Отзывы о Материнская плата ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0
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ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0?
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spins up, no beeps and nothing else. Getting another sent to me, so I'll update
2x8GB OLOy 3000mhz RGB RAM
AMD Ryzen 3 2200G
Kingston A2000 256GB M.2 NVMe SSD
Corsair 450W modular PSU
CoolerMaster Q300L mATX case
It’s simple to install, although I’d have liked 4 RAM slots, but tbh I’d probably never use them.
The install went mostly smoothly - the CPU tray on the back is secure and it was easy to remove the clips to install the stock heatsink. Uses a 4 pin CPU connector, so CPU upgrade and overclocking/volting options are limited. While I knew about the power and RAM slots going into this because I did my research, it’s still a 4 star product at best due to these limitations. HOWEVER...
My biggest gripe, and worth docking an extra star, was the utterly subpar IO shield. It’s flimsy and bent outward a lot when pushing it into the case with minimal pressure, so now it has a convex shape. Seriously, it felt like I was pushing on tinfoil. In addition, the spring clips designed to put pressure against the motherboard were not bent in enough, and three of them were intruding into the HDMI port when I installed the motherboard in the case. Had I not noticed this, I could have damaged the HDMI port, cable, or worse, shorted the whole thing out when I booted up for the first time.
Since I didn’t want to remove the whole thing to bend the clips back inward, I just grabbed some pliers and bent them back and forth until they snapped off.
An extra 25 cents spent on a sturdier and better made IO shield would have prevented this. In 2020, even on budget systems, IO shields should be of better quality than the ones I used to get in 1995.
That said, Linux install was relatively painless aside from som quirkiness supporting the onboard AMD GPU; I had to try several distros before landing in Linux Mint, which works fine. Considering that other Linux users have had success with the 2200G in various distros, I have to wonder how much of this is due to AMD, and how much is due to this motherboard’s iGPU output implementation. Since Linux support can be dicey, it’s not worth docking another star, but beware if you plan to use this in a cheap Linux build.
A major pro for this board is the low cost, which allows you to get into PC building/gaming with lower overhead and leaves plenty of room in the budget for upgrades down the road. The cost savings achieved with this board went straight into a better graphics card.
I was a bit unhappy with the packaging however, amazon felt it was appropriate to simply slap a shipping label on the product retail packaging. Motherboards are fairly notorious from arriving DOA, I've had many over the course of the past decade arrive dead. I was really worried that this product would be dead since it didn't have any shipping protection at all.
Build:
Excellent build quality, everything laid out nicely, lots of fan power headers, sensible layout. Final configuration included a 480GB NVME drive, two 2TB Western Digital Caviars in soft-RAID-1 configuration, Nvidia GTX670 GPU, Ryzen 1700 CPU, and 16GB of Crucial 2400 work-horse DDR4 (two-by-eight).
Install:
The CPU and RAM installed on the first try, and POSTed on the first try. I moved the NVME drive over from the Intel build and bam... in business! Windows 10 updated all the drivers and the system was up and running. I'd say from the box to POST, I probably spent about 35 minutes on this build. USB3 worked... Ethernet worked... everything worked... no surprises.
Other thoughts:
Manual seems to be printed in like 4pt font in places. Not a show-stopper, but a few times I had to take a picture of the jumper diagrams with my phone and zoom in... again, minor issue and not a show-stopper. In retrospect, next time, I'll pull the manual PDF onto a laptop and use it instead.
Verdict:
Buy it.
ASUS ROG Strix B450-F Gaming
AMD Ryzen 5 3600 6-Core, 12-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor with Wraith Stealth Cooler
When I decided to upgrade the other two systems, the motherboard-CPU combo was no longer available, so I tried to find a comparable motherboard that could be mated with the Ryzen 5 3600. The ASRock B450M PRO4 AM4 had good reviews, and was less expensive, so I opted for this one. Note that both the ASUS and ASRock motherboards claim to support 3200 MHz DDR4 memory.
ASUS: Powered by 2nd generation AMD Ryzen AM4 and 7th generation Athlon processors to maximize connectivity and speed with dual NVMe M.2, USB 3.1 Gen2, gigabit LAN and up to 64 Gigabytes of DDR4 (3200 Megahertz)
from https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B07FKTZC4M/
The ASUS manual also specifically states that the following memory modules are supported: 4 x DIMM max. 64 GB, DDR4 3200(O.C.) / 3000(O.C.) / 2933(O.C.) / 2800(O.C.) / 2666 / 2400 / 2133 MHz, un-buffered memory
from: https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/C1iEgPZSvxS.pdf
ASRock: Memory 4x DDR4-3200+(OC)/2933/2667/2400/2133 DIMM Slots Dual Channel ECC Non-ECC Unbuffered Max Capacity of 64GB (AMD Ryzen series CPUs (Pinnacle Ridge))
So I bought two of these motherboards, along with 2 AMD Ryzen 5 3600, and two set of 2x16 TEAMGROUP T-Force Dark Z DDR4 32GB Kit (2 x 16GB) 3200MHz
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B07WRR3Q33/
I installed everything in one board, and found that the computer while booting, was emitting beeping sounds. This happened whether I had 1 or 2 sticks of memory on the board. When I removed both sticks, the beeping went away, but of course, the computer won't finish booting with no memory.
I then took the two sticks of memory and put them into the first computer I upgraded. The computer booted fine, recognized all 32 GB of memory and loaded the OS.
Bottom line - this motherboard does not support 3200 MHz DDR4 RAM (at least not in the configuration I received it) so I am going back to a known quantity. I am returning both of the ASRock motherboards, and replacing them with ASUS TUF (I need an mATX and the ROG is a full ATX size).
I will still give it 4 stars (one star docked for their BIOS issues). Board quality is excellent. Overclockability is excellent. The VRMs have proper heatsinks but don't overdo it with extra fans. Its a nice micro-atx motherboard. I will be throwing a Zen 2 CPU into it as soon as they come out.
-Matt
UPDATE! I successfully popped a 3900X into this motherboard. Be sure to update your BIOS first! This particular motherboard with its latest BIOS took the 3900X without any serious issues and will push 150W into the CPU socket, so it does a good job running it. Also, with a Zen 2 CPU you *can* now set the PPT power cap (which is the best way to match your system's cooling capability to the CPU). It's a bit hit or miss finding the PPT field that actually does something, but it works. Its in CBS/NBIO and.. futz I can't reboot right now but it isn't the PPT setting in the XFR sub-menu, it's in another sub-menu under NBIO. You'll find it. Always verify with a kill-a-watt meter. I do NOT recommend trying to overclock with these early BIOSes. If you are reading this review two months or later after the Zen 2 release, the BIOS is probably fine.
Increasing from 4 stars to 5 stars.
I’m happy with install, features and performance so far but hard to trust a product that first shipped DOA, and replacement is not in “new” condition.
1 star for now. 1st one was DOA, working power supply but absolutely nothing when trying to turn on. No PSU fan soon no cpu fan spin, notta.
It happens so I will update when I get my replacement, as usual amazon is fantastic about replacing a defective item.
So far I really do like the layout, it pairs so perfectly with my Coolermaster Master Box q300L cable management will be super simple, and I love how the SATA connectors are at 90 degree angle I’ll let you know how the replacement works.
I’d say avoid it if you don’t have the time or patience so far.
I will look for a different B450 board and return this one
That is, until it starts giving you trouble. My system now randomly shuts down all the time. Tested for software and hardware issues and in the end I could only pinpoint the issue down to the motherboard. Something that I should have suspected from the beginning, considering that the system would not boot if I plugged into one of it's USB 3 connectors.
I would not recommend buying the "cheap Asus" if you are looking for a motherboard that will last you longer than a year.
It has 2 fan headers which ain't bad if you're going for a basic build. You can add an AIO but at that point you're no longer budget building and just get a Tomahawk.
It also has a 3 pin and 4 pin rgb headers. ASRock has a program you can download to control them from your desktop.
In all not a bad buy if you want a basic setup with a little bit of flair. Just remember ALL B450 boards won't support the new Zen 3 chips coming out in fall.
Edit: Add pic of the rig I built. I'm running g. Skill 3200 ram. I overclocked my Ryzen 5 1600 AF to 3.8mhz stable. I'm actually impressed with the ASRock Utility app which you can get on their website. I also figured out how to control rbg with ASRock rbg app.
A great buy at under $80.
- native USB-C Port
- 4 DIMM slots
- 2 M.2 Slots
- 2 16x and 1 1x PCI-E Slots
- 4 SATA ports
- 5 USB-A 3.0 ports
But, it comes shipped with its BIOS ver. 3.60, which phases out support for the Pinnacle, Raven, Summit, and Bristal Ridge architectures, which means only Athlon (good luck) and Ryzen 3rd Gen CPUs will be able to even post. And ASRock doesn't even have a Firmware Flashback function unless you submit it to ASRock themselves, wait possibly weeks for them to flash a new version, when instead you could get a slightly less feature-rich AM4 board from a local electronics store for about a sliver of the time.
Also, rumor has it that if you have an M.2 plugged in whatsoever, you cannot boot from SATA. Can't confirm this personally, but there's definitely a handful of others who have.
I got this for my very techy step-father for Christmas, since before he was only running a 4th gen i7, only to quickly be let down since his Ryzen 5 2600 couldn't work on it, and was quickly refunded.
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).











