ASRock Fatal1ty Z77 Professional In The Box

ASRock boxes either fall into one of two categories: either almost nothing or a lot of bang for your buck.  There could be reasons for this – either ASRock has overspent on the board and are trying to bring the cost down, or ASRock has under spent and want to justify the bringing the level of cost on the board up a notch by including everything under the sun to hit the next price point above.  Both can be construed as trying to squeeze more profit margins, or an actual genuine attempt to win over market share from the competitors.  Today with the Fatal1ty Z77 Professional, we get in the box:

Rear IO Panel
User Guide + Manual
Driver CD
Front USB 3.0 Panel + Rear Converter
3-slot SLI bridge
Six SATA connectors, locking
Two 4-pin molex to SATA power cables

On the most positive note, ASRock has included their combination USB 3.0 bay and SSD holder.  I love this bit of kit, which would probably retail for $15 on its own if not more.  Compared to the $230 ASUS P8Z77-V Pro board however, this ASRock at $230 does not include an add-in WiFi card.

Voltage Readings

After my first publication of OCCT voltage readings, a few readers responded with a more in-depth reasoning behind some of the results we were seeing.  With this in mind, I would like to re-describe what we are doing with this test, and how it comes about.

Much of what an enthusiast overclocker does is monitor CPU temperature and voltage.  Whatever settings a user places in the BIOS or OS is at the mercy of the motherboard - in terms of actually setting the values and reporting the values back.   As an enthusiast, we have to rely on what readings we get back, and hope that motherboard manufacturers are being honest with their readings.

Take CPU voltage.  What we as a user see in CPU-Z or OCCT is a time-averaged value that hides voltage ripple (if any) for power delivery.  It is very easy for a motherboard manufacturer to hide this value, or to disregard slight deviations and report a constant value to the user.  The CPU voltage reading can be taken at a variety of places on the power plane, which can vary between motherboards and manufacturers, meaning that each reading is essentially not comparable with the other.  Nevertheless, as an enthusiast, we will constantly compare value A with value B. 

Whether or not I can achieve 4.7 GHz with 1.175 volts on a particular board is inconsequential - your motherboard may perhaps produce the same result with a reading at 1.200 volts.  The only way to test the actual value is with consistent methodology is via an oscilloscope connected to similar points on each board.  This may sound like taking an OCCT reading is therefore redundant.

However, motherboards have settings relating to load line calibration.  As load is applied to the CPU, the voltage across the processor decreases (VDroop).  Load Line calibration essentially attempts to control this level of droop, by increasing voltage when voltage drops are detected away from a fixed value.  Manufacturers have different ideas on how to modify LLC with respect to load, or whether the level of modification should be controlled by the user.  Some manufacturers offer the option at a variety of levels, such that overclockers can be sure of the applied setting (even if it increases peak voltage, as explained by AnandTech in 2007).

By doing a full load OCCT test, we are essentially determining both how aggressive the motherboard is reporting the CPU voltage under load and how aggressive load line calibration is performing (from the point of view of the user without an oscilloscope or DVM).  If someone has one of the motherboards we have tested and you have a different one, variations in load voltage should describe the offset you may require for overclock comparisons.

ASRock has pulled a fast one on the Fatal1ty Z77 Professional.  So far on all the boards I have tested, default settings give load voltage around the 1.050 volt mark on the i7-3770K.  With the Fatal1ty Z77 Professional, the load voltage is almost 0.100 volts lower, at 0.956 volts.  This opens up a can of worms – is this standard across processors?  Will all processors still act fine at stock at this voltage?  I know from testing that the processor I have will run at stock at 0.900 volts set in the BIOS, but can ASRock be sure that all processors will do this?  It is a very interesting prospect.

  Reported Load Voltage / V
ASRock Fatal1ty Z77 Professional 0.956
ASRock Z77 Extreme4 1.050-1.058
ASUS P8Z77-V Deluxe 1.085
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro 1.090
Gigabyte Z77X-UD3H 1.067
MSI Z77A-GD65 1.020

Overclocking

Note: Ivy Bridge does not overclock like Sandy Bridge.  For a detailed report on the effect of voltage on Ivy Bridge (and thus temperatures and power draw), please read Undervolting and Overclocking on Ivy Bridge.

Automatic overclocking comes from the BIOS only, where we have ‘Advanced Turbo Mode 30’ and ‘Load Optimized CPU/GPU’ settings.  The former offers a preset of 4.7 GHz, while the latter gives another menu for 4.0 GHz to 4.8 GHz in 200 MHz increments (also as a series of presets).

Manual overclocking is performed primarily in the BIOS, where we have many of the normal CPU+memory speed/voltage options.  The only downside to these settings I found that was that I could not manually apply the XMP sub-timings of my DDR3-2400 9-11-11 memory kit, as ASRock had artificially limited the options of those timings.  My memory kit would only boot at XMP (with enhanced voltage) around 40% of the time, so I was sitting at my desk a lot hoping that it would boot correctly.

Automatic Overclock: Using the Advanced Turbo Mode 30 setting, the system applied a 47x multiplier on the CPU and 1600 MHz on the iGPU.  This was in conjunction with a +0.085 volt offset on the CPU (LLC Level 1) and +0.120 volt offset on the iGPU (LLC Level 2).  In the OS, this led to 1.272 volts on the CPU at load and a monstrous 102ºC on the CPU at load during PovRay.  I would not be happy running these settings.

With the ‘Load Optimized CPU Setting’ options, the following results were obtained:

- At ‘Turbo 4.0 GHz’, the CPU was at 1.168 volts on load which led to a peak 79ºC during PovRay and 80ºC during OCCT.
- At ‘Turbo 4.2 GHz’, the CPU was at 1.176 volts on load which led to a peak 80ºC during PovRay and 81ºC during OCCT.
- At ‘Turbo 4.4 GHz’, the CPU was at 1.192 volts on load which led to a peak 83ºC during PovRay and 85ºC during OCCT.
- At ‘Turbo 4.6 GHz’, the CPU was at 1.200 volts on load which led to a peak 86ºC during PovRay and OCCT.
- At ‘Turbo 4.8 GHz’, the CPU was at 1.240 volts on load which let to a memory error during PovRay (and 95ºC during load).

Manual Overclock: Our standard testing methodology for Ivy Bridge processors has been to test the minimum voltage for each multiplier on the CPU from 45x and up.  This was also performed on this board.  Apart from adjusting the CPU multiplier and voltage, the PLL Overvoltage option was also enabled.

- The 45x multiplier was stable at a minimum of 1.100 volts, showing 1.096 volts at load in the OS and reaching a peak temperature of 74ºC during PovRay and 75ºC during OCCT.
- The 46x multiplier was stable at a minimum of 1.125 volts, showing 1.128 volts at load in the OS and reaching a peak temperature of 77ºC during PovRay and 78ºC during OCCT.
- The 47x multiplier was stable at a minimum of 1.200 volts, showing 1.200 volts at load in the OS and reaching a peak temperature of 89ºC during PovRay and OCCT.
- The 48x multiplier was not stable even at 1.275 volts, giving 102ºC during PovRay as well as memory errors.

ASRock Fatal1ty Z77 Professional BIOS and Software Test Setup, Power Consumption, POST Time, Overclocks
Comments Locked

57 Comments

View All Comments

  • Chaitanya - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    I am wondering how many people actually use floppy drive in this day and age when OS can install RAID drivers off a USB thumb drive and motherboards can flash bios even without having a CPU installed.
  • shabby - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    How else will people make floppy music? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgfPYetWWJw
    Now wheres my printer port!
  • SlyNine - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    Thanks man, made my day!
  • MonkeyPaw - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    That is awesome. Seems like something at the end of a Portal game.
  • anirudhs - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    There used to be a time when booting into Linux was only possible using a floppy drive.
  • CharonPDX - Thursday, May 24, 2012 - link

    There used to be a time when booting into *ANY* OS was only possible using a floppy drive.

    Heck, Windows XP required a floppy drive to load storage drivers if you weren't using a supported storage controller. (Which could be worked around if you were really dedicated, but for the average home user...)

    But since Windows Vista, we have no legitimate reason for the floppy drive to be internal as opposed to USB.

    Many motherboard makers have a "legacy" motherboard available, that includes these things (plus serial and parallel ports,) for those customers that truly need them. But a gamer doesn't. I haven't *NEEDED* a floppy drive since at least 2006. Yes, I've *USED* one since, but a USB one works just fine for everything I've needed to use it for. Nearly the same for PATA. I can't think of any gamer that still has an PATA drive sitting around that they just *NEED* to use. Yeah, digging data off an old retired PATA drive is nice, but there are (SHOCK!) USB-to-PATA adapters that work just fine. (And since the absolute fastest PATA drives are barely equal to USB 2.0, the speed "hit" doesn't matter.)

    I have a vintage computer collection, and use PATA, SCSI, even ESDI hard drives; along with 1.44 MB floppies, and even all the way back to 5.25" single-sided floppies, on a regular basis.

    But I don't need support for any of them in my gaming PC. (Then again, I also bought the Abit AT7-MAX motherboard when it first came out, lacking PS/2, serial, and parallel ports when leaving them off was controversial. So maybe I'm just someone who is perfectly happy to ditch legacy on modern gear before others.)

    It would be one thing if most boards still had them, but they don't. I don't even get the inclusion of the PS/2 port on many "gaming" boards these days. Does anyone still use a PS/2 keyboard or mouse on their modern "gaming" system? Haven't all gamers moved on to new fancy laser mice? (Or whatever the fad-of-the-minute is.)
  • DanNeely - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    when all the previous generation of boards yanked pata/floppy support there were enough people sending protest letters to convince most of the mobo makers to add it back for at least a few models.

    Personally I suspect they would've been better off jointly designing a pata/floppy pcie 1x card for the legacy device brigade.
  • Lazlo Panaflex - Monday, May 21, 2012 - link

    Asrock has included IDE and floppy connectors in various boards since the Dual-VSTA days...this is nothing new. Plus, some people still have decent IDE stuff laying around (i.e. DVD burners). Some older versions of Ghost run off a floppy.
  • SlyNine - Sunday, May 20, 2012 - link

    The reason I bought the board was because AsRocks name is a much better commodity then it was back in the A64 days. I bought it because I AsRocks name had proven itself, and I needed a motherboard with a hella lot of HDD ports. This build has been on 24/7 and up for weeks at a time before rebooting for 6 months so I'm glad I got the motherboard afterall. All the Fatality 1 did was make me not want it. But again needed the 10 HDD ports.

    I don't care about the Fatality 1 on the board at all. Used to play a ton of FPS's and I'm very very good at them. To bad I moved to a place with crappy internet, and was forced to buy a LCD. Makes all the difference in the world!
  • AssBall - Monday, May 21, 2012 - link

    So you moved somewhere with crappy internet and need 10 drives spinning all the time on an ATX board... because that's not pointless, inefficient, or unrealistic at all....

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now