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ASUS Unveils the ROG Crosshair X670E Hero and ROG Crosshair X670E Extreme

What does this have to do with power draw? Only the front USB-C ports supports USB PD.
A PCIe 4.0 x4 interface supports 64 Gbps, so you get one USB4 port that can do 40 Gbps of data and the second can still do 20 Gbps, whereas the Intel PCIe 3.0 Thunderbolt chips can only do 32 Gbps in total, so they're not even reaching full USB4 speeds.


See above, but yes, you're not wrong.

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Some of these boards report 60W charging for 2 or more of the rear USB C ports. There is one board that has 2 6 or 8 pins for the USB C ports at the back. If you have your Smartphone and your partner's Smartphone charging and an external GPU running it will suck board power. That can't be for the PCIe lanes as TRx40 has way more lanes and less 6 or 8 pin MB connectors.
 
From what I have seen of the X670 boards you will need at least a 850 Watt PSU with at least 3 8 pin CPU cables. 1000W will more likely be more feasible though. I counted up to 6 PSU connections on these boards. I like the concept of the Extreme allowing to use that DRAM like module. From what I can see it looks like it is connected to the CPU (Likely 4.0) which means you don't have to share 8 lanes with the GPU using that adapter card. Not that that is going to make a difference right now, but the bandwidth of the hardware is getting faster.
Where are you getting that math from? Let's see:
CPU: 170W sustained, let's say 300W with an OC.
2x PCIe x16: 150W
4x USB-C: 60W (4x15W)
8x USB-A: 80W
5x m.2: 50W
Fans, RAM, various controllers and other stuff: let's say 50W.
That sums up to 690W without the >75W power of the GPU - but, crucially, assumes every single component and port is loaded to 100% power draw at once. With a very power hungry OC. That never, ever happens in a PC. Ever. And, of course, dual GPU is dead, so that 2x75W for PCIe x16 is completely unrealistic (very few non-GPU AICs draw 75W). Nor will you ever fully load five SSDs at once, or draw full power from every USB port at once. It just isn't happening.

Is total power creeping up from these faster interfaces, and is potential total power creeping up from more power outputs? Sure! Does that matter? Not much. A baseline build will still draw 250-300W under normal loads; an upper midrange build will still draw 400-500W under normal loads (with each of these peaking at 25-50% higher under unrealistic torture loads).

Also, crucially, most boards with more than one EPS connector don't actually need more than one to be connected. A single EPS cable is rated for 336W after all. The extras are for XOC or to look cool.
Some of these boards report 60W charging for 2 or more of the rear USB C ports. There is one board that has 2 6 or 8 pins for the USB C ports at the back. If you have your Smartphone and your partner's Smartphone charging and an external GPU running it will suck board power. That can't be for the PCIe lanes as TRx40 has way more lanes and less 6 or 8 pin MB connectors.
USB hosts generally support 5v3A or 15W. There are exceptions, but they are rare. Also, who on earth charges their phone from a rear USB port? :kookoo: Most fast-charging smartphones also don't support their peak rating with PD, but use some proprietary fast charging and step down significantly when on PD.


This board is pretty insane though. Outside of people using tons of AICs, I can't think of anything it doesn't have in spades. Looking forward to the >$1000 price tag!
 
Where are you getting that math from? Let's see:
CPU: 170W sustained, let's say 300W with an OC.
2x PCIe x16: 150W
4x USB-C: 60W (4x15W)
8x USB-A: 80W
5x m.2: 50W
Fans, RAM, various controllers and other stuff: let's say 50W.
That sums up to 690W without the >75W power of the GPU - but, crucially, assumes every single component and port is loaded to 100% power draw at once. With a very power hungry OC. That never, ever happens in a PC. Ever. And, of course, dual GPU is dead, so that 2x75W for PCIe x16 is completely unrealistic (very few non-GPU AICs draw 75W). Nor will you ever fully load five SSDs at once, or draw full power from every USB port at once. It just isn't happening.

Is total power creeping up from these faster interfaces, and is potential total power creeping up from more power outputs? Sure! Does that matter? Not much. A baseline build will still draw 250-300W under normal loads; an upper midrange build will still draw 400-500W under normal loads (with each of these peaking at 25-50% higher under unrealistic torture loads).

Also, crucially, most boards with more than one EPS connector don't actually need more than one to be connected. A single EPS cable is rated for 336W after all. The extras are for XOC or to look cool.

USB hosts generally support 5v3A or 15W. There are exceptions, but they are rare. Also, who on earth charges their phone from a rear USB port? :kookoo: Most fast-charging smartphones also don't support their peak rating with PD, but use some proprietary fast charging and step down significantly when on PD.


This board is pretty insane though. Outside of people using tons of AICs, I can't think of anything it doesn't have in spades. Looking forward to the >$1000 price tag!
I mean you say never ever but I did run quadfire Polaris plus a 2X460 Gtx, that's six GPU, in a Fx8350 Asus crosshair system.
There's idiots out there that do, just because.
F£$€ I would again.

In a way they have limited the chaos I could cause with only two pciex5 x16.
 
Thank F they labelled the USB ports


Oh good, four USB C
Two 40Gb, then a 10Gb, then a 20Gb?

Oh but on the extreme lets spice that up and go 10-40-40-20


Front panel USB-C port doing 60W of PD/QC, that's great to see. Can actually charge a phone from the PC at last.
 
What does added E stand for? Extreme pricing?
Animation Goodbye GIF by MOOT
No, most X670E boards will be priced similar to their equivalent X570 models. See my Computex coverage of Gigabyte for some ballpark figures.
 
No, most X670E boards will be priced similar to their equivalent X570 models. See my Computex coverage of Gigabyte for some ballpark figures.
If the non E chipsets will be cheaper, so more like B550 prices, or an in-between?

Ballpark figures get hard when you're not used to that countries pricing and currencies... american stuff pre-tax for example confuses things
 
If the non E chipsets will be cheaper, so more like B550 prices, or an in-between?

Ballpark figures get hard when you're not used to that countries pricing and currencies... american stuff pre-tax for example confuses things
No idea about X670, there doesn't seem be a whole bunch of them. B650 boards, which are launching next year, will be sub $200 for sure, even with current inflation, maybe even a few around $150 or less. MSRP pricing without tax obviously.
 
No idea about X670, there doesn't seem be a whole bunch of them. B650 boards, which are launching next year, will be sub $200 for sure, even with current inflation, maybe even a few around $150 or less. MSRP pricing without tax obviously.
Any whispers of any ITX boards so far?
 
Any whispers of any ITX boards so far?
B650/B650E only so far, but there was a weird poll during the AMD event where they asked about X670/X670E mATX/mini-ITX boards, which I don't see the point of.
 
B650/B650E only so far, but there was a weird poll during the AMD event where they asked about X670/X670E mATX/mini-ITX boards, which I don't see the point of.
Yeah, that sounds weird and unnecessary. ITX with a full complement of I/O would be nice, but there's just no space to make use of all of those PCIe lanes, let alone fitting dual chipsets on there. Current itx boards are cramped already, I can't imagine fitting two chipsets would help any.
 
Anybody know anything about the bottom PCI-e slot on the ROG Crosshair X670E extreme. Is it a PCI-e 3 or 4 x4 slot? I need something for a SATA card for additional hard drives.
 
No, most X670E boards will be priced similar to their equivalent X570 models. See my Computex coverage of Gigabyte for some ballpark figures.
maybe for gigabyte only.
asrock pro rs and msi pro p wifi are all using 8 layers low loss PCB while gigabyte aorus elite is just 6.
also godlike and ace have pcie switches everywhere on PCB, crazy.
 
Anybody know anything about the bottom PCI-e slot on the ROG Crosshair X670E extreme. Is it a PCI-e 3 or 4 x4 slot? I need something for a SATA card for additional hard drives.
Going by how they've been doing it with previous generations, it's going to be a 4x 4.0 shared with the final NVME slot
(or one version of the board has an extra NVME slot, and that one has the lanes assigned there instead)
 
Going by how they've been doing it with previous generations, it's going to be a 4x 4.0 shared with the final NVME slot
(or one version of the board has an extra NVME slot, and that one has the lanes assigned there instead)
Remember that X670E has a significant increase in PCIe lanes compared to X570 though. 24 vs. 12-16 IIRC?
 
Intel: DMI 8*pci-ex gen4 lanes.
Amd: 4*pci-ex gen5 lanes from the cpu to the chipset.

The number of lanes the chipset generates is useless.
am5 gen5x4 from cpu, yes.
but am5 b650 chipset cant take gen5x4 but gen4x4 only.
so....
 
Intel: DMI 8*pci-ex gen4 lanes.
Amd: 4*pci-ex gen5 lanes from the cpu to the chipset.

The number of lanes the chipset generates is useless.
It absolutely isn't. The number of lanes to the chipset determine peak throughput from any devices connected to it. The number of lanes from the chipset determine how many devices can be connected to it, and how fast they can be. The latter is far more interesting - and important, and likely to be a bottleneck. No consumer use case is ever going to meaningfully saturate either PCIe 5.0x4 or 4.0x8 from the chipset for any significant amount of time, regardless of the number of devices connected. But if the chipset doesn't have the lanes to connect your SSD, capture card, or whatever, then you literally can't use it. Working with the theoretical but highly unrealistic potential for performance hiccups > not working at all.
 
USB hosts generally support 5v3A or 15W. There are exceptions, but they are rare. Also, who on earth charges their phone from a rear USB port? :kookoo: Most fast-charging smartphones also don't support their peak rating with PD, but use some proprietary fast charging and step down significantly when on PD.


This board is pretty insane though. Outside of people using tons of AICs, I can't think of anything it doesn't have in spades. Looking forward to the >$1000 price tag!
The 60W power output isn't just for phones, its for VR headsets and monitors powered by USB-C

welcome to 2022
 
The 60W power output isn't just for phones, its for VR headsets and monitors powered by USB-C

welcome to 2022
PD is absolutely very useful, and it's great that they're starting to add real PD support on some of these, though from what I can tell that's only one front port on a few high end motherboards? Most USB-C host ports still only provide 5V3A, as that's the base requirement.

I'll be interested in seeing the power management for that PD port though - I guess it must have its own buck/boost converter, running off 12V, to deliver the 5~20V needed for PD support? Unless they're being really shady and only delivering 12V5A through that port, in which case it's far less useful - that won't charge most laptops, or most other power hungry PD devices. (Also, isn't 12V PD deprecated since ... 2.1 or something?)

Also, which VR headsets need 60W of power? That sounds ... unsustainable. Venting 60W of heat off of a device mounted 5cm off your eyeballs isn't going to be comfortable for long. USB-C PD monitors also tend to peak around ~15-25W, and many are happy to run off host port power.

Still, useful? Absolutely.
 
Agreed, but it looks like the era of 60W ports has begun - front panel first, and USB 4.0 rear ports
 
Agreed, but it looks like the era of 60W ports has begun - front panel first, and USB 4.0 rear ports
I really don't see the point of 60W rear ports though. Accessories literally can't rely on that, as only 15W is mandated as host power by the standard, so either they stay within that power envelope or come with their own power supply, and ... who is going to fast charge their laptop or phone from the rear ports on their motherboard? This just seems like a gimmick to me. Front ports have a tad more utility, but still ...
 
I really don't see the point of 60W rear ports though. Accessories literally can't rely on that, as only 15W is mandated as host power by the standard, so either they stay within that power envelope or come with their own power supply, and ... who is going to fast charge their laptop or phone from the rear ports on their motherboard? This just seems like a gimmick to me. Front ports have a tad more utility, but still ...
If its got the DP output, i absolutely see the purpose.

We are at the era of VR headsets and regular old displays both using USB-C DP inputs, and being powered by the same USB-C.
It needs to exist first, before devices use it more often.


I've gotta use full sized DP and a powered USB 3 cable for my rift S, quest 2 uses compressed data and goes flat as you use it - the next gen could/should use regular old USB4 with 60W of power, higher quality compressed data or pure displayport
 
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