zx128k
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Just okay? It's $25 more expensive than the cheapest x570. It's worth it for the VRM alone considering it has superior current capacity compared to anything under $250. Its also well featured for a sub $200 x570 board. It's easily the best motherboard under $200 and the Aorus Elite is the only board that comes close.
The 3 sub $200 MSI boards all require MAJOR airflow at the 150A mark and get the red X of not recommended at 200A. No other x570 motherboard(s) have those distinctions. I'm not crying about anything. I'm pointing out that every x570 motherboard that costs the same or less than these motherboards has superior VRM's. This isn't an endorsement or recommendation for these motherboards. This is just a fact. If we accept that, than what distinctive feature(s) do the MSI boards have that make them worth recommending? There are cheaper motherboards with better power delivery. Even if it's only slightly better power delivery its still better. You need to point out some other feature(s) that make them worthy of a recommendation. Especially if you want to give the thing an Editors Choice award.
https://pcpartpicker.com/product/wh...plus-atx-am4-motherboard-tuf-gaming-x570-plus
https://pcpartpicker.com/product/q4...plus-atx-am4-motherboard-mpg-x570-gaming-plus
Make an apples to apples comparison. If you want to compare to the WIFI version of the Tuf than use the GAMING EDGE WIFI. The Gaming Edge WIFI is more expensive than the Tuf WIFI. Depending on where and when you buy it (here in the US) the non WIFI Tuf is about $10 more than the Gaming Plus. At Micro Center they are currently the same price.
Agreed.
Which is exactly why sites like TH need to make responsible hardware recommendations. The Tuf is just so much better than every board that costs less than it, and almost as good or better than almost everything else that costs more than it. 99% of people shopping for x570 boards should be buying it IMO . It literally has a flagship VRM. It is, for all intents and purposes, the same VRM that the Maximus XI hero sports. Unless you are doing extreme sub zero overclocking the only reasons to spend more money are cosmetic, troubleshooting, or I/O feature related. Nobody is running anywhere near the nearly 300A of current at 90% efficiency this VRM can deliver. At least on ambient cooling. Even if you never utilize the excellent power delivery you also never have to worry about it under any practical circumstance. It also has a very solid feature set. It is only $25 more than the cheapest x570 motherboard. IMO nobody should buy anything cheaper, and few should be buying anything more expensive. If an extra $25 is a decision factor at this level of motherboard then you shouldn't be buying x570 to begin with.
This is irrelevant. The B450 tomahawk doesn't cost $165. It's a good motherboard in relation to it's direct competition. It's fine. I actually think it's a bit overrated. I just sold a system with one. It has basically the same VRM as the x570 Gaming Plus minus the doublers. You are making my argument stronger. Why are many of the MSI B450 motherboards well regarded? For the exact same reason the x570 Tuf is a better buy than everything else in its price range. It has comparable features and better power delivery than most or all of its direct competition.
People make dumb configuration decisions all the time. This doesn't mean those of us that know better shouldn't make an effort to inform them. Giving the MSI MPG X570 GAMING PLUS an Editors Choice award is laughable. Period.
Ignoring buildzoids video were he states the vrm is okay for a budget board? Knowing what you are doing and building a system. Is not the same as building a system from reviews and not knowing what you are doing.
You don't need a stupid efficient vrm if you have good cooling. Stock you just need 18 watts of cooling at the vrm's which with good air flow is fine.
A 12 core cpu needs 24 watts of vrm cooling @ 150A overclocking which should be fine with good case air flow. A 16 core cpu overclocking needs 175A which requires 30 watts of cooling at the vrm heatsink. This should be okay with good air flow but is close to the maximum the heatsinks can handle. For 200A or a completely maxed out 16 core you will need 38 watts of cooling on the vrm's. At this point the vrm needs active cooling from a fan. The heatsink near the IO shield will likely need to cool 30 watts, so its best to put the fan there first and test.
The x570 taichi needs about 24 watts of cooling at 200A.
At 150A we need 16 watts of cooling. There is approx. a 8 watt difference between the x570 taichi and the Gaming Plus at 150A. With the air flow I have, atm I am at 20-30c on the VRM's. The x570 taichi has decent VRM's but if I push the limits then quickly they too will become hot. At 500A I would need 84 watts to cool the x570 taichi vrm's. 71 watts @ 400A and 44watts @ 300A. This is a solid vrm but still can't complete with the top boards.
The TUF Gaming X570-Plus [Wi-Fi] has 3x SiC639 50A Power Stage by the spreadsheet which is the same as the Prime X570-Pro. ROG Crosshair VIII Hero [Wi-Fi] has more phases and 2x IR3555 60A Power Stage.
Focusing on the power delivery solution, ASUS equips the TUF X570-Plus with a 12+2 phase physical implementation.
ASUS is using a proprietary ASP1106G PWM controller in a 4+2 phase mode. Details for this controller are limited but it is likely a re-badged Intersil PWM.
Interestingly, given the rather limited 4+2 electrical phase control capability of the PWM, we do not see ASUS applying any PWM phase doublers. This is typical of what we have seen from ASUS motherboards recently, with the vendor arguing that ‘fattening up’ the quantity of electrical components per phase signal is more beneficial than doubling the phases via a dedicated logic IC.
As such, ASUS’ 12 CPU VCore phases are actually a 4×3 design with three lots of electrical components per single control phase. You can see which phases are working together by decoding the text on the PCB highlighting power phase mounting positions.
Focussing specifically on the 4×3, non-doubled CPU VCore power delivery system, ASUS is using a total of twelve Vishay SiC639 DrMOS power stages. These power stages are rated at ‘up to’ 50A of continuous current output just like we see from the SiC632 solutions and they look to be very slightly de-rated compared to the SiC634 alternatives. https://www.kitguru.net/components/...rm-temperature-analysis-luke-deep-dive/all/1/
The ASUS Crosshair VIII Hero is a 7+1 phase design.
The Maximus XI hero appears to be different and uses 2x SiC632. The voltage controller used for the Asus Hero XI is ASP1400 *(4+(2) referred to as a budget controller found on cheaper motherboards as a cost savings. Buildzoid recommends a better heatsink for this particular phase design, among other concerns.
They are not the same.
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