07-27-2017
12:49 AM
- last edited on
03-05-2024
09:55 PM
by
ROGBot
07-27-2017 06:31 AM
08-10-2017 10:15 PM
Syaoran wrote:
I am a bit surprised that there aren't more E-ATX motherboards out there geared towards gamers and enthusiasts.*It is nice to see an E-ATX motherboard come out that I would actually want if it wasn't for the many issues plaguing the Asus Crosshair VI line. The Crosshair VI Hero has more than enough issues to make me bitter enough from the lack of progress in stabilizing the board to even consider another Asus product. The extra fan headers are a good example. There are issues with the Hero where the CPU and AIO headers shut down for no reason. Why add more on basically an identical board when Asus can't even ensure the ones on the smaller board all work consistently?! With the extra room, the layout could have been improved more. The M.2 slot hidden under the heatsink seems silly, especially when the chipset gets quite hot. The 24 pin power connector turned 90 degrees is a nice touch but why not do the same with the 8 and 4 pin connectors on the top left area of the motherboard? Where are the other premium features to justify in the increased price? A 5 gigabit ethernet port would have been nice. I am not even going to get started on what is wrong with the sound and the lack of DTS and Dolby. Asus could have and should have done better but they didn't!
07-27-2017 07:47 AM
Ocelot wrote:
is there a big difference to the crosshair vi hero? I mean performance wise or only more features?
07-27-2017 11:31 AM
Syaoran wrote:
Performance should be identical to the Crosshair VI Hero and Crosshair VI Hero (WiFi AC). It is essentially the same board with more fan headers, a slightly updated version of the audio (which still lacks Dolby and DTS), 90 degree 24 pin power connector, a second M.2 slot under the chipset heatsink, the IO panel is attached to the board, and the board is physically about an inch or so wider.
08-04-2017 11:23 PM
Syaoran wrote:
Performance should be identical to the Crosshair VI Hero and Crosshair VI Hero (WiFi AC). It is essentially the same board with more fan headers, a slightly updated version of the audio (which still lacks Dolby and DTS), 90 degree 24 pin power connector, a second M.2 slot under the chipset heatsink, the IO panel is attached to the board, and the board is physically about an inch or so wider.
08-05-2017 05:23 AM
AQUASTEVAE wrote:
performance is NOT identical to the Hero. The Extreme is much more powerful, and overclocks much better. It has several advantages over the Hero. Two m.2 slots, two usb 3.0 headers on the board, more fan control headers, better placement of the Qcode readout/start/reset/retry buttons, a molex at the bottom of the board better wifi and bluetooth built in and yes, even better rgb. It also has an attached faceplate on the rear I/O, and rgb audio ports. Reviewers are getting their highest clock speeds on this board of any am4 mobo's available. And I absolutely love the 90 degree 24 pin and 3.0 headers. So yes, there are major differences.
08-05-2017 07:50 AM
Syaoran wrote:
What reviewers get and what the general public get when buying are usually two different things. The Crosshair VI Hero was known for being the best overclocker before the Extreme. The difference between the two is still very little, including in overclocking.
08-06-2017 06:22 AM
AQUASTEVAE wrote:
And what evidence do you have to back that up? Have you had one in your hands? What you are saying is so untrue. The reviewers are regular people like you and I. They are not the companies. Now, if you said that what most companies claimed was different than what the public gets, then we could agree. But what you are saying here is pure tripe, because reviewers are part of the general public. I find I get nearly identical results that most of the reviewers I watch get, using the same hardware. It varies a bit, of course, because of different silicon. But generally the same.
So I don't mean to be offensive, but your point is just flat out wrong, and I'm not even sure why you would say such a thing. We have to base decisions off of trial and error and observation. And thus far, everything we have observed is that the Extreme board is much more powerful than the Hero. And btw, there is an entire history to back this up as well. Can you name one Hero version of any mobo that was as powerful as the Extreme version of that same mobo? Not one... There is absolutely no evidence to the contrary.