Review: ASRock Z77 Extreme 6 with Sandy Bridge

Published by Marc Büchel on 29.03.12
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Layout

The Extreme 6 comes with a black PCB as well as black expansion slots. Southbridge cooler as well as the coolers on the current converters got a cover which is kept in grey and gold. Altogether the design looks calm and nice. Furthermore the components are well placed and the PCB doens't look too crowded.


ASRock equipped their latest Extreme 6 motherboard with an 8+4 phase VRM design. Eight phases are there to provide stable and clean power to the CPU. The four additional phases are there to deliver power to the memory as well as other components on the board. This really is enough even for overclocking.


Totally you'll find four DIMM-slots on the ASRock Extreme 6. The official clock speeds that are still under NDA. Therefore we'll release them whit the launch of Intels upcoming CPUs.


The current converters are being held at adequate temperatures via a passive heatpipe cooling solution. There are two separate cooling blocks covering the area which are connected via a heatpipe. The southbridge got a cooling block too, which has not been integrated into the heatpipe loop of the VRM. The fact that the cooling blocks around the CPU socket aren't too big makes it comfortable to install a big aircooler. We also noticed the very high manufacturing quality of the cooling blocks.

  


Page 1 - Introduction Page 8 - SiSoft Sandra 1
Page 2 - Specifications / Delivery Page 9 - SiSoft Sandra 2
Page 3 - Layout Page 10 - Super Pi / wPrime
Page 4 - Connectors and I/O Page 11 - Games
Page 5 - BIOS Page 12 - Overclocking
Page 6 - Test setup Page 13 - Conclusion
Page 7 - Futuremark  



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Review: ASRock Z77 Extreme 6 with Sandy Bridge - Motherboards > Intel > Z77 - Reviews - ocaholic