Tuesday, June 28th 2011
ASRock Readies Z68 Fatal1ty Motherboard with PCI-Express 3.0 Slots
ASRock gave its premium LGA1155 motherboard lineup a boost with the new Z68 Fatal1ty. Apart from being a Z68 chipset based motherboard modeled along the lines of its predecessor, the ASRock P67 Fatal1ty, the new motherboard features PCI-Express 3.0 graphics slots, that work on Sandy Bridge and future Ivy Bridge processors. The new third generation PCI-E interconnect can drive 1 GB/s of data per link, per direction. You'll need PCI-E 3.0 compliant add-on cards to make use of that bandwidth, current graphics cards will run at Gen. 2 speeds. One advantage here could be that AMD Radeon HD 5000 and HD 6000 series single-GPU graphics cards will run on Gen 2.1 mode, which has slightly higher bandwidth at its disposal thanks to its lower-overhead data coding scheme.
The ASRock Z68 Fatal1ty is designed for both gamers and overclockers, using high-grade components. The LGA1155 socket is powered by a 18-phase VRM, wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots supporting dual-channel DDR3-2133 MHz (Ivy Bridge IMC's optimal memory speed). Featuring Intel Flexible Display Interface (FDI), the board allows you to use the integrated graphics. With the Lucid Virtu technology, you can switch between the integrated graphics, and discrete graphics cards. Expansion slots include two PCI-Express 3.0 x16 (electrical x8/x8 when both are populated), one PCI-Express 2.0 x16 (electrical x4, wired to Z68 PCH), and two each of PCI-E 2.0 x1 and legacy PCI.Storage connectivity includes six SATA 6 Gb/s ports, four internal 3 Gb/s ports, two eSATA 3 Gb/s, E-IDE and FDD. It supports the Intel Smart Response SSD-caching technology Other connectivity includes four USB 3.0 ports (two internal), 8-channel HD audio, two low-latency/high-polling USB 2.0 ports optimized for gaming mice, dual gigabit Ethernet, and display connectivity that includes D-Sub and HDMI.
Source:
TechConnect Magazine
The ASRock Z68 Fatal1ty is designed for both gamers and overclockers, using high-grade components. The LGA1155 socket is powered by a 18-phase VRM, wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots supporting dual-channel DDR3-2133 MHz (Ivy Bridge IMC's optimal memory speed). Featuring Intel Flexible Display Interface (FDI), the board allows you to use the integrated graphics. With the Lucid Virtu technology, you can switch between the integrated graphics, and discrete graphics cards. Expansion slots include two PCI-Express 3.0 x16 (electrical x8/x8 when both are populated), one PCI-Express 2.0 x16 (electrical x4, wired to Z68 PCH), and two each of PCI-E 2.0 x1 and legacy PCI.Storage connectivity includes six SATA 6 Gb/s ports, four internal 3 Gb/s ports, two eSATA 3 Gb/s, E-IDE and FDD. It supports the Intel Smart Response SSD-caching technology Other connectivity includes four USB 3.0 ports (two internal), 8-channel HD audio, two low-latency/high-polling USB 2.0 ports optimized for gaming mice, dual gigabit Ethernet, and display connectivity that includes D-Sub and HDMI.
50 Comments on ASRock Readies Z68 Fatal1ty Motherboard with PCI-Express 3.0 Slots
with current cards there is nothing to be gained from going 3.0
oh i forgot, this is the way to grab some attention and if they interested they gonna buy it no matter what
mouses have such high DPi these days. does having a lower latency usb really make any real world performance improvements?
Or small IDE HDDs for the pagefile and other stuff for backup. :p
Anyone who uses this board likely doesn't still have any IDE devices in use.
Here.... your gonna need one of these to put that beast out of its misery
THE TRUE REASON WHY THEY HAVE FLOPPY?
its because ASROCK is trying to cater to everyone, yes including ones that are behind the times... some people still use XP (in fact close to half the windows users), and to enable AHCI in XP, you need to insert a floppy ACHI driver disk during windows installation, called the F6 pre-install driver:
downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?agr=Y&ProdId=2101&DwnldID=19601&ProductFamily=Chipsets&ProductLine=Chipset+Software&ProductProduct=Intel%c2%ae+Rapid+Storage+Technology&lang=eng
Why have floppy drive style power ports on PSUs? Other devices use that adapter as well.
IDE I can understand but not floppy on a motherboard this new.