Wednesday, March 8th 2023

ASUS TUF Gaming B760M-BTF WiFi D4 has its Connectors on the Reverse Side of the Motherboard

Back in October of last year, pictures from an ASUS event in China appeared online, showing off a pair of mATX motherboards that had most of its peripheral and power connectors on the reverse side of the motherboard. Now it appears that ASUS has decided to launch such a product, in the shape of the unforgettably named TUF Gaming B760M-BTF WiFi D4. The BTF part in the model name stands Back To (the) Future, although ASUS is most likely not allowed to use that term due to copyright restrictions, so it had to make do with BTF. Regardless of naming, the interesting part here is that all of the power connectors, the four SATA ports, the USB-C and USB 3.0 headers, as well as multiple other headers and one of three M.2 slots, are on the reverse side of the motherboard. This is all done to allow for cleaner cable management.

Other noteworthy features on the board include a single PCIe 5.0 x16 slot, one PCIe 4.0 x4 and one x1 slot, three USB-C ports, of which one is capable of 20 Gbps speeds and 2.5 Gbps Ethernet. As this is a mid-range board, we presume ASUS wants to test the waters so to speak, to make sure there's a market for such a product. However, one major hurdle is the small fact that there aren't any suitable chassis in the market and the product page even mentions that "This motherboard is compatible with specific case models", without going into any details. Presumably, ASUS will offer a suitable chassis, or have some partner(s) lined up that will provide a suitable chassis. Gigabyte announced something similar in May last year, but decided to team up with system integrators, something ASUS might be planning on as well.
Sources: ASUS, via @momomo_us (on Twitter)
Add your own comment

34 Comments on ASUS TUF Gaming B760M-BTF WiFi D4 has its Connectors on the Reverse Side of the Motherboard

#26
ir_cow
Soooo Asus made a MB that won't fit any current cse eh? Might as well take out all the headers.
Posted on Reply
#27
donzafir
ymdhisHow exactly are you supposed to connect anything there with the board screwed into the case? Am I missing something?
The case will have holes on the motherboard tray, like they have now for aftermarket cooler installation.
Posted on Reply
#28
-L3-
All right, I read the discussion and it seems that overseas friends really don't know what is going on.
As someone involved (not asus but this MB structure ),share some:

(The following is translated by translation software. Although I often watch TECHPOWER web looking for pc news, my English level is not good.)

We've sent images to LinusTechTips before, and shown briefly in a video

Chassis does not support?? Don't worry.
Cases supporting these motherboards are already on sale, and motherboards of this structure have been on sale for several months.(In China)
Tthey're cheap, they look good, and the internal design is also good.(compare with cheaper cases that in Chinese market )

Can you see these cases outside of China?
not know. Economics, politics, logistics, network opinion, market feedback.........toooooooooo many factor.

U don't like it.
It's normal , everyone's preferences are different.
But some... Internet trolls( not sure is this a good translate ) always have a lot of reasons to say things they don't like worse than shXt. With misinterpretation and malice. We meet them all the time on the Internet.

Making the inside of the DIY PC look cleaner and wireline free , makes it easier to assemble. This is something we want to push forward.
I'm excited to try and push this thing forward . If you search DIY APE, more information. B660-R, YTX... we're trying, keep doing and we're very grateful to companies like Asus for help.
Posted on Reply
#29
ThrashZone
Hi,
Yeah just another ghetto mod :cool:
Posted on Reply
#30
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
Well that's f*cking weird


Throw this in with the shift PSU, and it'll be time to drill some holes everywhere to make things work
Do i like the concept? kinda. Do i think it'll cause a lot of issues? yes.


It's E-waste. Forces you to buy their parts combined together, and without standard support you either use their stuff or bin it, when something fails.
Posted on Reply
#32
donzafir
I just found out that Maingear and Gigabyte did this kind of thing already last year with their Gigabyte Project Stealth DIY Kit that includes a special motherboard, GPU (with PCIE power sockets on the bottom of the card) and case with coverings and holes for a very clean build. It has zero airflow flow.
Posted on Reply
#33
nomdeplume
@TheLostSwede

Did a bit of research. For most practical purposes it appears this is stemming from long held requests to place 12V ATX connector on rear of board. To alleviate 180 degree bend occurring in close proximity to an equally sharp 90 degree one in back of case. Which they abdicated upon doing until it would look like a kneejerk reaction following the arrival of a certain octopus like cable resulting in class action suits.

Please contact your product issuing PR offices to assure full and immediate upon pre-release review samples are incoming of all incumbent parts and accessories!
Please take pains to mount a class leading Asus RTX 4xxx series card in build for duration of review!
Posted on Reply
#34
TheLostSwede
News Editor
donzafirI just found out that Maingear and Gigabyte did this kind of thing already last year with their Gigabyte Project Stealth DIY Kit that includes a special motherboard, GPU (with PCIE power sockets on the bottom of the card) and case with coverings and holes for a very clean build. It has zero airflow flow.
Did you not read the last sentence in the news post?
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Nov 21st, 2024 14:58 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts