• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

ASUS Announces New F1A75 Series Motherboards

btarunr

Editor & Senior Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 9, 2007
Messages
47,217 (7.55/day)
Location
Hyderabad, India
System Name RBMK-1000
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
Motherboard ASUS ROG Strix B450-E Gaming
Cooling DeepCool Gammax L240 V2
Memory 2x 8GB G.Skill Sniper X
Video Card(s) Palit GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER GameRock
Storage Western Digital Black NVMe 512GB
Display(s) BenQ 1440p 60 Hz 27-inch
Case Corsair Carbide 100R
Audio Device(s) ASUS SupremeFX S1220A
Power Supply Cooler Master MWE Gold 650W
Mouse ASUS ROG Strix Impact
Keyboard Gamdias Hermes E2
Software Windows 11 Pro
ASUS today announced the launch of their new AMD A75 chipset-based F1A75 Series motherboards. Designed specially to optimize performance for the AMD Llano APUs, the F1A75 Series motherboards have exceptional overclocking capability for the versatile APU with a variety of integrated graphics built directly on the same die. This new series is also equipped with the latest ASUS-exclusive technologies and features, including the Dual Intelligent Processors 2 (DIP2) with DIGI+ VRM for precise power control, a graphical and mouse-controlled UEFI BIOS and the easy-to-use auto tuning for better performance.



New ASUS motherboard design to complement the new AMD Fusion platform
The ASUS F1A75 series are designed with the exclusive DIGI+ VRM and the most intuitive UEFI BIOS on the market. The F1A75-V EVO is the world's first FM1 socket motherboard with dual x8/x8 PCI-Express for AMD CrossFireX support, while the entire range of ASUS F1A75 Series motherboards are designed to natively support the latest USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gbps standards.

ASUS F1A75 Series motherboards are based on the latest AMD A75 chipset and FM1 socket, which supports AMD's new APUs. These include class leading performance from AMD Radeon HD 6000 series processor graphics with AMD Dual Graphics support. With an additional PCI-Express Radeon GPU to initiate Radeon Dual Graphics mode, the performance can be boosted up to 128 percent.

The APU Radeon processor graphics offers DirectX 11 technology, OpenCL Direct Compute and superb low power performance that is ideal for home media entertainment and gaming, without the need for an extra PCI-Express graphics card.

ASUS Dual Intelligent Processors 2 with DIGI+ VRM on board
The premium F1A75 Series motherboards are equipped with DIP2, which features DIGI+ VRM technology in addition to the TPU and EPU. DIGI+ VRM power delivery allows a user to precisely adjust and control power settings digitally perfectly serving the APU specification's power demand. Digital control differs from analog controls by eliminating digital-to-analog conversion lag, which helps to improve overclocking capabilities. This enables precise power flow adjustment and management as well as easy and flexible tuning, including extra DRAM power control for the AMD platform. System stability is also more efficient thanks to a smart thermal function, which includes phased temperature controls. For full system control, all features are accessible either by UEFI BIOS or AI Suite II. This all-in-one software offers diverse and easy-to-use functions, without the need to switch back and forth between different utilities while in Windows.

Media recognized most intuitive UEFI BIOS
Included on all F1A75 Series motherboards is the previously mentioned UEFI BIOS menu interface. UEFI BIOS allows a user to control and adjust their BIOS settings through a mouse-enabled interface for more user-friendly navigation. The built-in EZ Mode option also provides a drag-and-drop boot priority option for easier management of boot devices, while the Advanced Mode allows experienced performance enthusiasts to tweak more intricate system settings. Overclockers can also save screen caps of their settings by pressing F12 on the keyboard and saving it onto a USB thumb drive.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 

faramir

New Member
Joined
May 20, 2011
Messages
203 (0.04/day)
... because everybody wants dual CrossfireX in x8/x8 PCI-e configuration with an equivalent of Athlon II 635 with its fGPU disabled.

What's the point of using an APU if one doesn't utilize its fGPU capability ?
 

kirtar

New Member
Joined
Jun 1, 2010
Messages
42 (0.01/day)
... because everybody wants dual CrossfireX in x8/x8 PCI-e configuration with an equivalent of Athlon II 635 with its fGPU disabled.

What's the point of using an APU if one doesn't utilize its fGPU capability ?

How I read it, the APU's GPU is not disabled because Radeon Dual Graphics is supported (marketing name for APU + discrete GPU working in tandem). Also, I recall [H] doing a test where even x4 in SLI/Crossfire didn't make a significant difference with GTX 480s and Radeon 5870s
 
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Messages
13,791 (1.88/day)
But still, it's a bit idiotic that my old ASUS II Gene can do 2x full PCIe 16x in crossfire but new boards can't. In fact Intel X48 boards were able to use full 2x 16x PCIe. I thought new boards should be better even if just theoretical than old ones...
 
Joined
Feb 17, 2007
Messages
1,238 (0.19/day)
Location
SoCal
Processor AMD Phenom II 1055T @ 3.6ghz 1.3V
Motherboard Asus M5A97 EVO
Cooling Xigmatek SD1284
Memory 2x4GB Patriot Sector 5 PC3-12800 @ 7-8-7-24-1T 1.7V
Video Card(s) XFX Radeon HD 7950 DD @ 1100/1350 1.185V
Storage OCZ Agility 3 120GB + 2x7200.12 500GB Raid1
Display(s) QNIX QX2710 27" LCD 1440p @ 120hz
Case Cooler Master 690M
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC892
Power Supply Enermax Liberty 620W Eco Edition
Software Windows 7 Professional x64 / Ubuntu 12.04 x64
But still, it's a bit idiotic that my old ASUS II Gene can do 2x full PCIe 16x in crossfire but new boards can't. In fact Intel X48 boards were able to use full 2x 16x PCIe. I thought new boards should be better even if just theoretical than old ones...

The high-end chipsets from AMD (790FX/890FX/990FX), Intel (x38/x48/x58), and nVidia (780i/790i/780a/980a) all supported dual PCIe 2.0 x16 slots. Intel's x79 chipset will even support dual PCIe 3.0 x16 slots (only on socket 2011).

These A75 chipsets from AMD, as well as P67 chipsets from Intel are not their high-end, and that's why they don't offer the additional lanes. Regardless, there isn't much of a performance difference with dual 8x anyway.
 
Joined
May 7, 2009
Messages
5,392 (0.95/day)
Location
Carrollton, GA
System Name ODIN
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Elite AX V2
Cooling Dark Rock 4
Memory G Skill RipjawsV F4 3600 Mhz C16
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ventus 3X OC LHR
Storage Crucial 2 TB M.2 SSD :: WD Blue M.2 1TB SSD :: 1 TB WD Black VelociRaptor
Display(s) Dell S2716DG 27" 144 Hz G-SYNC
Case Fractal Meshify C
Audio Device(s) Onboard Audio
Power Supply Antec HCP 850 80+ Gold
Mouse Corsair M65
Keyboard Corsair K70 RGB Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
Benchmark Scores I don't benchmark.
... because everybody wants dual CrossfireX in x8/x8 PCI-e configuration with an equivalent of Athlon II 635 with its fGPU disabled.

What's the point of using an APU if one doesn't utilize its fGPU capability ?

Well first you have no basis for claim it will be on par with an AII 635. You are just pulling that out of thin air.

Second, since we are working with rumors, AMD claims they want to allow programming level access to the iGPU on their APU even when a discreet GPU is installed. And I don't mean when a low end GPU is working with CrossfireX. I mean when (confirmed fact from AMD) a GPU that is more than 2x the power of the APU's IGP and graphic will ONLY be rendered by the dedicated card, programmers may still be able to write OpenCL or AMD APP code to run on the IGP anyway. I think this is a great idea and I hope they follow through with it.

And the point is value. The A-series desktop CPU's will be the $100 to $200 chip range. It would allow budget minded buyers to get a mid-ranged Chip and a decent board with very little money; however, they will not have to sacrifice Crossfire or other luxury features to do it. Thats why.
 

kirtar

New Member
Joined
Jun 1, 2010
Messages
42 (0.01/day)
Well first you have no basis for claim it will be on par with an AII 635. You are just pulling that out of thin air.
He may not have stated his basis, but I suspect that it was this:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4448/amd-llano-desktop-performance-preview/2


But still, it's a bit idiotic that my old ASUS II Gene can do 2x full PCIe 16x in crossfire but new boards can't. In fact Intel X48 boards were able to use full 2x 16x PCIe. I thought new boards should be better even if just theoretical than old ones...
Try comparing it to H67 then.
 
Joined
May 7, 2009
Messages
5,392 (0.95/day)
Location
Carrollton, GA
System Name ODIN
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Elite AX V2
Cooling Dark Rock 4
Memory G Skill RipjawsV F4 3600 Mhz C16
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ventus 3X OC LHR
Storage Crucial 2 TB M.2 SSD :: WD Blue M.2 1TB SSD :: 1 TB WD Black VelociRaptor
Display(s) Dell S2716DG 27" 144 Hz G-SYNC
Case Fractal Meshify C
Audio Device(s) Onboard Audio
Power Supply Antec HCP 850 80+ Gold
Mouse Corsair M65
Keyboard Corsair K70 RGB Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
Benchmark Scores I don't benchmark.
He may not have stated his basis, but I suspect that it was this:
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4448/amd-llano-desktop-performance-preview/2

Try comparing it to H67 then.

You can't go by SysMark numbers. AMD, Nvidia, and VIA all dropped endorsement on their upcoming crapware for a reason. They have a history of bias, unfair testing that does not take full advantage of support instructions simply based on brand instead of what the chip can do.

And I expect some marginal improvements between now and release (they delayed it for a reason) from improved instruction optimization and a functioning Turbo mode.
 

kirtar

New Member
Joined
Jun 1, 2010
Messages
42 (0.01/day)
You can't go by SysMark numbers. AMD, Nvidia, and VIA all dropped endorsement on their upcoming crapware for a reason. They have a history of bias, unfair testing that does not take full advantage of support instructions simply based on brand instead of what the chip can do.
That's probably why Anand used more than just SysMark. The scroll bar exists for a reason
 

faramir

New Member
Joined
May 20, 2011
Messages
203 (0.04/day)
Well first you have no basis for claim it will be on par with an AII 635. You are just pulling that out of thin air.

Kirtar beat me to this part.

And the point is value. The A-series desktop CPU's will be the $100 to $200 chip range. It would allow budget minded buyers to get a mid-ranged Chip and a decent board with very little money; however, they will not have to sacrifice Crossfire or other luxury features to do it. Thats why.

My point exactly, this is about value the customer gets. You've got this "budget" $170 APU which requires $100+ board and uses up some of system's RAM for fGPU graphics ($10 for 1 GB fair enough ?) and it's supposed to give customer better value than AMD's existing products, say a $115 Phenom II 955BE, $65 fully featured ATX format AM3 motherboard and $70 Radeon HD5670 combination that can mop the floor with A8-3850 any day of the week and twice on sunday, yet costs less. Where is value in that ?

If there is value to be had in this market, compromises are going to have to be made and crippled CrossfireX support on a platform that is all about integration of relatively powerful GPU and decent CPU makes as much sense as selling refrigerators to Eskimos living in a tent with no electricity. Instead they (= the ecosystem of AMD and their partners who manufacture motherboards) should focus on bringing the price down - into the medium range AM3 board range at the very least. On one hand they are touting GPU performance of Llano while on the other hand they are implying that GPU performance sucks and customers will ultimately want to go with discrete solution or even worse, a discrete CrossfireX solution. Which one is it ?

Make buy-in (= motherboard and 1600 or faster RAM) affordable and success in desktop market will follow. Make buy-in expensive (by providing pointless "features" for platform destined to the "value" segment) and you'll corner yourself out of the market with your own products, nevermind the competition from the company that shall not be named in this post.
 
Joined
May 7, 2009
Messages
5,392 (0.95/day)
Location
Carrollton, GA
System Name ODIN
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Elite AX V2
Cooling Dark Rock 4
Memory G Skill RipjawsV F4 3600 Mhz C16
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ventus 3X OC LHR
Storage Crucial 2 TB M.2 SSD :: WD Blue M.2 1TB SSD :: 1 TB WD Black VelociRaptor
Display(s) Dell S2716DG 27" 144 Hz G-SYNC
Case Fractal Meshify C
Audio Device(s) Onboard Audio
Power Supply Antec HCP 850 80+ Gold
Mouse Corsair M65
Keyboard Corsair K70 RGB Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
Benchmark Scores I don't benchmark.
That's probably why Anand used more than just SysMark. The scroll bar exists for a reason

In all the other tests on the page, the new A8 does marginally better in every test. And I think those are still SysMark numbers, just results from individual tests. I stand by my statement that I expect improvement during the next 3 months.

Kirtar beat me to this part.

My point exactly, this is about value the customer gets. You've got this "budget" $170 APU which requires $100+ board and uses up some of system's RAM for fGPU graphics ($10 for 1 GB fair enough ?) and it's supposed to give customer better value than AMD's existing products, say a $115 Phenom II 955BE, $65 fully featured ATX format AM3 motherboard and $70 Radeon HD5670 combination that can mop the floor with A8-3850 any day of the week and twice on sunday, yet costs less. Where is value in that ?

If there is value to be had in this market, compromises are going to have to be made and crippled CrossfireX support on a platform that is all about integration of relatively powerful GPU and decent CPU makes as much sense as selling refrigerators to Eskimos living in a tent with no electricity. Instead they (= the ecosystem of AMD and their partners who manufacture motherboards) should focus on bringing the price down - into the medium range AM3 board range at the very least. On one hand they are touting GPU performance of Llano while on the other hand they are implying that GPU performance sucks and customers will ultimately want to go with discrete solution or even worse, a discrete CrossfireX solution. Which one is it ?

Make buy-in (= motherboard and 1600 or faster RAM) affordable and success in desktop market will follow. Make buy-in expensive (by providing pointless "features" for platform destined to the "value" segment) and you'll corner yourself out of the market with your own products, nevermind the competition from the company that shall not be named in this post.

First the A8 will not be "budget" chips. Those should be the mid-range with the A6 the top tier of the budget chips. Second, no one said the F1 socket boards will be at least $100. As usually those boards based on features will range from $65 to $120, so buy a cheaper board.

Now what they are doing as they have done for years and every one does in every market.....provide options. If you have something against dual PCIe 8x slots, there will be dozens of boards that only have 1x 16x PCIe. They will also be cheaper. So stop pretending this is the only motherboard they will be making. My motherboard has dual PCIe and an IGP. It doesn't imply the IGP was crap, it just wasn't enough to game at the level I wanted.

Finally the obvious answer to why not buy the current Phenom II and such is they are being flushed out of the market. They price was dropped to clear stock so there is storage room for the new chips. The second very obvious reason is the improved power consumption with the new chips showing they will at least perform as well as current chips while consuming less power.

I am not saying the A-series will be great or will not need revisions in the near future. I am saying wait for more conclusive testing and AMD confirmed information.
 

WarEagleAU

Bird of Prey
Joined
Jul 9, 2006
Messages
10,812 (1.61/day)
Location
Gurley, AL
System Name Pandemic 2020
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 "Gen 2" 2600X
Motherboard AsRock X470 Killer Promontory
Cooling CoolerMaster 240 RGB Master Cooler (Newegg Eggxpert)
Memory 32 GB Geil EVO Portenza DDR4 3200 MHz
Video Card(s) ASUS Radeon RX 580 DirectX 12 DUAL-RX580-O8G 8GB 256-Bit GDDR5 HDCP Ready CrossFireX Support Video C
Storage WD 250 M.2, Corsair P500 M.2, OCZ Trion 500, WD Black 1TB, Assorted others.
Display(s) ASUS MG24UQ Gaming Monitor - 23.6" 4K UHD (3840x2160) , IPS, Adaptive Sync, DisplayWidget
Case Fractal Define R6 C
Audio Device(s) Realtek 5.1 Onboard
Power Supply Corsair RMX 850 Platinum PSU (Newegg Eggxpert)
Mouse Razer Death Adder
Keyboard Corsair K95 Mechanical & Corsair K65 Wired, Wireless, Bluetooth)
Software Windows 10 Pro x64
I wanna build me one of these. They should be bad ass for an HTPC.
 
Joined
Oct 30, 2008
Messages
1,768 (0.30/day)
System Name Lailalo
Processor Ryzen 9 5900X Boosts to 4.95Ghz
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming X570-Plus (WIFI
Cooling Noctua
Memory 32GB DDR4 3200 Corsair Vengeance
Video Card(s) XFX 7900XT 20GB
Storage Samsung 970 Pro Plus 1TB, Crucial 1TB MX500 SSD, Segate 3TB
Display(s) LG Ultrawide 29in @ 2560x1080
Case Coolermaster Storm Sniper
Power Supply XPG 1000W
Mouse G602
Keyboard G510s
Software Windows 10 Pro / Windows 10 Home
People would complain even more if they provided no discrete option with APUs. But yeah you gotta ask that...why don't they just build them better so you wouldn't need discrete? Tech just isn't there yet, not for everyone. But if someone is building a set top box with performance in mind, they won't be buying an APU setup. You would buy Intel or Phenom/FX. I can see these APU setups getting bundled into prebuilt rigs more and later the user will want the ability to get discrete graphics.

Don't see the point in arguing over a chip that will shine more in the mobile market and niche markets. They'll get the Crossfire fixed eventually. But ultimately these are just first gens. Interesting and neat, sure, but 2nd and 3rd gen designs will likely be where things will start really looking better.
 
Joined
May 7, 2009
Messages
5,392 (0.95/day)
Location
Carrollton, GA
System Name ODIN
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Elite AX V2
Cooling Dark Rock 4
Memory G Skill RipjawsV F4 3600 Mhz C16
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ventus 3X OC LHR
Storage Crucial 2 TB M.2 SSD :: WD Blue M.2 1TB SSD :: 1 TB WD Black VelociRaptor
Display(s) Dell S2716DG 27" 144 Hz G-SYNC
Case Fractal Meshify C
Audio Device(s) Onboard Audio
Power Supply Antec HCP 850 80+ Gold
Mouse Corsair M65
Keyboard Corsair K70 RGB Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
Benchmark Scores I don't benchmark.
People would complain even more if they provided no discrete option with APUs. But yeah you gotta ask that...why don't they just build them better so you wouldn't need discrete? Tech just isn't there yet, not for everyone. But if someone is building a set top box with performance in mind, they won't be buying an APU setup. You would buy Intel or Phenom/FX. I can see these APU setups getting bundled into prebuilt rigs more and later the user will want the ability to get discrete graphics.

Don't see the point in arguing over a chip that will shine more in the mobile market and niche markets. They'll get the Crossfire fixed eventually. But ultimately these are just first gens. Interesting and neat, sure, but 2nd and 3rd gen designs will likely be where things will start really looking better.

Crossfire is not broken.
 

TheMailMan78

Big Member
Joined
Jun 3, 2007
Messages
22,599 (3.54/day)
Location
'Merica. The Great SOUTH!
System Name TheMailbox 5.0 / The Mailbox 4.5
Processor RYZEN 1700X / Intel i7 2600k @ 4.2GHz
Motherboard Fatal1ty X370 Gaming K4 / Gigabyte Z77X-UP5 TH Intel LGA 1155
Cooling MasterLiquid PRO 280 / Scythe Katana 4
Memory ADATA RGB 16GB DDR4 2666 16-16-16-39 / G.SKILL Sniper Series 16GB DDR3 1866: 9-9-9-24
Video Card(s) MSI 1080 "Duke" with 8Gb of RAM. Boost Clock 1847 MHz / ASUS 780ti
Storage 256Gb M4 SSD / 128Gb Agelity 4 SSD , 500Gb WD (7200)
Display(s) LG 29" Class 21:9 UltraWide® IPS LED Monitor 2560 x 1080 / Dell 27"
Case Cooler Master MASTERBOX 5t / Cooler Master 922 HAF
Audio Device(s) Realtek ALC1220 Audio Codec / SupremeFX X-Fi with Bose Companion 2 speakers.
Power Supply Seasonic FOCUS Plus Series SSR-750PX 750W Platinum / SeaSonic X Series X650 Gold
Mouse SteelSeries Sensei (RAW) / Logitech G5
Keyboard Razer BlackWidow / Logitech (Unknown)
Software Windows 10 Pro (64-bit)
Benchmark Scores Benching is for bitches.

faramir

New Member
Joined
May 20, 2011
Messages
203 (0.04/day)
Second, no one said the F1 socket boards will be at least $100. As usually those boards based on features will range from $65 to $120, so buy a cheaper board.

The cheapest I can find is 67 EUR (= US$95) at one of the local pricelist sites:

http://geizhals.at/a655277.html

I don't think they are going to get much cheaper than that, Asrock's boards are the cheapest of the lot here and there isn't anything more you could take away from the board to make it 30% cheaper still (to get into $65 range) as all key features are part of the chipset, there are no expensive heatpipe-based heatsinks, no extra expansion or memory slots to get rid off, it's bare essentials.

Finally the obvious answer to why not buy the current Phenom II and such is they are being flushed out of the market. They price was dropped to clear stock so there is storage room for the new chips.

Guess how sales will fare should it turn out that people are paying more for less ...

The second very obvious reason is the improved power consumption with the new chips showing they will at least perform as well as current chips while consuming less power.

... which is something one would expect from refinement of 4 years old architecture and process shrink. Alas it's not as if they managed to drop the power usage significantly, they merely moved it from two places (separate CPU and GPU with independent cooling solutions and more room inbetween for better cooling) into a single spot.

As a matter of fact I'd be delighted to see head to head performance and efficiency comparison of 45 nm + 40 nm generation running at exactly the same frequencies versus this integrated 32 nm APU. I'm sure somebody is going to do it as soon as NDA is lifted and I can't wait :)

I am not saying the A-series will be great or will not need revisions in the near future. I am saying wait for more conclusive testing and AMD confirmed information.

Eagerly waiting for quite some time now :) I like the concept of APU, I want it to succeed but in order to do so I expect it to have to be able to beat previous generation of AMD's own products in both price/performance and performance/power. Considering the process change this should be doable, right ? What concerns me are all those motherboards that try to position Llano a bracket or two above where I expect it to end up.
 
Joined
Apr 21, 2010
Messages
5,731 (1.08/day)
Location
West Midlands. UK.
System Name Ryzen Reynolds
Processor Ryzen 1600 - 4.0Ghz 1.415v - SMT disabled
Motherboard mATX Asrock AB350m AM4
Cooling Raijintek Leto Pro
Memory Vulcan T-Force 16GB DDR4 3000 16.18.18 @3200Mhz 14.17.17
Video Card(s) Sapphire Nitro+ 4GB RX 580 - 1450/2000 BIOS mod 8-)
Storage Seagate B'cuda 1TB/Sandisk 128GB SSD
Display(s) Acer ED242QR 75hz Freesync
Case Corsair Carbide Series SPEC-01
Audio Device(s) Onboard
Power Supply Corsair VS 550w
Mouse Zalman ZM-M401R
Keyboard Razor Lycosa
Software Windows 10 x64
Benchmark Scores https://www.3dmark.com/spy/6220813
The cheapest I can find is 67 EUR (= US$95) at one of the local pricelist sites:

Usually with tech the dollar = £1gbp/1 EUR go check out, so $60-$70 might be about right
 
Joined
May 7, 2009
Messages
5,392 (0.95/day)
Location
Carrollton, GA
System Name ODIN
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 5800X
Motherboard Gigabyte B550 Aorus Elite AX V2
Cooling Dark Rock 4
Memory G Skill RipjawsV F4 3600 Mhz C16
Video Card(s) MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ventus 3X OC LHR
Storage Crucial 2 TB M.2 SSD :: WD Blue M.2 1TB SSD :: 1 TB WD Black VelociRaptor
Display(s) Dell S2716DG 27" 144 Hz G-SYNC
Case Fractal Meshify C
Audio Device(s) Onboard Audio
Power Supply Antec HCP 850 80+ Gold
Mouse Corsair M65
Keyboard Corsair K70 RGB Lux
Software Windows 10 Pro 64-bit
Benchmark Scores I don't benchmark.
The cheapest I can find is 67 EUR (= US$95) at one of the local pricelist sites:

http://geizhals.at/a655277.html

I don't think they are going to get much cheaper than that, Asrock's boards are the cheapest of the lot here and there isn't anything more you could take away from the board to make it 30% cheaper still (to get into $65 range) as all key features are part of the chipset, there are no expensive heatpipe-based heatsinks, no extra expansion or memory slots to get rid off, it's bare essentials.

Can't argue with anything else you said. All I can say here is that is too expensive and I expect that same board to be much cheaper here. In fact, I looked for it and I can't find that board available in the US yet which means it is in the low-end board section. In the US mobo companies always seem to start with the top of the line, then the low end, and then release a number of ambiguous mid-ranged boards that are hard to determine the value of. I can say 100% sure the price will be different, but even with the required silicon -> mobo price increase that board should be like $70 to $82.99 here.

And I am with you, I am not going to settle for just better power efficiency. Performance needs to improve noticeably.
 

faramir

New Member
Joined
May 20, 2011
Messages
203 (0.04/day)
Usually with tech the dollar = £1gbp/1 EUR go check out, so $60-$70 might be about right

Not here, lowest tier motherboards for old budget platforms cost roughly 35 EUR (= US$50) which sounds about right:

AM3: http://geizhals.at/a577031.html
S775: http://geizhals.at/a513806.html

And brand spanking new LGA1155 at 45 EUR (US$60-65):

http://geizhals.at/a623006.html

These prices make sense; easily affordable boards for decent internet/productivity and low-end gaming systems.

Board prices will have to come down and it appears abovementioned Asrock FM1 board will be shipping at ~10% less than the price I quoted above. Still not anywhere near 30% less though :(
 
Top