After much testing (and a dead Neo4 Platinum) I am convinced that MSI has some problems with the Neo4 Platinum (MS-7125). They have yet to release a BIOS officially that supports the AMD Athlon 64 X2 dual-core CPUs. The beta BIOS's they sent me are garbage, as are all of the BIOS's on their site for this board. The one decent BIOS (1.3, the one the board came with) is not even on the MSI site. Even with the San Diego and Winchester core chips I tested on the board there were major BIOS and flash memory issues on this board.
All is not lost, however. The Asus A8N-E Deluxe is here!!!
The difference between the Asus and MSI boards is night and day. The Asus not only truly supports the X2 chips, it has done so since the last 2 BIOS releases. They also have two Beta BIOS which work extremely well. I'm currently running Beta 1006.002 and it's wonderful. It has better overclocking features that actually work. When an overclock fails the system automatically calls up the default FSB and memory timings without actually changing the BIOS settings so all you have to do is go into the BIOS and change one value until you get one that works. The MSI is a complete nightmare by comparison. Hats off to Asus for taking the time to release the product properly. Late is better sometimes I guess.
While I'm at it, I've done lots of testing with the new X2s. If anybody has any questions feel free to ask me. There's a lot to digest with these new cores. Here is just a few things you may find interesting.
1) Unlike many of the more "available" A64s the X2 really does justify the extra money for the higher-end models. You can go for the 2200MHz models and you'll probably be able to hit 2400MHz stable with very good air cooling, but anything beyond that will require water or better. The 2400MHz models overclock much better, but NO X2 will overclock anywhere near the San Diego or Venice cores, for obvious reasons.
2) When using memtest to dial in RAM speeds and checking CPU overclock limits there's something you need to realize. YOU CAN'T DO IT WITH A DUAL-CORE CHIP! The reason is that memtest only uses one core. You can get some very good stable overclocks with only one core, but when Windows loads the kernel and that second core kicks in all bets are off. What you get in memtest is meaningless on a dual-core machine.
3) These things are very fast and very powerful. Even the 4200+ is easily more powerful than just about any dualie Opteron ot Xeon at almost everything.
4) THEY REALLY REALLY NEED VOLTS!!! REALLY! For high stable overclocks they need the voltage. They also need cooling. I'm not a fan of water cooling but in the case of the overclocked dual-core system I am very tempted to "take the plunge" so to speak. The 2.2GHz 4200+ will run just fine at 2.46GHz but it needs to be fed 1.475v min to do so unless you have very good water cooling or better.
5) Did I mention these things are fast? Well they are, and very smooth also, even when running 2 instances of SETI there is no noticeable slowing no matter what I do. Multi-tasking is greatly improved, something AMD has needed for awhile.
If anybody has any questions about the 4200+, 4400+ or 4800+ chips or my testing please feel free to post them here.
Cheers!