Why the lack of holes through the PCB on the X99 |
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tonschk
Newbie Joined: 01 Oct 2015 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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Posted: 12 Oct 2015 at 6:28pm |
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[/QUOTE] [/QUOTE] I don't understand why you seem to think the separate backplate design is superior, or why it is a pity that ASRock does not use that design. The ASRock 2011-v3 boards have a socket backplate, but the threaded studs for the CPU cooler mounting are on the top of the board. The only use for the interchangeable backplates as described by one board manufacture, is for easier mounting of an LN2 pot. That is used for cooling a CPU with liquid nitrogen for extreme over clocking attempts. [/QUOTE] I was under shock when I become aware that All the Asrock X99 motherboards were made without holes through the PCB for the CPU cooler, incredible Edited by tonschk - 12 Oct 2015 at 7:47pm |
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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I agree, that was the point of my statement. The boards that are using the separate backplate socket design still must use CPU coolers designed for socket 2011-v3 boards. I don't understand why you seem to think the separate backplate design is superior, or why it is a pity that ASRock does not use that design. The ASRock 2011-v3 boards have a socket backplate, but the threaded studs for the CPU cooler mounting are on the top of the board. The only use for the interchangeable backplates as described by one board manufacture, is for easier mounting of an LN2 pot. That is used for cooling a CPU with liquid nitrogen for extreme over clocking attempts. |
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tonschk
Newbie Joined: 01 Oct 2015 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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My guess is that MSI was using the same thread for the screws as the standard LGA2011 latching mechanism
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tonschk
Newbie Joined: 01 Oct 2015 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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Hello, thank you very much for the answers and thank you also for the welcome . Other mobo manufacturers like Asus, Gigabyte, EVGA, MSI, have released All their enthusiast X79 and X99 motherboards with four (4) holes through the PCB to install the CPU cooler, and even Asus went to the extent to offer the possibility to use the normal small LGA2011 back plate and was also included with the mobo accessories the bigger LGA2011 back plate. The photo of my previous post is from a X99 MSI mobo which has been done with the bigger back plate. I was under shock when I realized that All the X99 Asrock motherboards have been made without holes through PCB for the CPU cooler, pity
Edited by tonschk - 02 Oct 2015 at 1:33am |
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Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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What might appear to be a standard heatsink mounting design with holes through the mother board, such as the example you provided, really are not that type of design. Notice in your picture that it appears a backplate has been mounted on the board. We don't see holes through the board as we would with any board designed for Intel processors other than socket 2011 and 2011-v3. Instead we see threaded metal studs. How many boards are sold with a backplate already mounted, since the backplate is not a standardized design across CPU cooler manufactures. The board in your example is not designed for a standard CPU cooler design, such as those that fit socket 1151, 1150, 1155, 1156, or 1366. It still must use a CPU cooler designed for the 2011-v3 socket. It is just a variation of the 2011-v3 socket. If the board in the example can use CPU coolers other than those designed for socket 2011-v3, which type of CPU cooler mounting is it compatible with? |
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 24518 |
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I am not sure I follow, the image you posted is of an MSI board for one and there are 4 threaded standoffs present for CPU cooler mounting.
The 2011-3 platform has a different CPU cooler mounting configuration than the 1150 platform because the 2011-3 CPUs tend to have much higher TDPs than the socket 1150/1155 CPUs. Some coolers will come with mounting options for both and the standard has been present since first gen socket 2011 so by now most coolers that have adequate cooling abilities for a socket 2011 platform should have socket 2011 mounting support. Odds are, if the cooler does not have the right mounting brackets, it does not support the TDP requirements of the platform or it is an out dated model. The cooler mounting system on socket 2011 boards is a lot more sturdy than that found on 1150/1155 systems from what I have seen and this is as a result of the 2011 socket being focused on the server/enthusiast market where the last thing you want is a plastic peg breaking off and causing the cooler to tilt or worse, fall off. The server market in particular is very demanding on product stability and reliability so intel established a standard that ASRock, along with every other board manufacturer I know of, uses for a more robust mounting system that will withstand heavier coolers as well as long periods of constant use. I hope this answers your question, if not, please post comparison pictures of what you are talking about and the other manufacturer that provides it. Welcome to the forums
Edited by Xaltar - 01 Oct 2015 at 5:47pm |
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tonschk
Newbie Joined: 01 Oct 2015 Location: London Status: Offline Points: 6 |
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