Wednesday, September 4th 2013
ASRock Unveils its First Socket FM2+ Motherboards Based on AMD A88X Chipset
ASRock unveiled its first socket FM2+ motherboards, ready for the upcoming A-Series "Kaveri" APUs, and backwards-compatible with A-Series "Richland" and "Trinity" ones. Among the most notable of ASRock's FM2+ products are the FM2A88X-Extreme6+ and the FM2A88M-Extreme4+. The former is a feature-rich ATX form-factor offering, while the latter isn't too far behind with its feature-set, albeit in the micro-ATX form-factor. The FM2A88X-Extreme6+ features a 10-phase VRM to power the APU socket, which is wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots, and two PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots (electrical x8/x8 when both are populated). A third PCI-Express x16 is electrical gen 2.0 x4, and wired to the A88X FCH. Two each of PCI-Express 2.0 x1, and legacy PCI make for the rest of the expansion.
Storage connectivity on the FM2A88X-Extreme6+ includes seven SATA 6 Gb/s ports, and one eSATA 6 Gb/s. Display connectivity includes dual-link DVI, DisplayPort 1.2, and possibly HDMI 2.0. 8-channel HD audio with optical SPDIF output, gigabit Ethernet, and six USB 3.0 ports. Moving on, the FM2A88M-Extreme4+ features a simpler 6-phase VRM for the APU socket, which is wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots, and a single PCI-Express 3.0 x16. The other long slot is electrical gen 2.0 x4. One each of PCI-Express 2.0 x1 and legacy PCI make for the rest of its expansion. Display connectivity includes dual-link DVI, D-Sub, and HDMI (2.0?). Four USB 3.0 ports, 8-channel HD audio, and gigabit Ethernet make for the rest of it.
Storage connectivity on the FM2A88X-Extreme6+ includes seven SATA 6 Gb/s ports, and one eSATA 6 Gb/s. Display connectivity includes dual-link DVI, DisplayPort 1.2, and possibly HDMI 2.0. 8-channel HD audio with optical SPDIF output, gigabit Ethernet, and six USB 3.0 ports. Moving on, the FM2A88M-Extreme4+ features a simpler 6-phase VRM for the APU socket, which is wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots, and a single PCI-Express 3.0 x16. The other long slot is electrical gen 2.0 x4. One each of PCI-Express 2.0 x1 and legacy PCI make for the rest of its expansion. Display connectivity includes dual-link DVI, D-Sub, and HDMI (2.0?). Four USB 3.0 ports, 8-channel HD audio, and gigabit Ethernet make for the rest of it.
21 Comments on ASRock Unveils its First Socket FM2+ Motherboards Based on AMD A88X Chipset
- Supports both FM2 and FM2+ processors
That's what I've found so far...Interesting read imo.
Might be interesting if AMD could fuse off the graphics section and sell a low cost CPU's, for this type of mobo as a gaming foundation. Might have merits on the product side for AMD and motherboard manufactures consolidating what they have to support. Given AMD would've had a tough-haul to be completive in high-end desktop CPU's it probably a logical move, to cover various platforms. For AMD there isn't/wasn't money in support of CPU’s, especially seeing a shrinking desktop market. Going forward they can remain competitive in multiple-core throughput with chips from A-Series "Kaveri" and beyond. The market is/has changed to tablets, laptops, HTPC, while high-end (gaming) CPU's aren't viable to support. Heck they don't absolutely need them for the sever market going forward either. If AMD can situate themselves with an effective and competitive low cost platform for gaming that might be fine.
This is quite clearly designed to replace the AM3+ series of motherboards to go along with the discontinuing of the FX series.
However, I don't see it to be farfetched for them to release in the future a high-end APU. Yes, more cores, sure, but mostly bigger caches, higher frequencies and a ton more GCN CUs.
I would have mentioned how AMD released a while back 140W TDP Phenoms... but seeing as how the FX-9Ks have a 220W, even more so...
Also, Kaveri will have a 95W TDP, the lower power models probably still 65/45W tho. And Carrizo, 65W (supposedly) for the high end. That's a decent amount of headroom to work with. I wouldn't mind seeing a 8-core Carizzo/Excavator w/ L3 (and 4?) cache, w/ quad-channel DDR4 and and a 16-24 VI/PI GCN CUs.
That would be an absolute computational monster... if HSA kicks off...