Monday, April 20th 2020
More ASUS Z490 Motherboard Specs Sheets Surface: 6-layer Minimum, Optimem III Dual-Rank DDR4 Optimization
Earlier today we brought you pictures and specs sheets of ASUS' top-tier ROG Maximus XII family of socket LGA1200 motherboards based on the Intel Z490 chipset. The rest of that slide-deck was leaked to the web by VideoCardz, revealing some fascinating specs common across the series. Apparently, a 6 PCB layers is the bare minimum for ASUS' lineup, which probably contributes to the elevated prices across the board. Some of the cheaper 300-series chipset motherboards make do with just 4 PCB layers.
The CPU VRM solutions are a definitely step up from the previous generations, designed to cope with rising electrical requirements of the 14 nm 10th gen Core processors. For the ATX and M-ATX models, 12+2 phase solutions appear to be the bare minimum for the ROG Strix Z490 series, and 9-phase for the cheapest Prime Z490 series. The ROG Strix Z490-E Gaming, which leads the ROG Strix Z490 series, tops the chart with a 16-phase solution that's probably similar to the one on the Maximus XII Hero. There's also a big innovation with memory optimization, series-wide. With its Z490 motherboard series, ASUS is transitioning from T-topology to daisy-chain, across the board. This is combined with the company's Optimem III automated memory optimization feature on select models, which enables you to populate all four slots on your motherboard with dual-rank DIMMs, and yet achieve frequencies as high as DDR4-3600, with timings as tight as CL16.
Source:
VideoCardz
The CPU VRM solutions are a definitely step up from the previous generations, designed to cope with rising electrical requirements of the 14 nm 10th gen Core processors. For the ATX and M-ATX models, 12+2 phase solutions appear to be the bare minimum for the ROG Strix Z490 series, and 9-phase for the cheapest Prime Z490 series. The ROG Strix Z490-E Gaming, which leads the ROG Strix Z490 series, tops the chart with a 16-phase solution that's probably similar to the one on the Maximus XII Hero. There's also a big innovation with memory optimization, series-wide. With its Z490 motherboard series, ASUS is transitioning from T-topology to daisy-chain, across the board. This is combined with the company's Optimem III automated memory optimization feature on select models, which enables you to populate all four slots on your motherboard with dual-rank DIMMs, and yet achieve frequencies as high as DDR4-3600, with timings as tight as CL16.
29 Comments on More ASUS Z490 Motherboard Specs Sheets Surface: 6-layer Minimum, Optimem III Dual-Rank DDR4 Optimization
I happen to like devices that aren't NVMe disks, like network adapters, sound cards, graphics cards, more than 2 SATA ports.
Just because it's what *you* like/want/need doesn't mean it's what anyone else wants. Stop castrating boards and disabling features in favor of more NVMe ports. Don't be cheap, go buy some bigger NVMe disks and copy your crap over like a big boy.
I know if I gotta buy a sata card for a new mobo, I'm just buying a different mobo :rolleyes:
So weak intel, its a shame.
Also, SLI is clearly dead in the water.
Good to see so many boards with 2.5Gbps Ethernet as standard though, but we still need affordable switches. Sorry, Intel doesn't have that many PCIe lanes available...
It's a non issue on X570 boards... If you want HDMI 2.0 you have to buy an
Atom CPU, sorry, Celeron or Pentium...www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard/Z390-AORUS-MASTER-G2-Edition-rev-10#kf
You need to join the 10Gbps Ethernet club ;)
I wouldnt be able to afford the gear to make that possible. :laugh:
Well, I'm sure I can introduce you to some people that can help design a custom board for you, if you got a few hundred thousand dollars to spare...
That would truly be a board for only you...
SLI support will only be on the most expensive models ! Trend has already been noticed with the X570 AMD series. Less for more money is currently popular or not !