At a first glance the ASUS
Maximus VIII Ranger looks very good with its harmonic design. For the first time in quite a few years ASUS has decided to change the color scheme of their ROG series motherboards. There is a matte black PCB and the heatsinks feature a metallic, dark silver tone, which reflects different colors. The
layout itself is well-designed and there is plenty of space around
the CPU socket to install even todays largest CPU coolers. The fact that there
are angled SATA connectors
allows an easy installation of oversized graphics cards.
The ASUS Maximus VIII Ranger features a
digital 10+2 phase power design. The CPU is backed up by ten phases, while the memory can rely on two, so there is a stable current supply in any case. Furthermore ASUS equips this board with their so called "BlackWing
Chokes". Furthermore those chokes can cope with up to 60A per phase.
Additionally there are 10K Black Metallic Capacitors, which have an average life
span of 10'000 hours. The power design is overall more than powerful enough to easily deal with extreme overclocking.
There are four DIMM-slots on the Maximus VIII Ranger. Officially supported are DDR4 3400 (O.C.) / 3333 (O.C.) / 3300 (O.C.) / 3200 (O.C.) / 3000 (O.C.) / 2800 (O.C.) / 2666 (O.C.) / 2400 (O.C.) / 2133.There is engough space between the DIMM-slots and the CPU socket which means that you won't encounter compatibility issues with large coolers even when you choose to install RAM with big heatspreaders. Also supported is Xtreme Memory Profile (XMP) in version 2.0.
On the
Maximus VIII Ranger the PCH (Platform Controller Hub) is being cooled by a
passiv heatsink. A closer look at the area where the VRM is, shows
that there are two additional heatsinks, which have been connected with a
heatpipe. As we already mentioned, ASUS has decided to rework the design and in our opinion ASUS once again managed to improve the looks of these coolers compared to the previous Rangerration. We particularly like the shroud covering the sound implementation, I/O area as well as a part of the power design.
Page 1 - Introduction | Page 4 - Layout |
Page 2 - Specs and Delivery | Page 5 - Connectors and I/O |
Page 3 - Features | Page 6 - Conclusion |
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