- Joined
- Jul 31, 2014
- Messages
- 484 (0.13/day)
System Name | Diablo | Baal | Mephisto |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7700 | 2x Xeon E5-2697v4 | i7-13900H |
Motherboard | ASRockRack B650D4U-2L2T/BCM | Supermicro X10DRH-iT | Lenovo Thinkpad P1 Gen 6 |
Cooling | Custom loop | SC846 Chassis cooled| dual-fanned heatpipes with LM |
Memory | 64GiB DDR5-5600 ECC | 256GiB DDR4-3200 ECC RDIMM | 64GiB DDR5-5600 |
Video Card(s) | RTX 3090 Ti Founder's Edition | Embedded ASPEED2400 | RTX 5000 Mobile (80W) |
Storage | many, many SSDs and HDDs.... |
Display(s) | Dell U3014 + Dell U3011 | SMCI IPMI KVMoIP | 3840×2400 Samsung OLED |
Case | Caselabs TH10A | Supermicro SC846 | Lenovo Thinkpad P1 Gen 6 |
Audio Device(s) | Creative SoundBlaster X4 | None | On-board + Moondriver2 Ti + Bluetooth |
Power Supply | Corsair AX1600 | 1200W PSU (Delta) | Lenovo 230W or 300W |
Mouse | Logitech G604 |
Keyboard | 1985 IBM Model F 122-key, Lenovo integrated |
Software | FAAAR too much to list |
I do believe motherboard manufacturers have come out and said that Z370 was not necessary and could have worked on Z270.
Correct me if I'm wrong though as the specifics slip my mind at the moment.
Intel claims to have needed a new socket (and did in fact change the pin assignments in the socket in question). May as well do some badge engineering (Z370 is the exact same die as Z270 iirc) along the way since users will need a new motherboard anyways.
Now, whether the socket itself needed changing is up for debate: some people say yes, others say no. I personally reckon Intel wasn't happy with the safety margin of an unmodified LGA1151 socket, which resulted in the update. The basic engineering premise is sound however: more power leads to more current (since you never want to raise the voltage), which leads to more power pins. Adding more power pins is exactly what Intel did with the updated Z370-based 1151 boards.
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