Layout
As we mentioned in
the introduction, the MSI Z87 XPower motherboard comes with a Twin Frozr IV
based design. Therefore the PCB has a matte black finish with a few yellow
touches on the heatsinks. The heatsinks themselves have been shaped with a lot of attention to detail
and come with a matte black colour scheme. Combined, it makes the design unique and good looking. The layout itself has been well thought and there
are plenty of useful features, like eight USB
3.0 ports on the back, SATA 6Gbps ports, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, overclocking features and more.
MSI equipped the Z87 XPower with a 32-phase digital power design
with an IR3563B from International Rectifier taking care of the CPU VRM. Unlike
the previous MPower (Z77), the Z87 XPower power design has one DRMOS
for two phases rather than one DRMOS for one phase. All those solid capacitors are part of MSI's Military Class IV
group of components so that's one pretty strong power design.
The memory gets a 3-phase digital power design here driven by a UPI uP1606R,
one more phase than usual.
As far as the memory goes, you can find four
DIMM-slots on the Z87 XPower. Officially supported are
the DDR3 3000 / 2800 / 2666 / 2600 / 2400 / 2200 / 2133 / 2000 / 1866 / 1600 / 1333 / 1066 MHz
(O.C.). There is
enough space between the DIMM-slots and the CPU socket which means that you
will not run into any issues with large coolers, even if you choose to
install memory with big heatspreaders. Also supported are the Xtreme Memory Profiles
(XMP) in version 1.3. Overclocking memories on this board with old ICs
(PCS,BBSE), which are what all overlcockers are still using is not really nice because
of the
BIOS issue, but overclocking new Samsung ICs and Hynix CFR,BFR,MFR is not bad for
gaming and daily use PCs, but not for getting any serious high memory
frequency results.
Southbridge as well as current converters are being held at
adequate temperatures via passive heatsinks. The current converters heatsink
is made from a single aluminium block that uses one 8mm nickel-plated copper heatpipe.
The southbridge heatsink has not been integrated into the heatpipe loop and it is
quite simple and flat. The cooling blocks have been very well made and also
they are very well attached to
the board to provide enough pressure on the components they have to cool down.
They are entirely black colored with yellow stripes to remind of the Twin Frozr IV
graphics card cooler design and color choices.