bear jesus
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- Joined
- Aug 12, 2010
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System Name | Gaming temp// HTPC |
---|---|
Processor | AMD A6 5400k // A4 5300 |
Motherboard | ASRock FM2A75 PRO4// ASRock FM2A55M-DGS |
Cooling | Xigmatek HDT-D1284 // stock phenom II HSF |
Memory | 4GB 1600mhz corsair vengeance // 4GB 1600mhz corsair vengeance low profile |
Storage | 64gb sandisk pulse SSD and 500gb HDD // 500gb HDD |
Display(s) | acer 22" 1680x1050 |
Power Supply | Seasonic G-450 // Corsair CXM 430W |
I do not have exact info on future products at this time. What I can say is that every Intel X79 Express board I have seen supports PCIe 3.0, which should be the only requirement currently for Ivy-bridge support.
As mentioned, I am also using this board for memory reviews right now, so I'll be sure to be staying on top of any updates that may affect functionality, including looking at PCIe 3.0 devices when they become available.
If you are not overclocking, a standard case install should provide more than adequate cooling. The issues with cooling stem from overclocking, and the fact these CPUs can consume an easy 250 W, even @ just 4.4 GHz. I would really suggest to those looking for long term overclocks over 4.0 GHz, that they use watercooling with a block on the board's VRMs as well. But at stock, the 130 W consumed doesn't have that large of an impact.
And that applies to any board, not just the ASUS P9X79 Deluxe. If anything, the large coolers used on the ASUS P9X79 Deluxe make cooling less of an issue than with some other products.
I would be more than willing to water cool the VRMs but a major reason why i want ivy bride e instead of getting sandy bridge e is the expected power savings, but even though i don't expect to need to overclock but i want it to be a viable option for me from the start as i'm sure i will do some overclocking and benchmarking while it's still new although i assume there may be a limitation of which boards will have VRM water blocks released so i guess that will be something to pay attention to but i don't intend to use a normal case, i want to use a dimastech open air case as i like to see the hardware more than i want to create a good cooling wind tunnel like case but that is partly why i am so concerned with the fine details of cooling any/every part possible.
Hopefully the time until the ivy bridge E CPUs are released will be more than enough to find the perfect board for my usage and i hope in that time frame you will review a bunch more of them.