With the AMD series of the Foxconn Quantum series of motherboard, here comes the destroyer, not really an Intel killer as most people think, but the much cheaper way to have quad core market, while as I say again and the last three hundred times, it is a good investment on the future but are you going to use it now? Well technically no.
Enter the Foxconn Destroyer. The Destroyer is built around the NVIDIA GeForce 780a SLI chipset for maximum gaming speed. Foxconn takes everything gamers could want or need and packs it into a great package that will get anyone with an AMD AM2/AM2+ processor drooling for one. The Foxconn Destroyer comes enclosed in a very large box. This is probably the largest motherboard package I have ever received which gets me drooling to see what is inside. The front side of the box has the logo that Foxconn has designated for the motherboard which is a “Destroyer” ship with the logo. On the back side Foxconn has highlighted some of the features such as the Hybrid SLI. If you take the front of the package and flip it up there is an inner section also. Inside here you have a picture of the motherboard and have cut-outs so that you can get a glimpse of special parts of the Destroyer.
With Foxconn’s AMD series of the famous quantum series, the extreme edition of all Intel and AMD boards to be one of the best ways and buy to have an over-clockable board without the worried of having a heating problem, with all the feature of a cooling needs, passive, active cooling, water cooling and the crazy liquid nitrogen cooling, to put that 4000-5000GHz chip into check on its heat. While you don’t see this in the Avenger and the Destroyer with the use of all four cooling, but in the X48 Black Ops has all of the cooling needs.
The tech specs of the Destroyer are the support of all Phenom and AMD Athlon 64 chips with HTT to 4000MHz, with dual channel DDR2 memory to up to 1066MHz FSB with the NForce 780a chipset with can support to about two and to three or even four NVIDIA cards for quad SLI. And with the North and the South Bridge are almost next to each other, and close to the graphics and the memory, plus an extra cooling in the side of the board, with an extended feature of the heat sink combo.
With the I/O are the six USB and two eSATA ports plus a 1394a port for all the digital connections of a digital camcorders, and also an extra that Foxconn can provide are a enthusiast fan for the graphics card and While a great board for the enthusiast in mind, but to remind you on the placement of the Northbridge, it may increase the heating problem and then stability, great use of the chip in the memory lane but be better between the graphics and the memory and a platform to place your new board from touching the hard tile surface of your living room.
While performance is splendid to be considered as an enthusiast, but the cooling array can make it a hot board, great for the AMD fan, why not buy it.

I just bought one of these, and I was wondering how I should place my memory chips, What order they should be in? I bought 2X2gig making total of four gig new for the new board. I will be removing from the other 1- 2048MB chip from slot A0, and 1- 1024 MB in slot A1 on the old mother board. I will also be installing the one from the old on to the new totaling 7 gigs? anyway, what order would be best for the package? Thanks…LEE