Thursday, January 19th 2023

ASRock Returns to its Roots with Wacky X670 Upgrade Card

For those that don't remember the early days of ASRock, the company started out making some rather unusual motherboards, often with some wild and wacky upgrade paths, such as both a slot and a socket for a CPU or both AGP and PCIe graphics card slots. Since then, ASRock has become a much more mainstream motherboard maker, but the company appears to have gone back to its roots with what the company calls the X670 Xpansion Kit. Right now, the expansion card appears to be working with the B650 LiveMixer motherboard and it's unknown if it's compatible with other models from ASRock. It seems to be limited to ASRock motherboards only, due to the fact that the add-in card requires not only a x4 PCIe slot with all lanes attached, on the motherboard, but also a custom cable that is most likely for "low-speed" I/O's such as I2C, SPI and so on.

As the name suggests, the X670 Xpansion Kit allows B650 motherboards to be turned into X670 motherboards, more or less. The card is home to a second chipset, which enables not only two additional M.2 slots for PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs, but it also features two SATA ports, a 10 Gbps USB-C port, three USB-A ports and—maybe most interestingly—a 10 Gbps Ethernet interface. It's unclear if this will be a retail product, but the card provided to Level1Techs doesn't appear to be an engineer unit, but a full retail ready product. It's definitely an interesting upgrade path for those that have invested in a B650 motherboard and there's no real reason why this shouldn't work as well as having the second chipset on the motherboard, especially as ASRock appears to have fitted a signal re-driver on the add-in card to make sure the PCIe signals are handled properly.
Sources: Level1Techs, via VideoCardz
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72 Comments on ASRock Returns to its Roots with Wacky X670 Upgrade Card

#1
ir_cow
Interesting, Interesting. Now lets hear the price. My guess is $199.
Posted on Reply
#2
natr0n
They let a mad scientist loose.

pcie/agp bracket addon for new cpu in coming.
Posted on Reply
#3
Gmr_Chick
Shit, this is cool! :eek: :love:
Posted on Reply
#4
Wirko
This is so pleasantly weird. Should have a PCIe slot on top so we can stack several of those cards if necessary.
Posted on Reply
#5
freeagent
I actually just watched this video while I was doing the dishes :D

Posted on Reply
#6
Wirko
freeagentI actually just watched this video while I was doing the dishes :D
Can people multitask? Sure! (It's just that the results are poor)
Posted on Reply
#7
natr0n
When channels do that blown eye gimmick I get irate. fkn childish.
Posted on Reply
#8
GreiverBlade
now, that's something i like from ASRock (and i am used to ...)

impressive idea and implementation (now, the price ... pweety pwease?)
Posted on Reply
#9
kapone32
ir_cowInteresting, Interesting. Now lets hear the price. My guess is $199.
Doesn't it come with the board for $229 US?
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#10
Theswweet
This is fascinating. I wonder how much it'll cost? If it's less than $100 I might just buy one to throw in my rig down the line...
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#11
LabRat 891
This is beyond cool.

Hopefully a way is found to use this add-in card under 'unsupported' conditions :pimp:
Posted on Reply
#12
trsttte
Personally I would have preferred more sata instead of one of the m.2 but this is great! It makes x670 almost irrelevant and gives a lot more expansion flexibility, I love it.
LabRat 891Hopefully a way is found to use this add-in card under 'unsupported' conditions :pimp:
It requires a "special" control header but in the video comments someone was sugesting it's just eSPI or LPC bus so it could be possible with bios hackery. It would be great to, that 'LiveMixer' asrock motherboard doesn't do this justice (too much color and marketing gimicks, not much function)
Posted on Reply
#13
Space Lynx
Astronaut
my guess is the cost of it will make pointless and dead on arrival, because you could just bought an x670 board to begin with after you add in the add-in cost... eh...
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#14
ir_cow
Space Lynxmy guess is the cost of it will make pointless and dead on arrival, because you could just bought an x670 board to begin with after you add in the add-in cost... eh...
exactly.
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#15
Crackong
It would be Frankenstein amazing If it works on a X670E and turns it into a 3-chipset monstrosity
Posted on Reply
#16
LabRat 891
CrackongIt would be Frankenstein amazing If it works on a X670E and turns it into a 3-chipset monstrosity
...and here I am dreaming about slotting this into the CPU-connected Gen4.0 M.2 slot (via adapter) on my X570. Generational Hybridization :D
(I have 'a thing' for anachronistic and explicitly 'unsupported' combos, regardless of 'bottlenecks' or hassles to get working.)
Posted on Reply
#17
InVasMani
WirkoCan people multitask? Sure! (It's just that the results are poor)
Watched a video lost a finger while doing dishes. Go gadget go! Oddball device by AsRock going back to it roots of we put all this technology in a blender and this is what we came up with.
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#18
LabRat 891
InVasManiWatched a video lost a finger while doing dishes.
I don't suggest attempting flat-pack (IKEA-style) furniture...
Directions unclear. Got d*** stuck in ceiling fan.
Posted on Reply
#19
InVasMani
LabRat 891I don't suggest attempting flat-pack (IKEA-style) furniture...
IKEA self assembly...
Posted on Reply
#20
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
Traditional ASRock is best ASRock.
Posted on Reply
#21
ymdhis
This looks like a genuinely good upgrade card for any motherboard, not just B650 ones. Of course, I question if it has the bandwidth for all that i/o, but if you'd max out all of that you most likely bought the wrong board to start with.
Posted on Reply
#22
Unregistered
Always like seeing neat unusual stuff like this - I remember my first ASRock board and it was one of those described in the article where it had both AGP & PCI-E, giving me a nice easy upgrade path. I have an ASRock board in my main rig that I just upgraded to, and an ASRock board in my Plex server - they make pretty good stuff. Knock on wood, I've never had a single issue with any of them.
Posted on Edit | Reply
#23
LabRat 891
WirkoThis is so pleasantly weird. Should have a PCIe slot on top so we can stack several of those cards if necessary.
Reminds me of:


^not mine. Pulled off Vogons forums.
Yes, that's a PCIe HD 4850, in a PCIE-PCI bridging adapter, in an AGP-> 32-bit PCI 66Mhz adapter, in some ancient AGP mobo, w/ a K6-III...
(I consider many of these bridge chips basically "add-on Southbridges". The article's subject card, also is essentially a 'add-on Southbridge'.)
Posted on Reply
#24
DemonicRyzen666
LabRat 891Reminds me of:


^not mine. Pulled off Vogons forums.
Yes, that's a PCIe HD 4850, in a PCIE-PCI bridging adapter, in an AGP-> 32-bit PCI 66Mhz adapter, in some ancient AGP mobo, w/ a K6-III...
(I consider many of these bridge chips basically "add-on Southbridges". The article's subject card, also is essentially a 'add-on Southbridge'.)
can you go to down to a TSA slot ? lol even older than pci slots.
Posted on Reply
#25
thewan
This is why everything should be gen 5 now. Limit gpu to x8 or even x4, m2 to x2, and have expansions galore with minimal performance loss. Dear ppl of TPU. Stop saying that higher pcie gens are pointless. You all lack imagination and out of the box thinking. If we don't need all those bandwidth, then reduce the lanes to add more stuff! We all could use more m.2 storage, as in we could use MOAR TBs. MOAR fast USBs. MOAR 2.5G or even 10G ethernets. MOAR imagination pls ppl. Use your brains MOAR.
Posted on Reply
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