Fatal1ty 1151 Boards, no USB 3.1? Why? |
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Streetguru
Newbie Joined: 26 Mar 2016 Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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Posted: 26 Mar 2016 at 12:32am |
Guys cmon, why don't any of the 1151 Boards have USB 3.1 it's like the main reason to go for skylake. I didn't even know they made Type C in only 3.0.
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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Your thread's title is, "Fatal1ty 1151 Boards, no USB 3.1? Why?" The Fatal1ty Z170 Gaming K6 has USB 3.1, and so does the Fatal1ty Z170 Gaming-ITX/ac. Also, the Fatal1ty Z170 Professional Gaming i7, and the Fatal1ty Z170 Gaming K6+ have USB 3.1. So out of the six Fatal1ty Z170 boards, four of them have USB 3.1. http://www.asrock.com/mb/index.asp?s=Current USB 3.1 the main reason for going to Skylake? I think I finally saw the first USB 3.1 flash drive that might be available soon, otherwise they are non-existent. There are other far more compelling reasons for going with Skylake, particularly for the Fatal1ty board series. The Z170 chipset now has PCIe 3.0 support, so the M.2 SSD ports are connected to the chipset. That leaves all the PCIe 3.0 lanes provided by the CPU for graphics cards. Z170 lets you have two-way SLI, and one or more M.2 PCIe SSDs at the same time. No Intel mainstream chipset platform has given us this option, until Skylake. |
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Streetguru
Newbie Joined: 26 Mar 2016 Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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I did not look high enough on the pricing list then I don't think, I think 4/9 though for the boards isn't it? at least that's what I found on newegg.
Suppose the question becomes, why don't any of the more budget oriented ones have USB 3.1? There's a few boards from like MSI/Gigabyte that have USB 3.1 on the cheap. I guess the priorities would be elsewhere potentially as to the why. Otherwise I don't see many people even running SLI let alone paying the premium for a PCI-e SSD, performance wise the CPU really aren't much faster, added PCI-e lanes is nice but not really too game changing. |
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 25073 |
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To my mind the benefits of Skylake, in order, are:
1. Better overclocking potential with the BCLK now able to be manipulated in conjunction with the multiplier 2. DDR4 (with prices dropping and capacities and frequencies on the rise) 3. 14nm architecture which equate to lower thermals and power draw (my 6600k draws about the same power under load as my old dual core G3258 Haswell) 4. Almost every mATX and larger board I have seen support at least Crossfire or a GPU and PCIe x16 expansion card (albeit at x4) 5. More PCIe lanes 6. Improved performance over Haswell which increases significantly when overclocking. Clock for clock Skylake still comes out on top. 7. M.2 is common on most mainstream boards (at least from ASRock) 8. USB 3.1 Obviously the order will be different depending on usage scenarios. Skylake is not really an upgrade path for those using Haswell or even Ivybridge just like Haswell was more or less a pointless expense coming from Ivybridge/Sandybridge. Now if you are upgrading from say Sandybridge then you start to see merit in an upgrade. Edited by Xaltar - 26 Mar 2016 at 3:29pm |
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