luke@
15-02-2021, 18:14
Salve,
devo assemblare un pc con una motherboard ITX con un 10600k
non ho ancora deciso se rimpiazzare il ryzen 5600x o affiancare il 10600k, comunque sia non farei overclock e vedo che ci sono tre tipologie di asus strix itx su socket 1200
h470 ad euro 235
b460 ad euro 175
z490 ad euro 315
ora i prezzi possono essere migliori altrove, ma non importa, queste mobo sono vendute da uno shop di cui mi fido, e poi mi trovo all'estero
allora non userò un case con usb c frontale, quindi la b460 che non ha l'usb c frontale non è un problema
se non erro tutte le motherboard hanno l'ethernet INTEL, fondamentale per me, per non avere quella spazzatura di realtek
per la scheda audio uso due xonar u7, quindi anche li' che sia realtek o una realtek mascherata da supreme fx non mi interessa, la disabilito subito da bios
ma tra le tre mobo, volendo risparmiare, mi consigliereste la b460 o "paga" troppo rispetto alle altre?
la motherboard non avrà upgrade di processore, conto di metterci il 10600k e basta (non il modello KF perchè mi serve l'IGP)
quali sono le vostre opinioni in merito?
ps: ho trovato questo riferimento, è veritieroB boards were originally intended for small business use. The onboard headers tailored more towards storage use, lack of multiple fan headers, even the factory software was setup more for raid/fast cache storage with smaller SSDs etc.
H boards were originally intended for the average homeowner. Grandma's web surfer, HTPC, 10 year olds gaming habits etc. They came with most of the bells and whistles that you'd find on the Z boards, but performance wasn't really intended to be anything more intensive than plug and play.
Z boards were originally intended for Enthuziasts. Overclocked, boundry pushers, gotta-have-its but no idea what it does type ppl. Z boards have everything in the bios unlocked and available for tweaking, tinkering, bluescreening etc. As long as the cpu supports such.
Today, it's all about the Bells and Whistles. B has minimal, it's a serviceable mobo that usually has just enough to cover most ppl actual needs. H has almost everything, but tweaking is limited to lowering, not raising beyond stock. Z is king, if it's a Bell or Whistle, it has it. The more expensive the board, the more it has.
Nobody Needs more than a B. Most ppl prefer more. Some ppl insist on the more from a Z.
If you never intend on any OC or uber performance tweaks, a B or H is fine. If you have a locked cpu, B or H is fine. If there's Any consideration or deep thoughts or flipping coins about OC, get a Z. It's better to pay a little more up front, just in case, than have to replace the mobo later when bitten by the OC bug and a pocket full of regrets.
grazie
devo assemblare un pc con una motherboard ITX con un 10600k
non ho ancora deciso se rimpiazzare il ryzen 5600x o affiancare il 10600k, comunque sia non farei overclock e vedo che ci sono tre tipologie di asus strix itx su socket 1200
h470 ad euro 235
b460 ad euro 175
z490 ad euro 315
ora i prezzi possono essere migliori altrove, ma non importa, queste mobo sono vendute da uno shop di cui mi fido, e poi mi trovo all'estero
allora non userò un case con usb c frontale, quindi la b460 che non ha l'usb c frontale non è un problema
se non erro tutte le motherboard hanno l'ethernet INTEL, fondamentale per me, per non avere quella spazzatura di realtek
per la scheda audio uso due xonar u7, quindi anche li' che sia realtek o una realtek mascherata da supreme fx non mi interessa, la disabilito subito da bios
ma tra le tre mobo, volendo risparmiare, mi consigliereste la b460 o "paga" troppo rispetto alle altre?
la motherboard non avrà upgrade di processore, conto di metterci il 10600k e basta (non il modello KF perchè mi serve l'IGP)
quali sono le vostre opinioni in merito?
ps: ho trovato questo riferimento, è veritieroB boards were originally intended for small business use. The onboard headers tailored more towards storage use, lack of multiple fan headers, even the factory software was setup more for raid/fast cache storage with smaller SSDs etc.
H boards were originally intended for the average homeowner. Grandma's web surfer, HTPC, 10 year olds gaming habits etc. They came with most of the bells and whistles that you'd find on the Z boards, but performance wasn't really intended to be anything more intensive than plug and play.
Z boards were originally intended for Enthuziasts. Overclocked, boundry pushers, gotta-have-its but no idea what it does type ppl. Z boards have everything in the bios unlocked and available for tweaking, tinkering, bluescreening etc. As long as the cpu supports such.
Today, it's all about the Bells and Whistles. B has minimal, it's a serviceable mobo that usually has just enough to cover most ppl actual needs. H has almost everything, but tweaking is limited to lowering, not raising beyond stock. Z is king, if it's a Bell or Whistle, it has it. The more expensive the board, the more it has.
Nobody Needs more than a B. Most ppl prefer more. Some ppl insist on the more from a Z.
If you never intend on any OC or uber performance tweaks, a B or H is fine. If you have a locked cpu, B or H is fine. If there's Any consideration or deep thoughts or flipping coins about OC, get a Z. It's better to pay a little more up front, just in case, than have to replace the mobo later when bitten by the OC bug and a pocket full of regrets.
grazie