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What Happened to Abit Motherboards

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At the end of the year in 2008, one of the most legendary motherboard manufacturers of all time sadly went out of business. I am talking about Abit. What happened to Abit motherboards? A combination of factors took it down, including declining quality, loss of a key engineer, and a good old-fashioned scandal.

Abit took 7 years to become an overnight sensation

Abit wasn’t exactly a newcomer when I first learned about them in 1996. The company was founded in 1989 and made a number of 386SX, 386DX, and 486 motherboards. But it was the early hardware sites like Tom’s Hardware Guide and Anandtech that really helped to put Abit on the map during the Socket 7 era and distinguish them from the rest of the Taiwainese motherboard makers. The Abit IT5H was a Socket 7 board based on the Intel 430HX chipset that performed extremely well.

The jumperless Abit IT5H

Thing is, we already had an HX-based board that performed really well. Asus had those bases covered with its P55T2P4. What made Abit special was its board was jumperless. When you installed a processor, it initialized it using safe settings, and then you could go in and configure it to run at the speed you wanted using a feature called the CPU Softmenu. The Softmenu allowed you to change voltages and front side bus speed, not just the multiplier. You could even run your CPU at non-standard bus speeds like 75 or 83 MHz. Running a 166 MHz CPU at 83 MHz with a 2X multiplier actually ran faster than a 200 MHz CPU on a 66 MHz bus with a 3X multiplier. If you actually owned a 200 MHz processor, or a processor that overclocked well, you could run it at 83 MHz with a multiplier of 2.5, reach 208 MHz, and run rings around a CPU running on a 66 MHz bus with a 3x multiplier. It was the ultimate Socket 7 system at the time.

Overclockers loved the IT5H because they could easily test settings without looking up jumper settings and changing clumsy jumper blocks.

Abit BP6: Dual CPUs on a budget

And then there was the legendary Abit BP6. Socket 370 era Celeron processors had a Pentium II core, but Intel disabled the ability to change the multiplier to discourage overclocking and they also disabled the ability to run them in multi-processor configurations. Enthusiasts figured out that if they wired the processors up a bit differently, they could restore the multiprocessor capability. With the BP6, Abit made that unnecessary. They just wired the board up so that you could drop a pair of cheap Celeron processors into it and have a very inexpensive dual CPU setup.

What happened to Abit to cause its demise?

One major problem for Abit was the quality of the capacitors they used was not as high as Asus. That meant Abit motherboards didn’t age as well as Asus boards did. Arguably, in the ’90s, that wasn’t as huge of a problem because enthusiasts would upgrade every 2 or 3 years. As long as the board lasted 3 years, nobody noticed. But as the century turned, people started expecting to be able to keep their computers a little bit longer. Abit’s propensity to go cheap on the capacitors left it extremely vulnerable when capacitor plague kicked in, and indeed, Abit was one of the hardest hit.

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