ASUS ROG STRIX Z370-F Gaming review

Mainboards 327 Page 4 of 28 Published by

teaser

Product Showcase

   

Img_8484

 
When we place the motherboard in an angle we see the rather familiar socket LGA1151. It will support Coffee Lake procs, this is referred to as the 8th generation Core series processors. If you count along with me, the appears to feature an 10 power phase design for the CPU power circuit, which can help both with stability and overclocking. 

 

Img_8478

 
Storage ports then -- ASUS is equipping the board with six SATA3 ports. There are two M2 slots that have been tucked away close to upper PCI-Express slots, one shileded and sitting under the heatsink. See that in the photo below.  

 

Img_8480

 
There are two M2 SSD slots available, two 8cm type type 2242/2260/2280. All support PCIe x4/x2 Gen 3.0. With NVMe PCIe Gen3 x4 M.2 connectors onboard however are shared with the SATA connectors. So if you use the upper M2 slot then SATA1 will be disabled. For the 2nd M2 slot in use it even means that port 5 and 6 are disabled. PCIe Gen 3 x4 is fast though, delivering up to 32 Gb/s data transfer speed per connector, the M.2 solution supports RAID modes. Again, the Z370 chipset runs out of PCIe lanes, the M2 units are shared in-between SATA ports. The upper M2 slot has a heat shield.

  

Img_8477

And as stated on the previous page it supports single and dual channel with support up-to DDR4 4000 (O.C.) and starts at 2133 MHz memory modules. 4 x DDR4 DIMM sockets can sport up-to 64 GB of system memory.

Share this content
Twitter Facebook Reddit WhatsApp Email Print