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Review: ASRock Z170 Extreme 6

by Tarinder Sandhu on 16 September 2015, 15:31

Tags: AsRock, Intel (NASDAQ:INTC)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qacujr

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Testing methodology

Comparison Motherboard Configurations

 
ASRock Z170 Extreme 6
Asus Z170-K
MSRP
BIOS
1.20
0323
Chipset Revision
Intel Z170 (Intel 10.1.1.1019 driver)
CPU
Intel Core i7-6700K
Memory
Corsair Vengeance LPX 2800 16GB DDR4 (4 x 4GB)
Memory Timings
15-15-15-36-2T @ 2,133MHz
Discrete Graphics
Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 (353.62)
System Drive
SK hynix Canvas SC300 (512GB)
Chassis
Corsair Graphite 600T
Power Supply
Corsair AX760i
Operating System
Windows 10 (64-bit)

CPU and Memory Benchmarks

HEXUS PiFast Our number-crunching benchmark stresses a single core by calculating Pi to 10m places
Cinebench R15 Using Cinebench's multi-CPU render, this cross-platform benchmark stresses all cores
Handbrake 0.9.9.1 Free-to-use video encoder that stresses all CPU cores (64-bit)

Gaming Benchmarks

Grand Theft Auto DX11, 1,920x1,080, very high quality
Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor DX11, 1,920x1,080, ultra quality
Total War: Rome II DX11, 1,920x1,080, ultra quality

Miscellaneous Benchmarks

Overclocking and Power Maximum CPU and memory frequencies, plus power consumption when gaming

Notes

We've historically had a large number of benchmarks detailing performance between chipsets. Due to the levels of integration in the processor practically all modern motherboards benchmark at the same levels, give or take a per cent or two, so 15 graphs showing near-identical performance isn't what you (or we) want to see.

We're running nine benchmarks - three CPU, three gaming, three storage - to see if the boards perform at the expected levels. This is more of a sanity check than anything else. Of rather more importance is how well the board(s) are able to overclock the CPU and Corsair DDR4 memory.