image</p>
</div>
</tr>
</table>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&amp;field-keywords=asus+sabertooth+990fx+am3+tuf+series+atx+amd+990fx+ddr3+1800+motherboards&amp;tag=epictraffic-20" rel="nofollow">Similar Products To Asus Sabertooth 990fx Am3 Tuf Series Atx Amd 990fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards</a></p>
<!-- Start Sociable --><div class="sociable"><div class="sociable_tagline">Be Sociable, Share!</div><ul class='clearfix'><li><a title="Twitter" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-288px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards%20-%20http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F%20  "></a></li><li><a title="Facebook" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-96px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.facebook.com/share.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;t=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li><a title="email" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-160px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="https://mail.google.com/mail/?view=cm&fs=1&to&su=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&body=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&ui=2&tf=1&shva=1"></a></li><li><a class="option1_32" style="cursor:pointer;background-position:-128px 0px" rel="nofollow" title="Add to favorites - doesn't work in Chrome"  onClick="javascript:AddToFavorites();"></a></li><li><a title="StumbleUpon" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-224px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.stumbleupon.com/submit?url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li><a title="Delicious" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-32px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://delicious.com/post?url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;notes=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li><a title="Google Reader" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-224px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.google.com/reader/link?url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;srcURL=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;srcTitle=Epic+Traffic+Systems+Epic+Traffic+Systems"></a></li><li><a title="LinkedIn" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-288px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.linkedin.com/shareArticle?mini=true&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;source=Epic+Traffic+Systems+Epic+Traffic+Systems&amp;summary=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li><a title="BlinkList" class="option1_32" style="background-position:0px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.blinklist.com/index.php?Action=Blink/addblink.php&amp;Url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;Title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li><a style="cursor:pointer" rel="nofollow" onMouseOut="fixOnMouseOut(document.getElementById('sociable-post-12780'), event, 'post-12780')" onMouseOver="more(this,'post-12780')"><img style='margin-top:9px' src='http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/wp-content/plugins/sociable/images/more.png'></a></li></ul><div onMouseout="fixOnMouseOut(this,event,'post-12780')" id="sociable-post-12780" style="display:none;">   

    <div style="top: auto; left: auto; display: block;" id="sociable">



		<div class="popup">

			<div class="content">

				<ul><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Myspace" class="option1_32" style="background-position:0px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.myspace.com/Modules/PostTo/Pages/?u=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;t=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Digg" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-64px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://digg.com/submit?phase=2&amp;url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;bodytext=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Reddit" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-128px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://reddit.com/submit?url=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Google Bookmarks" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-192px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.google.com/bookmarks/mark?op=edit&amp;bkmk=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;annotation=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="HackerNews" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-256px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://news.ycombinator.com/submitlink?u=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;t=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="MSNReporter" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-352px 0px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://reporter.es.msn.com/?fn=contribute&amp;Title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;URL=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;cat_id=6&amp;tag_id=31&amp;Remark=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Sphinn" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-192px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://sphinn.com/index.php?c=post&amp;m=submit&amp;link=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Posterous" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-64px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://posterous.com/share?linkto=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;title=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;selection=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li><li style="heigth:32px;width:32px"><a title="Tumblr" class="option1_32" style="background-position:-256px -32px" rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.tumblr.com/share?v=3&amp;u=http%3A%2F%2Fepictrafficsystemshub.com%2Fpc-supplies%2Fasus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards%2F&amp;t=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards&amp;s=Asus%20Sabertooth%20990Fx%20-%20Am3%2B%20-%20Tuf%20Series%20-%20Atx%20Amd%20990Fx%20Ddr3%201800%20Motherboards"></a></li></ul>			

			</div>        

		  <a style="cursor:pointer" onclick="hide_sociable('post-12780',true)" class="close">

		  <img onclick="hide_sociable('post-12780',true)" title="close" src="http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/wp-content/plugins/sociable/images/closelabel.png">

		  </a>

		</div>

	</div> 

  </div></div><div class='sociable' style='float:none'><ul class='clearfix'><li id="Twitter_Counter"><a href="https://twitter.com/share" data-text="Asus Sabertooth 990Fx - Am3+ - Tuf Series - Atx Amd 990Fx Ddr3 1800 Motherboards - http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/" data-url="http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/" class="twitter-share-button" data-count="horizontal">Tweet</a><script type="text/javascript" src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js"></script></li><li id="Facebook_Counter"><iframe src="http://www.facebook.com/plugins/like.php?href=http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/&send=false&layout=button_count&show_faces=false&action=like&colorscheme=light&font" scrolling="no" frameborder="0" style="border:none; overflow:hidden;height:32px;width:100px" allowTransparency="true"></iframe></li><li id="Google_p"><g:plusone annotation="bubble" href="http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/" size="medium"></g:plusone></li><li id="LinkedIn_Counter"><script src="http://platform.linkedin.com/in.js" type="text/javascript"></script><script type="IN/Share" data-url="http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/" data-counter="right"></script></li><li id="StumbleUpon_Counter"><script src="http://www.stumbleupon.com/hostedbadge.php?s=2&r=http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/"></script></li></ul></div><!-- End Sociable -->]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://epictrafficsystemshub.com/pc-supplies/asus-sabertooth-990fx-am3-tuf-series-atx-amd-990fx-ddr3-1800-motherboards/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>

