Отзывы о Материнская плата ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0
393 отзывов пользователей o ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0
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ASRock H510M-HVS R2.0?
Поделитесь своим опытом и помогите другим сделать правильный выбор
- + Достойная бюджетная материнская плата, для десктопов начального уровня
- + Качество
- - Нет
- + Все отлично, работает норм
- + Нормальная карта за адекватные деньги
- - Не обнаружил
- + топ за свои деньги
First off, the price is great, why pay double for something just because the box says "gaming"?
My Ryzen 1600 was able to OC to 3.9ghz, and my ram was able to go to 3466mhz easily.
The bios is clean with all the options you need, and mine shipped updated so you CAN use 3rd Gen ryzen if you'd like.
Good things: supports more RAM sticks than listed on ASROCK website, and my Ryzen5 2600X easily clocks to 4Ghz without me doing anything.
Conclusion: good budget choice for Ryzen chips, better than expected.
First of all, it does NOT support AHCI M.2 SSDs in either slot. I had one of those kicking around and I decided I'd use it and defer buying a new NVMe unit for later. The description says it supports "PCIe" and "SATA" M.2. drives so I figured no problem. I spent the better part of a day on this, because Windows never had any problem detecting, formatting, or copying files to this drive. The UEFI, on the other hand, wouldn't even launch with the SSD plugged in until I disabled the CSM. Disabling this allowed me to access the UEFI with this drive connected, but no amount of toying with the settings would convince the UEFI to consider the (formatted and Windows-installed) drive as a possible boot option, though it did list it as an attached device. I decided to try a new NVMe drive and it immediately worked perfectly. "Well, that was an annoying waste of time", I thought, "but if it supports NVMe that was my ultimate goal so I suppose I'll live with that."
Proceeding on with the NVMe drive, I discover that the GbE NIC is throwing "Code 10" errors in Windows. Their driver fetch tool in the UEFI had no problem downloading the driver installer (suggesting that the NIC works at a basic level), but it would not run in Windows. Manually installing several different versions of the driver didn't resolve this, nor did permuting that with various relevant BIOS settings. After trying everything under the sun, I finally gave up. Whether the GbE NIC is defective or I'm simply unable to figure out the Windows driver situation, it's simply not worth my time.
I was also unable to get it to talk to my Intel chipset PCIe wifi card (though I didn't try especially hard, I was about ready to return the thing at this point) so I was never able to run Windows update to see if that would the GbE NIC issue.
The build quality of this board is subpar, also. In the amount of messing around it required me to do I observed that the RAM and PCIe sockets were already losing insertion force (whereas on the Gigabyte board I had nearby, which has seen much higher insertion counts on the PCIe, the sockets are still firm and feel new).
I have no doubt that plenty of folks don't have the issues I did, but nevertheless every step of this left me with a strong impression of barely-functional implementation and poor documentation. For me it simply isn't worth the gamble of time. I would recommend sticking with a more reputable brand.
update, a year later and still going strong. It's still fast.
I have two fans, one that came with case (3-pin) in back, and one in the front (pwm). I set the silent option, and it was really quiet and cool. After a couple of weeks, I went in and adjusted the fan curves to run all my fans a little slower. This is an office-work PC, so most of the time, it doesn't have much load, so I figured a little quieter wouldn't hurt. But the stock silent setting was fine already.
The a-tuning software is quite easy to use, but so is the bios, so I stick with that. It is nice to be able to use the a-tuning to mess around with settings before going to the bios to set things "for real."
This is a very simple system, so ymmv. I only have an m2 SSD on the mobo and no separate video card. As I add things, I'll come back and edit if I run into problems or continue to have smooth sailing. But, for now, I'd say this a good mobo for a beginner to start with.
Everything went together well, the board's compact size made it easy to slide into my existing computer case without removing other components. Fired right up.
The board comes with overclocking menus and abilities in BIOS. But I wouldn't bother. Unlike most boards that allow overclocking, this one has no "failure to boot" reset feature. If you make an OC change in BIOS that prevents boot up, then you are going to have to use the CMOS jumper on the motherboard to clear it. Made worse is that the slot for the video card is right on the edge of the motherboard. It's impossible to get to the clear CMOS jumper without removing the video card if using a smaller case (which most people would be using if wanting a micro ATX motherboard) And the SATA motherboard connectors are also right in line with the video card. So if you use a full size video card, the only way to get to the SATA connectors (say if one comes loose or you add another drive) is to pull the video card.
The motherboard also only has two memory slots. That really shouldn't count as too much the negative. Just be aware and order the amount of memory you want - with two sticks - up front. For an extra $15 ASRock makes the B450 Pro4 motherboard that has four memory slots and two video card slots, one further located further up from the edge of the board so the video card out of the way of way of CMOS jumper. Looks like a full size video card would still hang over the SATA connectors though.
If I had to do it over again, I'd still buy this board. Price is right and I didn't plan on overclocking anyway. MSI makes a similar board at the same price. But reviews here indicate a higher DOA rate with the MSI board.
Build is this MB, Ryzen 5 3600X, 8GB crucial DDR4, Radeon RX570 video card.
I'd still recommend the board, but look out for quirks with the onboard video display for the UEFI config screens. Check your display before you need it!
UPDATE: So I rolled the dice for another ASRock MicroATX Motherboard (B450M PRO4). Works great. As expected. First one was a fluke. Many available settings in BIOS. Happy with decision to try again.
As stated previously I am on beta bios 3.88. It’s available through asrock a website. It opens up the boards potential as I was not able to get any ram oc done on any earlier bios’s. This board seriously rocks. Asrock really killed it with this one.
Thankfully, my brother has the exact same motherboard as I have and it actually supports dual channel. As I also bought my brother this motherboard too, I swapped mobos and apparently, his motherboard actually supports dual channel and mine could not. So now his motherboard is now mine and vice-versa.
To be honest, I don't know how I say about this. Either I might've got mine as a used one on accident or just bad luck?











