The
Supermicro C7Z170-OCE comes with a
digital 6+2+1+1 phase power design. The CPU receives six full phases, the iGPU can rely on two full phases and VCCSA as well as VCCIO receive stable current supply from
one
phase each. Regarding the VCCIO it's worth noticing, that a smaller voltage converter is being used. On this board Supermicro uses Vitec 59PR72151 inductors, which feature a saturation current of 66A and a maximum operating temperature of 125°C. There is no other vendor today, which is using higher quality inductors on their consumer motherboards. Apart from that Supermicro doesn't do any phase splitting, which means every single phase is controlled by the main PWM chips directly. These come from International Rectifier and go by the name IR3556M and they are specified for 50A.
A look at the memory VRM reveals that it's based on componets from Infineon. While there are PX3143HDM PWMs from Primarion a power stage with writing DA21232 is also present. Furthermore there is a TPS51362 power converter from Texas Instruments, capable of withstanding 10A current.
There is a total of four DIMM-slots on the C7Z170-OCE and the board officially supports DDR4-3200. There is enough space between the DIMM-slots and the CPU socket which means that you wont encounter compatibility problems with big coolers even when you choose to install RAM with big heatspreaders. Also supported are Xtreme Memory Profiles (XMP) in version 2.0.
On the
C7Z170-OCE the southbridge is being cooled by a
passive cooling block. A closer look at the VRM area shows
there are two additional heatsinks. All heatsinks on this board are rather compact. Apparently this means there is a lot of space around the CPU socket, which makes installing hardware a bit more comfortable and there won't be any compatibility issues.
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