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XFX 750i motherboard, as you can see...
I just got this today so I haven't had time to play around with it except to make sure it works, but I already know it's gonna be an odd duck...
So judging by 1.) the sticker on the front that says "
Designed by nVidia Authorized Board Partner," 2.) the fact that this breaks significantly in design from the EVGA 750i [itself being strictly reference, as far as I know], and 3.) what I remember reading, this is a board designed by XFX's team. That itself makes it interesting to me, but also it's weird that they went through the trouble of designing a dual heatpipe cooler with black fins, logos all over the place, nickel plating for said heatpipes, but
then decided not to cool the fourth power stage? I seriously don't understand this decision, it isn't like newer boards where that would be IGP phase(s) and therefore more understandable. But I'm very confused by this design choice. I think they must have had their GPU team make this in their free time
Lot of things make sense and/or are fine, but some stuff is just confusing.
I gave the southbridge and VRM some Arctic APT2560 0.5mm pads, the northbridge and NF200 chip both got MX-2, and the shunned power stage got 2 small aluminum heatsinks. Also, the thermal... substances on this cooler were absolutely rock solid. There is no getting these off via any mortal means. I need like industrial grade solvent, or maybe just some gumption, but I have neither and I like to live on the edge. So I did the best that I could, which wasn't much, and if the board complains then oh well, it still works and I can always try again...
XFX... why is the POST code on the rear I/O? I mean, I'd rather have this than no post code at all. And if it were in the traditional position, you may not even be able to see the POST code at all if you have multiple GPUs, so I suppose that's a plus... But how could anyone reasonably read this if it's installed in a case? If it were on a test bench it'd actually be the best position imo, but clearly that wasn't their intention, since unlike the EVGA 750i this doesn't have onboard power / reset buttons.
While researching this board, I found
this laughable press release from XFX back in the day. Everyone at TPU hated it...
I think that marketing guy either wasn't involved in the box design (thank god), or they axed him before he got his hands on it. I'm more than fine with that, this box looks pretty sweet in my opinion.
XFX, very conveniently and taking after the style of Foxconn, decided that publicly hosting like 1GB of downloads for their older consumer mainboards is just way too damn expensive. So it's impossible to download any BIOS updates directly from their site, they took down those pages. Well, at some point, some person in 2014 wanted to update their XFX 750i BIOS on Tomshardware
but posted about how they couldn't find it. A XFX representative actually responded helpfully with what seems like an internal(?) link to all of their motherboard BIOSes. Seriously, what a great resource... I know their boards weren't popular or really all that great, but to have these organized and technically still on the internet is great.
The link to that is here, BIOSes in the Motherboard folder. Hopefully anyone else who would need one of those files can come back to this. Flashing can be done either through DOS or AWDFLASH, DOS of course being recommended. I didn't upload those BIOSes but considering the context, they appear legitimate. Mine was already fully updated luckily, so I didn't have to meddle with this hidden science.
I know I'm bashing on this board a lot, but I wanna make it clear I'm still happy with it no matter what because it's funky. If the hardware is funky, it gets a pass from me. I'm gonna do some overclocking on this after I do a few other projects and see if it's as unstable as I've read online