Six $200-$260 LGA 2011 Motherboards, Reviewed
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Intel
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We know that Intel's X79 Express platform hosts the fastest desktop processors in the company's portfolio. But can it be made more affordable? We round up the least-expensive $200-$260 motherboards to determine how much you have to give up for cheap X79.
Six $200-$260 LGA 2011 Motherboards, Reviewed : Read more
Six $200-$260 LGA 2011 Motherboards, Reviewed : Read more
More about : 200 260 lga 2011 motherboards reviewed
Anonymous
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Motherboard
February 27, 2012 5:00:38 AM
hellfire24
February 27, 2012 5:36:25 AM
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Achoo22
February 27, 2012 6:02:46 AM
Quote:
Quite simply, the costs associated with Sandy Bridge-E are higher, in part because of Intel's prices and also because the boards are more difficult to design.Since the boards all have vastly superior profit margins, your statement is misleading. Why is everyone too afraid to reveal the truth about motherboard pricing?
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AlexIsAlex
February 27, 2012 6:43:46 AM
Would it be possible, in future motherboard reviews, to include a measure of the cold boot (POST) time? This is something that different bioses can be differentiated on, and UFEI offers the potential for very fast boots if manufacturers take advantage of it properly.
A comparison of the time between the power button being pressed and the installed bootloader starting would be very interesting to me. I was thinking it might be easiest to measure this by having no OS on the boot media and measuring the time to the "please insert boot media" message, but I'm sure you can think of other ways of doing it.
I'm also informed that on some boards the boot time varies dramatically dependent on whether any Overclocking is enabled, as compared to the stock settings - that would also be worth knowing.
A comparison of the time between the power button being pressed and the installed bootloader starting would be very interesting to me. I was thinking it might be easiest to measure this by having no OS on the boot media and measuring the time to the "please insert boot media" message, but I'm sure you can think of other ways of doing it.
I'm also informed that on some boards the boot time varies dramatically dependent on whether any Overclocking is enabled, as compared to the stock settings - that would also be worth knowing.
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KT_WASP
February 27, 2012 8:24:26 AM
Anonymous
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Motherboard
February 27, 2012 11:37:21 AM
wysiwygbill
February 27, 2012 12:40:52 PM
Great informative article.
But I'm wondering why AMD continues the ATI brand on the ASrock motherboard? Seems odd. They had everyone replace the CCC as soon as they rebranded and here we are looking at the ATI logo on the ASrock board.
Also, even though there is so little difference when comparing boards using the same architecture, why no BF3 in the gaming section of the review? I thought this was one of the games mentioned in the 2012 goals for Tom's when reviewing gaming performance?
But I'm wondering why AMD continues the ATI brand on the ASrock motherboard? Seems odd. They had everyone replace the CCC as soon as they rebranded and here we are looking at the ATI logo on the ASrock board.
Also, even though there is so little difference when comparing boards using the same architecture, why no BF3 in the gaming section of the review? I thought this was one of the games mentioned in the 2012 goals for Tom's when reviewing gaming performance?
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josejones
February 27, 2012 1:00:42 PM
csm101
February 27, 2012 3:03:07 PM
i realy dont see a reason why i should go for a X79 from my X58 board. even with the next gen vga for AMD is out that say PCI 3.0 compatible, (assume same for the nvidia as well) i can put those cards on my board. so thats leave the quad channel and the more efficien i7 gen 2 cpu's. still will i see a huge FPS gain in games. i dont think so. so i think i can safely leave out this whole year without upgrading my mobo. in fact since i have a i7 950 im actually wating it to go down in the CPU hirearchy one more level.
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americanbrianyour feature table says the asrock extreme 4 comes with an 8 phase voltage regulator, but the text of article says 10 phase...which is it ?
Eight, thanksubercakeGreat informative article. But I'm wondering why AMD continues the ATI brand on the ASrock motherboard? Seems odd. They had everyone replace the CCC as soon as they rebranded and here we are looking at the ATI logo on the ASrock board.Also, even though there is so little difference when comparing boards using the same architecture, why no BF3 in the gaming section of the review? I thought this was one of the games mentioned in the 2012 goals for Tom's when reviewing gaming performance?
New benchmarks are considered when a new chipset is launched. Keeping the old benchmark means you can compare current results with former results of previous roundups.Score
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bigdragon
February 27, 2012 5:49:45 PM
I like this review. It's good to see that most of the motherboards perform about the same with nobody sticking out or lagging behind for the most part. There's such a wide variety of prices for the LGA 2011 platform that I certainly didn't want to wind up with an overpriced POS.
I settled on the ASRock Extreme4-m. I did have to wait for a new BIOS chip to arrive in order to make use of it though. They overnighted one to me last week and I got my system up and running over the weekend. So far so good. I've been quite happy with it now that it's working. I can't say that I've tried the overclocking features.
With the ASRock Extreme4-m the memory slots and CPU 8-pin power connectors are very close to the radiator. I went with the Intel liquid cooler for my build. It's a 120mm fan and radiator. I placed these in a Silverstone FT03 as exhaust from the top of the case. It's important to pick out RAM that doesn't have any crazy fins or spikes on it. I went with some Kingston HyperX DDR3 1600 4x4GB that were on the official support list. There is a 4 to 5 mm gap between the RAM and radiator. it is plenty of room for the 8-pin wires to clear without touching the RAM or radiator. It's tight, but it works. I originally was going to buy GSkill RAM that was $20 cheaper, but there's no way the big red fins on those sticks would have fit.
I settled on the ASRock Extreme4-m. I did have to wait for a new BIOS chip to arrive in order to make use of it though. They overnighted one to me last week and I got my system up and running over the weekend. So far so good. I've been quite happy with it now that it's working. I can't say that I've tried the overclocking features.
wysiwygbillI'd like to see one of these x79 motherboards mounted in a case with a rear mounted 120MM radiator. I'm concerned that the memory slots might be blocked by a thick radiator + 120MM fan inside the case.
With the ASRock Extreme4-m the memory slots and CPU 8-pin power connectors are very close to the radiator. I went with the Intel liquid cooler for my build. It's a 120mm fan and radiator. I placed these in a Silverstone FT03 as exhaust from the top of the case. It's important to pick out RAM that doesn't have any crazy fins or spikes on it. I went with some Kingston HyperX DDR3 1600 4x4GB that were on the official support list. There is a 4 to 5 mm gap between the RAM and radiator. it is plenty of room for the 8-pin wires to clear without touching the RAM or radiator. It's tight, but it works. I originally was going to buy GSkill RAM that was $20 cheaper, but there's no way the big red fins on those sticks would have fit.
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tiger6k
February 27, 2012 5:56:25 PM
I really wish Tom's Hardware would do more reviews of mid-range components. Especially with Ivy Bridge being compatible with Socket 1155, why wouldn't they do a review on some good z68 boards out now that will do well with Ivy Bridge, if you're looking to get a cheap rig now (G630/G860) and then upgrade later. All this 2011 stuff though are there really that many people that spend $600+ on a CPU?
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bigdragon
February 27, 2012 5:59:34 PM
ubercakeAlso, even though there is so little difference when comparing boards using the same architecture, why no BF3 in the gaming section of the review? I thought this was one of the games mentioned in the 2012 goals for Tom's when reviewing gaming performance?
I don't blame them for skipping BF3. Since the most recent video drivers I've been having all sorts of issues with BF3. It's the only game on my machine to display a "Something went wrong" error and crash the entire system. I'd imagine it's hard to benchmark such an unstable game. My Extreme4-m, i7 3820, and Radeon 7950 system has no trouble with Just Cause 2, GTA IV, Crysis, and others, but BF3 has this remarkable capability to come up with the most ridiculous of error messages and strange behavior. That game still has issues.
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Tiger6kI really wish Tom's Hardware would do more reviews of mid-range components. Especially with Ivy Bridge being compatible with Socket 1155, why wouldn't they do a review on some good z68 boards out now that will do well with Ivy Bridge, if you're looking to get a cheap rig now (G630/G860) and then upgrade later. All this 2011 stuff though are there really that many people that spend $600+ on a CPU?
Z68 has been covered fairly well, and Z77 will be next. Manufacturers will provide the information on Ivy Bridge compatibility for their Z68 motherboards. Score
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I've been pleased with my Z68 ASRock board. Happy to see them keeping things up.
A few things about mboards in general still bug me.
Why continue to sport the coax digital audio? Am I the only person that doesn't use one? If they want to shave manufacturing costs, that's the first thing I'd ditch ( leave the fiber, of course. )
I think the IEEE 1394 can be phased out too. With eSATA and USB 3.0 for external drives and devices, how prevalent IS FireWire at this point, specifically to the enthusiast market? I'd easily prefer an additional eSATA port, especially a powered one.
And again, maybe I'm the oddball, but does anyone really need more than six USB ports ( or even four in many cases, ) on the back of their box? A keyboard, a mouse, a printer, and a scanner ( though those two are quickly becoming combined, ) still leaves two ports open. And with the number of monitors that have USB hubs on them, you can move your keyboard and mouse there. Between front USB jacks, and those on my monitor I've usually got four ports available for flash drives, headsets, my Zune, or anything else that needs a temporary connection. If I'm missing something critical, I'm welcome to learn what, but these boards that offer 8+ ports on the back don't make a lot of sense to me. Again, you could cut them out to save money or put something else more usable in its place.
And please, please, PLEASE include more than two PWM fan jacks on the board! Yes, my ASRock has a lot of fan control in the UEFI for the 3-pin connectors, but they're still left at a static speed. Two CPU fans and two case fans should be the minimum consideration for an enthusiast board, even the budget enthusiast. I applaud Asus and MSI for doing giving better PWM fan support.
A few things about mboards in general still bug me.
Why continue to sport the coax digital audio? Am I the only person that doesn't use one? If they want to shave manufacturing costs, that's the first thing I'd ditch ( leave the fiber, of course. )
I think the IEEE 1394 can be phased out too. With eSATA and USB 3.0 for external drives and devices, how prevalent IS FireWire at this point, specifically to the enthusiast market? I'd easily prefer an additional eSATA port, especially a powered one.
And again, maybe I'm the oddball, but does anyone really need more than six USB ports ( or even four in many cases, ) on the back of their box? A keyboard, a mouse, a printer, and a scanner ( though those two are quickly becoming combined, ) still leaves two ports open. And with the number of monitors that have USB hubs on them, you can move your keyboard and mouse there. Between front USB jacks, and those on my monitor I've usually got four ports available for flash drives, headsets, my Zune, or anything else that needs a temporary connection. If I'm missing something critical, I'm welcome to learn what, but these boards that offer 8+ ports on the back don't make a lot of sense to me. Again, you could cut them out to save money or put something else more usable in its place.
And please, please, PLEASE include more than two PWM fan jacks on the board! Yes, my ASRock has a lot of fan control in the UEFI for the 3-pin connectors, but they're still left at a static speed. Two CPU fans and two case fans should be the minimum consideration for an enthusiast board, even the budget enthusiast. I applaud Asus and MSI for doing giving better PWM fan support.
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Great review Thomas!
I guess we all have our likes, dislikes and 'hot button's' - I've got a thing for non 8xDIMM x79's. However, if you're going to spend $600~$1,000 on just the CPU, in this article $1,000 i7-3960X, then why not spend a little more on a MOBO that completely suites your needs; no compromises. Examples: ASUS R4E, R4F, or P9X79 WS.
On LGA 2011, +$100~+$180 is nothing in a $2,500~$3,500+ (often much higher) build cost. Budgets go out the window with extreme builds. Ferrari engine with a Camry chassis.
In contrast, this article IMO is best suited for the 4-core i7-3820. If that were the case then yep all this makes a lot of sense, and offers excellent value choices. The i7-3820 with a strap of 133Mhz can easily keep up with it's 6-core big brothers; 43x * 133MHz goes far above it's vCore limits.
Then there's the 'acceptable' vCore debate 1.35v, 1.38v...1.4v...1.5Xv; I have only seen confirmed degrading using 1.5Xv vCore's.
I guess we all have our likes, dislikes and 'hot button's' - I've got a thing for non 8xDIMM x79's. However, if you're going to spend $600~$1,000 on just the CPU, in this article $1,000 i7-3960X, then why not spend a little more on a MOBO that completely suites your needs; no compromises. Examples: ASUS R4E, R4F, or P9X79 WS.
On LGA 2011, +$100~+$180 is nothing in a $2,500~$3,500+ (often much higher) build cost. Budgets go out the window with extreme builds. Ferrari engine with a Camry chassis.
In contrast, this article IMO is best suited for the 4-core i7-3820. If that were the case then yep all this makes a lot of sense, and offers excellent value choices. The i7-3820 with a strap of 133Mhz can easily keep up with it's 6-core big brothers; 43x * 133MHz goes far above it's vCore limits.
Then there's the 'acceptable' vCore debate 1.35v, 1.38v...1.4v...1.5Xv; I have only seen confirmed degrading using 1.5Xv vCore's.
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memadmax said:
I wish tom's would do a "best motherboards for the money" or something close to that.Harder to do. GPUs, HDDs, SSDs, even CPUs have very specific tasks thrown at them so it's pretty easy to compare products in the same price range.
With mboards you've got a lot more variables with the feature sets ( form factor, CPU interface, connectivity options, internal jack headers, RAM slots, PCI slot count, PCIe 2.0 vs 3.0, etc. ) The $250 point will get you a stripped down X79 board or a very high-end Z68 / AM3+ board. Each serves a different purpose so rating one as "best" is misleading. You'd need roundups based on at least CPU type and possibly form factor ( ATX, micro, extended, ) and market groups ( extreme, budget enthusiast, office / productivity, HTPC, etc. ) That leaves a lot of separate "Best Of" categories.
Don't get me wrong, I'd love to see something like this as well, but a basic list of award winners might be the best to hope for right now.
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ASUS and ASRock are indeed separated but in a similar manor to GM's (Cadillac and Buick). If you look at their corporate holdings you'll find both the founders and stock overlap. So 'separate' but 'owned'; search 'spin-off' -> http://www.pegatroncorp.com/download/GDR_Listing_Partic... they still compete fill the left pocket or the right pocket, Pegatron Corporation (ASRock) wasn't a give-away from ASUS nor it's stock holdings.
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__-_-_-__
February 27, 2012 11:59:21 PM
rishiaditya
February 28, 2012 5:00:13 AM
tarek0
March 1, 2012 9:28:26 AM
Asrock passed a long way since her establishment in 2002, from being ASUS sister Company onto a Company striving to build its own brand and yes they did it, ASROCK has become 3rd Large Motherboard Brand in Taiwan following the 2 Other Big Guy's ASUS & gigabyte. ASROCK does look fast & incredibly stable just like ASUS & they do share lots DNA, but i really wish them to push the Envelop further more and just add some more Powah into their Mobos.
Thumbs Up ASROCK...
Thumbs Up ASROCK...
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Why_Me said:
Asrock is #3 atm in the motherboard market behind Asus and Gigabyte in regards to sales, and is coming closer and closer to catching Gigabyte for the #2 spot. Hats off to Asrock.
Several times a week ASRock contacts Tom's Hardware guide to ask how it can improve its boards. The typical response is "do it better, and for less money, than your competitors". Amazingly, that advice still stands!
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hellfire24
March 2, 2012 11:59:10 AM
ceh4702
March 5, 2012 2:37:33 AM
ceh4702I have never purchased a motherboard costing over $140.00. Current motherboard Intel DZ68DB cost around $117.
But that's completely irrelevant since you can't actually put an LGA 2011 processor on that board. If you're waiting for a $140.00 LGA 2011 motherboard, you could be waiting a few years. Score
1
win7guru
March 5, 2012 3:53:56 PM
hjklpoiuI was thinking it might be easiest to measure this by having no OS on the boot media and measuring the time to the "please insert boot media"
That would depend on how many times the firmware searched for a boot device before giving up. I have a USB boot drive with DOS for Windows 98 that boots in less time than most boards take to report the drive error. Score
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lbucci
May 13, 2012 11:16:15 AM
Only problem with the X79 Extreme4 is the error 0xAF and no startup. This occurs with all ASRock X79 Extreme4 with an i7 3820 CPU. You need to get a new BIOS chip, the L6.2 BIOS Chip or higher from ASRock to fix the issue and you need to change it on the MoB your self. They are still shipping with BIOS 1.1 which does not support the i7-3820...
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AtotehZ
September 28, 2012 1:44:54 PM
AtotehZ
September 28, 2012 1:46:17 PM
eletrickone
March 16, 2013 11:41:45 AM
eletrickone said:
Checkout the reviews on the P9X79LE at new egg before you pay for the product. Sad!There are some sad tales of bent pins and some about people that don't know enough to use the BIOS Flashback option BEFORE putting their rig together to reduce compatibility issues. Some people just don't know what they're doing. You can't help bent pins, but when everything works but sound, I'm inclined to think the sound setting on the board isn't set right for their case. This sounds odd, but you can really screw things up if your case is setup for digital audio and you choose legacy output in the BIOS or vice versa. Most of the reviews are good. Based on the specs, it looks like a decent buy. Shame on Newegg for [re]selling boards with bent pins. This is why I always look at Newegg, but seldom order from them. Their return policies seem kind of crappy and strange comments lead me to believe they resell returned items as new. But one dude has a comment on there about pushing the CPU down and complains about bent pins. You don't push a CPU down in the 2011 socket on an X79 build unless you want bent pins. I'm sure newegg will be selling his returned board to someone else in the near future.
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