Here is ASUS' top of the line LGA2011 motherboard targeting the
gamer-overclocker market, the Republic of Gamers (ROG) Rampage IV
Extreme. This board offers all the expansion room and connectivity
you'll ever need, plus a wealth of nifty features that help overclockers
and ease incremental upgrades. To begin with, the Rampage IV Extreme
employs a strong digital PWM circuitry that supports heavy
voltage-assisted overclocking with Vdroop control.
The LGA2011 socket is wired to eight DDR3 DIMM slots (two per channel).
CPU and memory VRM areas are located along three sides of the socket,
all cooled by heatsinks that are connected by heat pipes. These VRM
heatsinks share heat with the one over the X79 PCH, which is actively
cooled by a fan.
Expansion slots include four PCI-Express 3.0 x16 (red), of which two are
x16-capable, and all are x8 capable, one PCI-Express 2.0 x4 (black,
wired to the PCH), and an x1 slot. Storage connectivity includes four
each of SATA 6 Gb/s (red) and SATA 3 Gb/s (black), and one eSATA, and a
power-eSATA (unknown datarate). There are eight USB 3.0 ports (four each
on the rear panel and front-panel headers). Surprisingly, there's only
one gigabit Ethernet connection, the other connectivity option is
Bluetooth, which plays a key role in some of the ROG-exclusive features
such as ROG Connect. For once, ASUS did away with the Creative X-Fi
soft-layer for its audio and the solution is pure Realtek ALC898 8+2
channel HDA codec (with Realtek driver).
Where do I even start with the toys overclockers get with this board?
OK, first, the LGA2011 socket is designed in such a way that its
Intel-spec retention bracket can be replaced by a custom ASUS-designed
one, that modifies the cooler mount holes to make the socket compatible
with LGA1366-ready coolers, so you can carry on with your expensive
LGA1366-ready water-block. Second, there is a strong VRM that's backed
by diagnostic phase and temperature LEDs, voltage direct-measurement
points, and a EPU chip that marshals the power phases. There is
redundant BIOS (in separate socketed serial EEPROM chips), with ASUS
ROG-exclusive UEFI firmware. Thirdly, power is drawn, apart from the
24-pin ATX and 8-pin EPS, by a 4-pin ATX (CPU power) and a 6-pin PCIe,
so electrical stability is maintained. The ROG connect feature lets you
monitor and overclock your board from Bluetooth-enabled smartphones
(hence the Bluetooth controller).
To top it off, every Rampage IV Extreme packs a free copy of Battlefield
3 Special Edition (bundles Physical Warfare and/or Return to Karkhand
DLC(s)).
Source: VR-Zone
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