Monday, September 16th 2024
MSI Z890 and X870 Motherboards Spotted at an Australian Retailer Starting at $385
Intel is set to launch its Arrow Lake processors on October 24th, likely alongside the official release of the Z890 motherboards. Meanwhile, AMD is expected to launch its new X870 and X870E motherboards on September 30th. Ahead of these dates, we've already seen many of them showcased at Computex, however, today an Australian retailer listed several MSI motherboards, including one Z890 model (MSI Z890 Carbon WiFi) and three X870/X870E models (MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi, MSI MAG X870 Tomahawk WiFi, and MSI PRO X870-P WiFi).
MSI Z890 Carbon WiFi
This is a mid-range motherboard, however without an official spec sheet, we're left trying to decipher details from the pictures. From what we can see, it offers a solid set of features, including USB 3.2, USB Type-C ports, BIOS Flash, Clear CMOS, and Smart Buttons. The board itself includes an 8-pin PCI-E connector and at least three M.2 slots. Currently, there is no information about its retail price.MSI revealed more details about their upcoming X870/X870E motherboards a few days ago, as we reported earlier. In addition to images, the latest information includes pricing listed by an Australian retailer, which is as follows:
Sources:
Wccftech, ITSPOT
MSI Z890 Carbon WiFi
This is a mid-range motherboard, however without an official spec sheet, we're left trying to decipher details from the pictures. From what we can see, it offers a solid set of features, including USB 3.2, USB Type-C ports, BIOS Flash, Clear CMOS, and Smart Buttons. The board itself includes an 8-pin PCI-E connector and at least three M.2 slots. Currently, there is no information about its retail price.MSI revealed more details about their upcoming X870/X870E motherboards a few days ago, as we reported earlier. In addition to images, the latest information includes pricing listed by an Australian retailer, which is as follows:
- MSI MPG X870E Carbon WiFi: AU$909.56 ($613 US)
- MSI MAG X870 Tomahawk WiFi: AU$625.02 ($420 US)
- MSI PRO X870-P WiFi: AU$571.84 ($385 US)
39 Comments on MSI Z890 and X870 Motherboards Spotted at an Australian Retailer Starting at $385
Not expecting good pricing on these.
this is what the X670E carbon cost in canada.
The X870E version will be cost $799 CAD easily.
But did they mandate it to be tied to the CPU lanes? I thought it was an implementation choice of he MB OEM. They did increase the PCIe lane count from 24 to 28 in AM4 to AM5 though.
Intel has the same 28 in LGA1700, though I remember seeing that for the next socket it will be 32 for the Z890 (20 CPU PCie 5, 4 CPU PCIe 4 and 8 DMI) chipset and 24 (20 CPU PCie 5 and 8 DMI) for B860. For whatever reason, they seem to remove the 4 additional PCIe 4.0 from the CPU if using the B860.
www.techpowerup.com/324153/intels-upcoming-800-series-chipsets-leak-in-detail
Though Intel does have USB/Thunderbolt integrated into the CPU, even in the LGA1700 ones, so IO wise it's more favorable as it seems(since 1 USB4/TB is equivalent to 2 PCIe 4 lanes).
Come and see, the fabulous X870!
Its a motherboard? Its a dock-station? Its rigid pcie-usb cable extension?
And bundled with every X870 the amazing: PCIE lane express operation game! Guess what PCIE_slot is disabled when you plug something.
You got your lanes mixed up though, one USB4 port is 40 Gbps, not 32 GB, that's Thunderbolt 3/4. So it's more than two PCIe 4.0 lanes. The ASM4242 allows for one 40 Gbps and one 20 Gbps port at full speed over four PCIe 4.0 lanes, with a bit of bandwidth to spare.
The actual reason why they were x16 I believe was because of Crossfire/SLI, so the GPUs could communicate with each other through the x16 links, but to the CPU it`s nothing. USB4/TB does tunnelling, I don`t think they do more than 32 Gbps for PCIe.
In addition, USB4/TB chips also receive DisplayPort separately so it can give you 40 Gbps(counting overheads).
I'd suggest you read this, instead of making assumptions.
www.techpowerup.com/review/usb4-guide-info-technology-details/
40 Gbps is counting the overheads.
USB4 is also just TB3 which has the same 20 gbps and 40 gbps modes.
If you connect two usb4 40 gbps devices to the ASM4242, it should negotiate both to 40 gbps, and the transmission/receive should be at those rates. The thing is that if you then try to do more the lanes support with USB 3 and PCIe tunneling then it will bottleneck at those. Keeping in mind that you also have separated DP lanes that do consume USB4 bandwidth if in use. Either way, I would still say that integrated USB4/TB controller in the CPU should count as two lanes per port.
No, USB4 does NOT have DP lanes, it's all done by tunnelling, unlike Thunderbolt.
Again, read the article I wrote just over two years ago, where I visited ASMedia and talked to them about the ASM4242, instead of pulling shit out of thin air.
So idk what you are going on about, I never said that DP gets into alternate mode and then has it's own dedicated lanes, I said that the connection is PCIe + DP.
So you do indeed have more than 64 Gbps.
Reread what I said.
Edit: Gigabyte has posted User manuals for their X870 boards and here is the block diagram of how everything is connected.