Отзывы о Материнская плата ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0
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ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0?
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It has cooled VRM, two M.2 slots, only 1 is Ultra M.2 (MVNe), lots of connectivity (USB, USB 3.0, USB3.1 USB type C, HDMI, DVI, VGA)
A good thing about this MOBO is that it comes Ryzen 3000 Ready.
There are 2 things I wish I knew before I bought it:
1.- I think the BIOS-UEFI does not have all features I have seen in other MOBOS.
2.- The RGB control on this bord is not what I was expecting it is very wonky.
Pros:
Enough SATA ports for up to 4 HDDs/SSDs for starters.
2 M.2 Slots (1 NVMe x 1 Sata 3)
Enough space for GPU and Pcie Wifi
Can do mild overclocking (have 2600x at 4ghz with 1.2375v and -100mv vcore offset, never BSOD'd once)
Cons:
3+3 phase VRMs
Don't hard overclock, especially with 2nd/3rd gen Ryzen 5/7 x variants (stated above)
If you have a SATA M.2 installed on the SATA III M.2 slot, you lose a SATA port.
If you have a 2600x on this board. Don't use PBO (Precision Boost Overdrive), stick with a mild overclock of something like 4ghz at 1.2375v with a vcore offset of -100mv. Or stock settings.
Mine runs stable and never exceeds 1.14v. Have touched the VRMs multiple times whilst in stress tests for an hour, they never got hot and you still get the respected performance whilst not cooking VRMs.
If you want a better motherboard for hard overclocks, try and find a used b450 Tomahawk for under $80 through Amazon Warehouse. You'll have a better time and will get the most performance out of the 2600x on a Tomahawk. If you don't plan on overclocking, then this motherboard is fine at stock, you can still undervolt the cpu if need be. My Gammaxx 400 (extra fan attached) keeps my 2600x at around 35c max in ambient of 14c with current OC settings.
Pay attention to where the motherboard tells you to install the RAM modules for best performance - initially I just bunged them into the 2 slots closest to the CPU, and was only able to get them to run at DDR4-2133 with no XMP option available. Then I re-read the manual, and noted that it is explicit about installing dual-channel memory into the 2nd and 4th slots (where the 1st slot is the one closest to the CPU). I moved them, fired it up again, selected the XMP profile in the BIOS, and bingo! DDR4-3000 operating perfectly.
I am a fan of ASRock motherboards for AMD systems, so I am slightly biased - I have used them before, and currently have ASRock B450 boards in both my Ryzen systems, and so far I have had no issues and have been very happy with them.
Either way, works perfectly as a replacement for my DOA MSI B450M GAMING PLUS (which did require a bios update, then failed to post).
I did have some issues fitting my RAM in after installing a stock AMD cooler (Patriot Viper). Although it wasn’t too big of an issue, if you have exceptionally y’all RAM, you may need to install it before installing a lower profile cooler.
The UEFI BIOS feels snappy and is really easy to navigate.
Overall, it feels like a solid board and is laid out great!
I have spent hours trying to this motherboard to work right. I eventually just bought another board from gigabyte and all my problems went away. Shocker.
In my experience at least with this motherboard/parts combo, Out Of The Box the way the 3900x uses voltage (1.45v) when boosting and in turn the way WRAITH PRISM cooler responds is a bit obnoxious, like the fans on a graphics card having driver issues spontaneously ramping up and down. Of course all this behavior can be tuned in BIOS to your liking, but just thought I should mention it.
So a couple of road bumps along the way, but I'd still recommend it.
Wish there was a wifi m2 slot, but can make do without.
If you're building a Ryzen 1st or 2nd gen machine, I would definitely recommend this board due to the features it offers at the price point. Neither have failed me yet.
05/12/20 Update: Now I have one rocking a Ryzen 5 3600X with a BIOS update to 3.50. No issues.
05/20 to 10/20 Update: Transplanted the motherboard into an HTPC case so I can fit into a smaller space in my entertainment system and game on my 65" TV. So upgraded to a GTX 1660 6GB card (because of small form factor) and 32GB (4X8GB) or G.Skill Trident RGB RAM DDR4 2400 overclocked to 3200 that I had sitting around. Everything worked fine and all games were buttery smooth.
Being the eternal tinkerer, I can't leave well enough alone so I decided to max out the RAM at 64GB with some G.Skill Aegis (4X16GB) DDR4 3200 I had laying around for a different build (workstation), I needed to test the RAM and make sure it worked and to run Memtest before the return window closed. I pulled the 4 sticks of overclocked G.Skill Trident RGB out, and tossed 4 sticks of the G.Skill Aegis RAM in....wouldn't boot up :(
This is a common issue I have run into when building rigs, my usual solution when building a new rig or introducing new RAM if it doesn't boot with all RAM installed is to start off with 1 stick in the primary RAM slot, which worked in this case. I let it boot into BIOS, verify the RAM, then shut it down. For testing purposes, I did this with the remaining sticks of RAM, had to make sure they all worked. Then I installed two sticks of RAM, booted into BIOS, shut it down. Tossed in the next two sticks of RAM, booted into BIOS, set XMP, reboot into windows and wham, I'm in.
Because I can't leave well enough alone, I went back into BIOS and tried overclocking the RAM....NOPE - would not overclock showing the limitations of cheap G.Skill Aegis RAM versus the much more expensive G.Skill Trident RGB sticks which can be cranked up. Still have the 64GB of RAM installed (definitely overkill), works great so I guess I'll keep them in since the workstation is getting different RAM anyway. So far so good, great MoBo, all the addressable RGB still works great (Wraith Spire LED, Corsair RGB Fans, LED strips), will probably buy another board for another build to use up spare parts I have laying around, like the G.Skill Trident RGB sticks I just pulled out. It has kinda raised in price a little bit though (thanks to Linus Tech Tips), so I have looked at other MoBo's in the same price range, they just don't have the feature set so looks like I'll pick up #3.
Update 11/24/20
I like this board so much that I bought another one. Now I have covered 1st, 2nd and 3rd gen Ryzen on it. By the way, this latest one had the sticker that it was 3rd Gen Ryzen ready, but I stuck a 2700X in this one. I added a few pics, Darkflash Mesh case, Neon lights really make it pop, why not, it has two 12v RGB headers and a 5v RGB header. This build was to mop up parts I had laying around.
AMD 7 3700X $299
ASRock B450 M-HDV R4.0 $65
PNY GeForce RTX 2060 Super $390
Timetech Hynix 16GB DDR 3200mhz $60
Sbrent 512GB M.2 2280 SSD $80
EVGA 750w $59
darkFlash mid-tower $95
Windows 10 Pro x64 $100
Total after tax is about $1300. That's a great bargain.
I researched hard through Google, YouTube, and other reviewers on any B450 motherboard to find a solution for getting my ram clocked at 3200mhz and hardly anyone gave a resolution. I did finally found one by following this tutorial on YouTube by searching "How to Manually Tune Your DDR4 Memory For Ryzen." Basically I use two softwares in order to figure how to clock my ram correctly, since I am not an expert, which are Thaiphoon Burner and Dram Calculator for Ryzen.
This worked for me, so I hope that helps you if you are encountering the same problem too. If I have help you in anyway, please click the "Helpful" button. Thank you!
That being said, it lacks a few things my MSI matx gaming board had. I got the MSI board on sale around Christmas for $50. Unfortunately my MSI board is currently on an RMA so I bought this one while I wait.
Things that are lacking that I like about my MSI mobo:
RGB lighting headers, better OC application, USB-C connection. Fan channels are adjustable via app or auto temp profile.
The most annoying thing to me about this Asrock mobo is the 2nd fan channel is a 3 pin which means you can't adjust fan speed. If you like your case fans running at max sounding like a jet engine all the time then no worries, for me I chose to run a 4 way splitter from fan 1 so I could create a cooling profile. This is really my biggest gripe about the board so far, otherwise it's a fine and stable board for a 2700x OC'd to 4.2.
I got this board because it wasn't fancy. No RGB, no weirdly placed heat sinks to give the illusion they're actually cooling something. All board, I do wish I would have gotten a board with integrated WIFI. As I did initially have to buy an additional WIFI adapter. Keep that in mind as that is $15 which could put you closer towards a Fatal1ty B450 with included WIFI.
Here are it's very basic features:
AMD AM4
Supports DDR4 3200+ (Overclockable)
1 PCIe 3.0 x16, 1 PCIe 2.0 x16, 1 PCIe 2.0 x1
AMD Quad CrossFireX
Graphics Output: HDMI, DVI-D, D-Sub
7.1 CH HD Audio (Realtek ALC892 Codec)
ELNA Audio Caps
4 SATA3, 1 Ultra M.2 (PCIe Gen3 x4), 1 M.2 (SATA3)
2 USB 3.1 Gen2 (Rear Type-A+C), 6 USB 3.1 Gen1 (2 Front, 4 Rear)
Realtek Gigabit LAN
Although there are plenty of people who have, I've had no issues with any of my upgrade components posting right out of the box. At first, I did cross-reference the support list frequently to make sure I'd have no issues. When I started noticing it that pretty much anything you stick in or onto this MBD, the B450 will take it (at least for me) and will at least allow it to post to the point you can update the BIOS after installing.
To no surprise, the last BIOS update (P4.20) did support Ryzen 9 3900XT. And speaking of BIOS options, don't expect anything fancy here. It is simple and straightforward. Being that it is washed of many options it does however navigate extremely easy. Something beginners, novices and professionals will appreciate. But, obviously that does leave some options at the wayside. Keep in mind this is a budget board and that is to be expected.
If you're looking for a great sub $75 do it all board, I highly recommend the ASRock B450M Pro4. You won't go wrong!
Just consider if only 1 pci express 16 and 2 ram slots are good for your needs
-CoolerMaster Masterbox M600L
-ASRock B450M-HDV R4.0 Socket AM4/ AMD Promontory B450/ DDR4/ SATA3&USB3.1/ M.2/ A&GbE/MicroATX Motherboard
-AMD Ryzen 3 3200G
-OLOy Memory DDR4 RAM 16GB (2x8GB) 3000 MHz CL16 1.35V 288-Pin Desktop Gaming
-Crucial 120GB SSD
-uphere 3-Pack Long Life Computer Case Fan 120mm Cooling Case Fan for Computer Cases Cooling 15LED Red,15R3-3
-Apevia RAPTOR450W ATX Power Supply
-Kingston 16GB DataTraveler 104 DT104 USB 2.0 Flash Drive Model DT104/16GB 50, 30MB/s Read, 5MB/s Write (DT104/16GB)
I will update this if AsRock ever gets around to responding to my email, but I highly doubt they will. Avoid this board











