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[Updates on bugs] Should you buy a Z590? Asus Maximus XIII Hero Z590 motherboard review

cagoblex

Here is a few updates from my industry contacts:

 

1. For the low memory performance issue, Intel has released a new microcode update to fix this problem. The BIOS should be released soon. I will update the performance in the next 11700 QS review. 

 

2. The only difference between 11700 and 11900 is TVB support

 

3. The new iGPU is called UHD780. The new graphics driver (2021/01/04) can display the name and frequency properly. 

 

4. The Voltage is actually higher on Rocket lake. It's not because of it being an engineering sample or BIOS issue. 

 

 

Today we will be taking a look at the Asus Maximus XIII Hero. It has the newest Z590 chipset that brings some major?? upgrades to the Z490 platform. Let’s start by talking about what’s new for the Z590 platform.



According to Intel, the major upgrade for Z590 platform is as follows:

1. PCI-E 4.0 support

2. Improved DMI x8 bus between PCH and CPU that would theoretically doubles the bandwidth

3. Native support for USB 3.2 Gen2x2 20Gbps

4. Support for Thunderbolt 4
 

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The Z590 chipset is also 25x24mm in size and should be pin to pin compatible to Z490.

The packaging for the Maximus XIII Hero is the same as the Maximus XII Hero. And the accessories are also the same only with the addition of a graphics card holder.





Next let’s do some brief circuit analysis. I’m not Buildzoid so please correct if I’m wrong.

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Maximus XIII Hero

 

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Maximus XII Hero



First is the CPU power delivery. There is a major upgrade for the M13H compares to the M12H. The M13H finally started using ISL power controllers like other brands, instead of the aging Digipower(Asus customized IR chips). In this case, Asus is using ISL69269 controller. It is a 12 phase controller that’s becoming more commonly seen on high end motherboard these days. However the way Asus is using them is interesting. Instead of using doublers like other brands, Asus insists that the performance would be better without doublers. So basically Asus is using two sets of the same components on each phase of power delivery, so the advertised 14+2 is actually 7+1 phases with double the components. People have different opinions regarding this but I guess Asus has been doing this on recent generations of ROG boards and has proved themself right with the record breaking OC results.



As for the Mosfet, M13H also has a major upgrade from the M12H. It is using a 95410RRB DrMOS, which is capable of delivering up to 90A of power. This is one of the best you can get on the market, and they are very very expensive. The retail price is about $8 each and just 14 of these would cost over $100, which is higher than the price some extremely low end Z490 motherboards. As for the M12H, things are a little interesting here. So the review samples provided to medias were using IR PowIRStage TDA21490, which was a 90A solution. However the retail boards, as least the one I got is using IR PowIRStage TDA21462 chip, which is a 60A solution. Costing down throughout the production is common, and I’ve seen many motherboard manufacturers doing same things. I wouldn’t name the name of manufacturer but I have talked to one of the motherboard PM for a major player in motherboard industry, and he told me it is pretty common for doing so, as long as it still meets the advertised specs and standards. However my problem is, for the pricing Asus is charging for the ROG line of products, it’s not a reasonable practice. And the consumer is not aware of the change at all, and buying motherboards they thought would have the same grade of components as they read in the media reviews. Shame on you Asus. However this time, Asus actually advertised the M13H as using 90A of power stages. So I guess the cost down is not likely to happen on the M13H.



Other than that there is also some changes on the arrangement of power delivery. For the M12H, Asus has placed the VCCIO and VCCSA on the left side of the CPU socket. On M13H, in order to give space for the extra M.2 slot, Asus moved the VCCSA to the VCC Core area, you can refer to the picture for this. And the VCCIO power delivery remains the same for M13H.
 

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Maximus XII Hero

 

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Maximus XIII Hero



For the IO part, there is also some major changes. First is the addition of Intel JHL8540 and the Cypress CYPD5225-96BZXI. The JHL8540 is the controller for Thunderbolt 4, and connected to the motherboard through a PCI-E 3.0 x4 link. Yes it’s actually not as fast as most people think they are. They are good enough for external devices, but you will not be getting the same experience as plugging devices directly to your motherboard, especially if you are daisy chaining couple devices.

The Cypress CYPD5225-96BZXI is always used in pair with Thunderbolt controller. This chip provides USB PD capability of 5V 3A up to 15W.

 

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USB 3.2 Gen2
 

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Thunderbolt 4

Let me share my thoughts on adding Thunderbolt 4 ports to this motherboard. Conclusion is it unnecessarily adds cost, and MSRP to this board. And here is why. Depends on your usage, very few people would actually benefit from Thunderbolt 4 ports on this motherboard. I don’t think anyone would use a external graphics enclosure instead of plugging the video card directly to the PCI-E slot on the motherboard, so GPU enclosure is not a possible use case. For storage arrays, first of all, U.2 or M.2 arrays are pretty rare as of now, I don’t see why you would need a NVMe array for a home computer. If you are using a single M.2 NVMe portable drive, here is the test result I did on the M13H. It actually performs better with USB3.2 Gen2x2 because Thunderbolt adds a protocol overhead.



Connecting to monitors is a possibility. However for desktops, there is absolutely no benefit of connecting to the monitor with a USB Type C cable instead of DP or HDMI. Not to say you have to spend extra for a monitor that comes with USB Type C ports.



The only meaningful use case I can think of would be high end audio and 10GB Ethernet. But again, the gain would be minimal and would not justify the extra price. It may make sense to include that on the M13E, coz M13E buyers are not sensitive to cost and simply wants the best of the best. But for M13H, it just doesn’t make much sense to me.
 

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By the way I’m not saying Thunderbolt 4 is useless. It is very meaningful for laptops and portable devices. The idea of charging, transmitting data and display signal in one cable is quite cool, and saves a lot of desktop spaces. It also makes more sense on a workstation boards, as these users may have the need to connect to a lot of professional A/V equipment and accelerators, as well as storage arrays. The lower latency and extra bandwidth would provide some benefits to them.
 

io 1.jpg



Back to the circuit. On the right there is an Intel i225 SLNMH chip that provides the 2.5Gbps Lan. And the TI TDP158 chip is also an upgrade from the Asmedia ASM1442K used on M12H. This chip is responsible for the HDMI output on this video card. The major difference is that ASM1442K only supports HDMI1.4b while the TDP158 supports HDMI2.0. But please note, you have to use 11th gen Rocket lake processors in order to output HDMI2.0. It will still be HDMI1.4 if you use Comet lake.

 

io 2.jpg




Let’s continue with the IO section. On the top left is three Pericom P13EQX. They are USB3.2 redriver chips that amplifies USB signal. Each chip is capable of amplifying 2 USB3.2 ports, so a total of three is used to amplify the 6 USB3.2 ports. And there is another Intel i255 that provides the second 2.5Gbps ports. The DrMOS used for VCCIO is different from the VCC core. There is no public data on it but I assume it’s a 70ish Amp chip.
 

memory power.jpg



For the memory power delivery, it is exactly the same is M12H. It is using a Asus rebranded ASP 1103 power controller. There is no public data about it, but it is some kind of Asus customized IR power controller. For the power stage it is using ON Semiconductor NTMFS4C10C, which is a 46A chip. This is a serious overkill for DDR4 memories, as they don’t consume much power even at extremely high frequencies. Your memory will probably catch fire if it is being fed with the whole 46A under 1.35V lol.
 

pcie switch 4.jpg



The PCI-E is an interesting part. Let’s talk about M13H first and then we will go over some of my discoveries for M12H. So for M13H, it is using a P13DBS PCI-E 4.0 switch and two of the P13EQX16 redriver. Pretty standard choice. There is a GL852G USB2.0 Hub controller that provides the internal USB2.0 connector. And it is using the same Proclock II chip to generate accurate frequencies for BCLK. If I remembered correctly it’s a rebranded TI chip, but I’m not sure about it.
 

z490 switching.jpg



As for M12H, things is a little interesting. Yes it supports PCI-E4.0 with Rocket lake under the new Beta BIOS. However it was not designed with PCI-E 4.0 support in mind. It is using ASM1480 switching chips, which is PCI-E3.0 switch. Other brands like MSI and Gigabyte, actually used PCI-E4.0 capable solutions on some of their high end Z490 boards. I can’t say for other boards, but at least for M12H, the PCI-E port will be running at PCI-E x8 if you enable PCI-E 4.0 in BIOS. This is confirmed by running 3D Mark bandwidth tests. It is running the same bandwidth with or without enabling PCI-E 4.0 in BIOS. Future BIOS might?? solve this, but I highly doubt it as it’s more of a design limitation.
 

usb asmedia.jpg



For USB, it is using an ASM1074 to provide the extra set of USB3.2 gen1 5Gb ports through internal connector. This is another strange choice as not many cases has that many USB ports on the front. You could technically connect to a internal HUB and connect more of the so-called Smart devices, like PSU and AIO. But most of these uses USB2.0 and there is already two internal USB2.0 headers. So I’m not quite getting the point of having two sets of USB internal headers. Or there is another possibility, the ASM1074 is actually capable of providing four USB3.2 gen1 ports. It could be that Asus is using the PCI-E configuration differently and relying on the Asmedia chip for both internal USB3.0 headers. If that’s the case, then why not make it two since the chip supports two sets of headers anyways lol.
 

usb type c.jpg



The internal USB type C connector is USB3.2 Gen2x2 20Gbps. This is one of the benefit Z590 brings.



This concludes our circuit analysis for this motherboard. Let’s continue with the benchmarks.



Just a little information about the Rocket lake CPUs I’m using in case you didn’t read my last review on the CPU. This is an stepping 0 engineering sample with 1.8Ghz base clock, 3.8GHz all core boost, 4.2GHz TB2 and 4.3GHz TB3 boost. It does not support TVB which makes it a 11700 instead of 11900. Being stepping 0, it is actually a ES2, one stepping before QS. The QS and retail will be stepping 1. I am a little confused about Intel’s positioning of the Rocket lake CPUs. According to leaks, the i7 11700K is running 3.6GHz base, 4.9GHz boost while the i9 11900K is running 3.5GHz base and 5.1GHz boost. The i9 11900K supports TVB up to 5.3GHz, and that’s it. They have same core and thread count, same instruction set and same cache. This is very very strange, as the i9 is actually 100MHz lower in base clock. 200MHz extra boost clock and TVB support is hard to justify it’s higher price tag and the i9 badge. I have reached out to few of my industry contacts and I haven’t hear back from them as I am writing this up. I will edit it once I have the information. I have a 11700 QS and a 11900T QS on the way and I may be able to find out once I test them.



Please keep this in mind when looking at the benchmark results. The ES Rocket lake I am using is 1.8GHz base, 3.8GHz all core, 4.4GHz TB3 and 4100MHz cache. The 10700 that it’s comparing against is 2.9GHz base, 4.6GHz all core, 4.8GHz TB3 and 4200MHz cache. It’s not a apple to apple comparison since there is a big difference in frequency between the too.
 

CPU-Z.png



First let’s start with CPU-Z benchmark. It is only 6% slower in all core while being 15% lower in frequency. For single core, it’s 3% faster than 10700 while being 10% lower in frequency. This is some serious IPC improvement. As for the motherboard, you will notice a continuous trend while you read further. The 10th gen Comet lake performs better on M12H, and the 11th Rocket lake performs better on M13H. But the difference is very small and should not be a reason for upgrade.



I will attach the other CPU benchmarks I did. There is nothing much to talk about as the difference is very very small. Please focus more on the motherboard as this is not a CPU review. I will post a separate 11th gen CPU review next week of QS 11700 VS 10700. That would be a more fair comparison between the two generations.


 

Aida64 memory.png





The 11700 ES is getting a normal read speed on M13H, however it’s suffering with the write and copy test on both motherboards. I also reached out to my contacts on this matter and I will update it once I get an answer.
 

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With the new cache algorithm, Rocket lake is having much better cache prformance. However the difference between the two boards is still minimal.
 

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This is another problem I’ve discovered with M12H. It is having problem with 11700 and all three M.2 PCH slots are getting less than 1GB/s speed. So the score is only 1/3 of what I am getting on the M13H. Again I’m not sure if it’s a BIOS problem or design related. Will have to wait for an BIOS upgrade to retest.
 

V-ray.png



V-ray is not very sensitive to memory or architecture. I just completed a project for rendering company’s new datacenter. I did a lot of testing with different core count and memory configuration, as well as comparing between different architectures. The difference is way less than I expected. So is the memory. With the 26 Cascade-lake SP processor they end up using, moving from 1 channel to 6 channels only brings less than 20% difference, and moving from dual channel to 6 channel only brings 5% difference. So they ended up with only 2 channels, strange choice but make sense cost wise.

 

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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nest is the GPU part. I am using an MSI RTX3080 X Trio for these tests. But first let’s do a few tests with the iGPU.
 

3Dmark Nightraid.png

 

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That is decent improvements over UHD630 and it’s actually running at 50MHz lower frequency. As for motherboards, again there is no noticeable difference between M12H and M13H.
 

3dmark bandwidth.png


Here is the PCI-E bandwidth test. It has confirmed what I said earlier. The PCI-E 4.0 on M12H in indeed running in x8 mode and the total bandwidth is the same as PCI-E3.0 x16.

Next is our 3Dmark time spy and game benchmarks.

 

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That concludes the technical part of this motherboard. Let’s talk about the cost. There is no final MSRP yet but it’s rumored that it will be around $600. For that price, there is absolutely no reason to buy a ROG Hero line of products. Very people are extremely overclockers and most people I know are actually using K series chips at stock. The Turbo Boost technology is already mature to a point that it would be enough for most people in daily use. The TUF Z590 would cost around $300, although still expensive, but at least it will save you the money of an i7 processor. What will you be losing? Thunderbolt4, dual 2.5Gbps LAN, one M.2 slot and an overkill power delivery. Are they necessary? Of course they exist for a reason, but not a common one. Unless you are using these in a cooperate environment, why would you need dual 2.5Gbps? Yes I know you can aggregate these ports to connect to a high performance NAS. But again, we are talking about common usages. For most users an external enclosure will be more than enough for storage, even for a NAS, single 2.5GBps is beyond what most home NAS can handle. For M.2, in reality who would be using 4 M.2 drives? Even if you are, you can do it with products like Asus Hyper M.2 card and you are getting better cooling and power delivery. For power delivery, 12x90A=1080A. Yes the EPS connector will melt and your computer will catch fire if you are actually pulling 1080A, and hopefully you got good insurance on your house. I have already talked about Thunderbolt 4 earlier, use a Thunderbolt AIC if you really need it, and that will cost you less than $100.
 

asus.PNG



I really can’t recommend this motherboard to anyone, unless I’m wrong about the $600 price tag. At least that’s what I paid for this motherboard. But as for Z590 as a whole, here are the realistic reasons to buy them:

1. USB3.2 Gen2 native support

2. Higher PCH bandwidth and it will benefit PCH attached SSD RAID

3. Better support for Rocket lake and PCI-E 4.0 (As of now, don’t know if BIOS updates will make Z490 work better with PCI-E4.0 and Rocket lake)


One of my contacts at Intel told me yesterday that Intel is having a headache of reviewers doing early benchmarks of Rocket lakes on Z490, as there are so many unpredictable problems and the result is way lower than Intel’s expectation.


So here comes the conclusion, buy the Z590 if you plan to use it with Rocket lake. It will save you a lot of headache and debugging time.


If you plan to use Rocket lake with your current Z490, you will be purely off to the mercy of motherboard manufacturers if they will ever release a actual mature version of BIOS for Z490 with Rocket lake and PCI-E4.0. Not to say the physical design limitations, like the M12H.


Otherwise, it would be stupid if you plan to use Z590 with your Comet lake processors. You will not get any benefit at all, no PCI-E4.0, no HDMI2.0.


Okay that’s it for today’s review. I spent over 60 hours on this and used a lot of help from my industry contacts to get the drivers, fix bugs and understand some strange behaviors. For unboxing and some other benchmarks, you can watch a video version of it here:

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Amazing review.

 

That means that just the z590-e gaming Strix will be enough for the 10900k-11900k?

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15 minutes ago, cagoblex said:

 

T

 



I really can’t recommend this motherboard to anyone, unless I’m wrong about the $600 price tag. At least that’s what I paid for this motherboard. But as for Z590 as a whole, here are the realistic reasons to buy them:

1. USB3.2 Gen2 native support

2. Higher PCH bandwidth and it will benefit PCH attached SSD RAID

3. Better support for Rocket lake and PCI-E 4.0 (As of now, don’t know if BIOS updates will make Z490 work better with PCI-E4.0 and Rocket lake)


One of my contacts at Intel told me yesterday that Intel is having a headache of reviewers doing early benchmarks of Rocket lakes on Z490, as there are so many unpredictable problems and the result is way lower than Intel’s expectation.


So here comes the conclusion, buy the Z590 if you plan to use it with Rocket lake. It will save you a lot of headache and debugging time.


If you plan to use Rocket lake with your current Z490, you will be purely off to the mercy of motherboard manufacturers if they will ever release a actual mature version of BIOS for Z490 with Rocket lake and PCI-E4.0. Not to say the physical design limitations, like the M12H.


Otherwise, it would be stupid if you plan to use Z590 with your Comet lake processors. You will not get any benefit at all, no PCI-E4.0, no HDMI2.0.


Okay that’s it for today’s review. I spent over 60 hours on this and used a lot of help from my industry contacts to get the drivers, fix bugs and understand some strange behaviors. For unboxing and some other benchmarks, you can watch a video version of it here:

The board is not worth the price tag for the CPUs you used.

 

When I bought the Hero XII is was for 5.3ghz overclocks and how it handles TVB on the i9 10900k. Since reviews on lesser board did not cover these I played it safe and got the Hero.  At this point I would not buy an Intel CPU without TVB.

 

With the Hero III it will be the same but this time more towards how it handles the boosts. 

Also if the AI tuning has improved over the Hero XIIs. 

 

RIG#1 CPU: AMD, R 7 5800x3D| Motherboard: X570 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3200 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA  RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 2TB | Monitor: ASUS ROG Swift PG42UQ

 

RIG#2 CPU: Intel i9 11900k | Motherboard: Z590 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3600 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA  RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1300 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO | Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 | SSD#1: SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX300 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k C1 OLED TV

 

RIG#3 CPU: Intel i9 10900kf | Motherboard: Z490 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 4000 | GPU: MSI Gaming X Trio 3090 | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Crucial P1 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV

 

RIG#4 CPU: Intel i9 13900k | Motherboard: AORUS Z790 Master | RAM: Corsair Dominator RGB 32GB DDR5 6200 | GPU: Zotac Amp Extreme 4090  | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Streacom BC1.1S | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD: Corsair MP600 1TB  | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV

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9 minutes ago, jones177 said:

The board is not worth the price tag for the CPUs you used.

 

When I bought the Hero XII is was for 5.3ghz overclocks and how it handles TVB on the i9 10900k. Since reviews on lesser board did not cover these I played it safe and got the Hero.  At this point I would not buy an Intel CPU without TVB.

 

With the Hero III it will be the same but this time more towards how it handles the boosts. 

Also if the AI tuning has improved over the Hero XIIs. 

 

I'll be overclocking at stable 5.0-5.2. Silicon lottery.

 

Do we need TVB for this kind of overclock?

 

I'm trying to decide between the z590-e Strix and the Maximus xiii hero for a 10900k-11900k.

 

Any help to decide?

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10 minutes ago, jones177 said:

The board is not worth the price tag for the CPUs you used.

 

When I bought the Hero XII is was for 5.3ghz overclocks and how it handles TVB on the i9 10900k. Since reviews on lesser board did not cover these I played it safe and got the Hero.  At this point I would not buy an Intel CPU without TVB.

 

With the Hero III it will be the same but this time more towards how it handles the boosts. 

Also if the AI tuning has improved over the Hero XIIs. 

 

Well that is true. My point is not if it's worth the price for my CPU. Those are review samples and I'm not using them anyways. The point is the improvement is not worth the bump in MSRP from M12H. As for TVB, I understand your point but I won't pay $200 more for motherboard and $200 more for CPU just for better TVB support on this generation. It is a very strange choice Intel made to position the Rocket lake i7 and i9 for this generation. 

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36 minutes ago, menko2 said:

Amazing review.

 

That means that just the z590-e gaming Strix will be enough for the 10900k-11900k?

In my point of view yes. Unless you absolutely needs Thunderbolt 4 or if you are using four M.2 SSDs, there is not much point spending the extra $200. I understand it has better overclocking capabilities, but not everyone push their CPUs to the limit. At least from the people I know, most them uses the K series CPU at stock at MCE, some does a little casual overclocking, but only one or two would push it to the absolute limit in daily usage. 

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23 minutes ago, cagoblex said:

In my point of view yes. Unless you absolutely needs Thunderbolt 4 or if you are using four M.2 SSDs, there is not much point spending the extra $200. I understand it has better overclocking capabilities, but not everyone push their CPUs to the limit. At least from the people I know, most them uses the K series CPU at stock at MCE, some does a little casual overclocking, but only one or two would push it to the absolute limit in daily usage. 

I won't need thunderbolt or many m.2.

 

Daily stable overclock 5.0-5.2 yes. I'm not sure if the 6 vs 8 layer pcb helps as well for durability.

 

Seems like 200 is a lot but might me safer in my case?

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2 minutes ago, menko2 said:

I won't need thunderbolt or many m.2.

 

Daily stable overclock 5.0-5.2 yes. I'm not sure if the 6 vs 8 layer pcb helps as well for durability.

 

Seems like 200 is a lot but might me safer in my case?

If budget isn't a problem for you, then definitely go with the Hero. For most high end users, it's good to have it even if you don't need it 🙂  I am using a 10980XE on a R6E at stock...which is stupid I know but it's nice to have

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37 minutes ago, menko2 said:

I'll be overclocking at stable 5.0-5.2. Silicon lottery.

 

Do we need TVB for this kind of overclock?

 

I'm trying to decide between the z590-e Strix and the Maximus xiii hero for a 10900k-11900k.

 

Any help to decide?

Using TVB is an alternative to traditional overclocks.

 

I have 2 i7 8086k and a i9 9900k with 5 and 5.1gz all core overclocks. The i9 10900k can beat them in most games using TVB.

If I put a 5ghz or more overclock on it the temps are too high for TVB to work(above 70c). Since TVB beats 5 and 5.1 only 5.2 or 5.3 are worth using. 

5.3ghz is too much for my cooling solution(330 watts plus) so that leaves 5.2ghz. 

 

I will get the Hero because every time I buy a lesser ASUS board I have issues.  All my mid range boards are Gigabyte AORUS. 

 

RIG#1 CPU: AMD, R 7 5800x3D| Motherboard: X570 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3200 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA  RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 2TB | Monitor: ASUS ROG Swift PG42UQ

 

RIG#2 CPU: Intel i9 11900k | Motherboard: Z590 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3600 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA  RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1300 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO | Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 | SSD#1: SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX300 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k C1 OLED TV

 

RIG#3 CPU: Intel i9 10900kf | Motherboard: Z490 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 4000 | GPU: MSI Gaming X Trio 3090 | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Crucial P1 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV

 

RIG#4 CPU: Intel i9 13900k | Motherboard: AORUS Z790 Master | RAM: Corsair Dominator RGB 32GB DDR5 6200 | GPU: Zotac Amp Extreme 4090  | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Streacom BC1.1S | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD: Corsair MP600 1TB  | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV

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6 minutes ago, jones177 said:

Using TVB is an alternative to traditional overclocks.

 

I have 2 i7 8086k and a i9 9900k with 5 and 5.1gz all core overclocks. The i9 10900k can beat them in most games using TVB.

If I put a 5ghz or more overclock on it the temps are too high for TVB to work(above 70c). Since TVB beats 5 and 5.1 only 5.2 or 5.3 are worth using. 

5.3ghz is too much for my cooling solution(330 watts plus) so that leaves 5.2ghz. 

 

I will get the Hero because every time I buy a lesser ASUS board I have issues.  All my mid range boards are Gigabyte AORUS. 

 

I agree with you on that. Low end Asus board sucks. TVB would beat traditional OC in many benchmarks, and is certainly nice to have. But again I hold my point that $600 is way too expensive for a mid range ROG board. 

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2 hours ago, jones177 said:

The board is not worth the price tag for the CPUs you used.

 

When I bought the Hero XII is was for 5.3ghz overclocks and how it handles TVB on the i9 10900k. Since reviews on lesser board did not cover these I played it safe and got the Hero.  At this point I would not buy an Intel CPU without TVB.

 

With the Hero III it will be the same but this time more towards how it handles the boosts. 

Also if the AI tuning has improved over the Hero XIIs. 

Is the RAM in the Maximus Hero XIII daisy chain or t-topology?

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2 minutes ago, menko2 said:

Is the RAM in the Maximus Hero XIII daisy chain or t-topology?

I believe it's daisy chained. 

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Just now, cagoblex said:

I believe it's daisy chained. 

It's strange. The tested ram in Asus websites are most of them 2x8gb or 4x8gb.

 

I have 2x8gb highly overclocked Samsung b-die. Not sure if for gaming 32gb dual rank will make difference playing at 4k.

 

It should be 2x16gb for daisy chain right?

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1 hour ago, cagoblex said:

Well that is true. My point is not if it's worth the price for my CPU. Those are review samples and I'm not using them anyways. The point is the improvement is not worth the bump in MSRP from M12H. As for TVB, I understand your point but I won't pay $200 more for motherboard and $200 more for CPU just for better TVB support on this generation. It is a very strange choice Intel made to position the Rocket lake i7 and i9 for this generation. 

I was not happy paying $400 for the Hero XII but like my past Heros it ended up worth it. 

 

I don't know if I am going for a i9 11900k build since my i7 8086ks are still doing so well.  I use TVs for gaming so I only need enough CPU to get frames over 120. If I used 144hz plus monitors I would definitely need more CPU.

 

TVB was a solution to a problem that cropped up for me in 2020 and that was some of my older modded games that use out date physics engines started not liking my overclocks. One of them being the Havok physics engine used in Bethesda games and Space Engineers. Like most issues that crop up after major Windows updates it is now mostly fixed but at the time I thought they may not be fixed since who cares about players that add so much content to old games that they are unplayable without overclocks.  

These games ran better using TVB than they ever did with traditional overclocks.

Most modern games run better as well with the exception of  modern Assassin's Creed games. They still run better with traditional overclocks. 

 

RIG#1 CPU: AMD, R 7 5800x3D| Motherboard: X570 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3200 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA  RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 2TB | Monitor: ASUS ROG Swift PG42UQ

 

RIG#2 CPU: Intel i9 11900k | Motherboard: Z590 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 3600 | GPU: EVGA FTW3 ULTRA  RTX 3090 ti | PSU: EVGA 1300 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic EVO | Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 | SSD#1: SSD#1: Corsair MP600 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX300 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k C1 OLED TV

 

RIG#3 CPU: Intel i9 10900kf | Motherboard: Z490 AORUS Master | RAM: Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 32GB DDR4 4000 | GPU: MSI Gaming X Trio 3090 | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Lian Li O11 Dynamic | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD#1: Crucial P1 1TB | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV

 

RIG#4 CPU: Intel i9 13900k | Motherboard: AORUS Z790 Master | RAM: Corsair Dominator RGB 32GB DDR5 6200 | GPU: Zotac Amp Extreme 4090  | PSU: EVGA 1000 G+ | Case: Streacom BC1.1S | Cooler: EK 360mm AIO | SSD: Corsair MP600 1TB  | SSD#2: Crucial MX500 2.5" 1TB | Monitor: LG 55" 4k B9 OLED TV

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Hi,

Today I installed the brand new Maximus XIII Hero (with my 10900k), but I'm not happy because I found several problems.

The biggest issue is that my Seagate FireCuda 520 SSD 1TB, M.2 is not found, so I'm not able to install the OS. I checked several entries in the BIOS, but no matter what I set, the M.2 is not found. The M.2 is installed in the upper M.2 slot. 

 

Update:

In the meantime I tried another M.2 - same result, M.2 is not found.

Furthermore just one of my two USB 3.0 case connector are working - nearly identical problem with USB 2.0: if I connect the two USB 2.0 case connectors on the left onboard USB 2.0, then just one connector is working. If I use the second onboard, both USB2.0 are working.

BIOS version 0232 is already installed - I found no newer bios.

It seems that the Maximus XIII Hero is not ready for the market - unless my M XIII H is broken.

I had no problem with my previous mainboard M XII Hero, so i'm sure it is due to the mainboard or bios.

 

Another question: Is there also a LED strip installed under the cooler above the CPU or only on the left side?

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5 hours ago, UdoG said:

Hi,

Today I installed the brand new Maximus XIII Hero (with my 10900k), but I'm not happy because I found several problems.

The biggest issue is that my Seagate FireCuda 520 SSD 1TB, M.2 is not found, so I'm not able to install the OS. I checked several entries in the BIOS, but no matter what I set, the M.2 is not found. The M.2 is installed in the upper M.2 slot. 

 

Update:

In the meantime I tried another M.2 - same result, M.2 is not found.

Furthermore just one of my two USB 3.0 case connector are working - nearly identical problem with USB 2.0: if I connect the two USB 2.0 case connectors on the left onboard USB 2.0, then just one connector is working. If I use the second onboard, both USB2.0 are working.

BIOS version 0232 is already installed - I found no newer bios.

It seems that the Maximus XIII Hero is not ready for the market - unless my M XIII H is broken.

I had no problem with my previous mainboard M XII Hero, so i'm sure it is due to the mainboard or bios.

 

Another question: Is there also a LED strip installed under the cooler above the CPU or only on the left side?

Ok here is the quick answer to your question. 

 

The biggest issue is that my Seagate FireCuda 520 SSD 1TB, M.2 is not found, so I'm not able to install the OS. I checked several entries in the BIOS, but no matter what I set, the M.2 is not found. The M.2 is installed in the upper M.2 slot. 

 

The first M.2 slot will be disabled if you use it with Comet lake processors. You can try using the second M.2 slot and it should work just fine. 

 

Furthermore just one of my two USB 3.0 case connector are working - nearly identical problem with USB 2.0: if I connect the two USB 2.0 case connectors on the left onboard USB 2.0, then just one connector is working. If I use the second onboard, both USB2.0 are working.

 

I am not quite getting this. So basically if you are saying only one of the USB2.0 and one of the USB3.0 would work right? If that's the case, it could be a problem with the PCI-E lanes allocation of 10th gen CPUs. I will have to find a way to test this as my case only has one set of each ports. But this would definitely be an interesting find. 

 

Another question: Is there also a LED strip installed under the cooler above the CPU or only on the left side?

 

There is only one LED strip under the heatsink on top of the CPU socket near the IO area. 

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Thanks for your reply.

You're right - I checked the manual and M.2_1 is only for the 11th CPUs. Unfortunately the M.2_2 is not working together with my 10900k. This is strange...
If I use M.2_3 or M.2_4 it's OK, the FireCuda and the other M.2 is found by my motherboard.

So I have the problem that both M.2 will not working on M.2_2 and additional the USB problem 😞

I will check tomorrow the other USB 3.0 onboard connection.

 

I think it's not a problem with the PCI-E lanes allocation of 10th Gen CPUs, because I had no problem with the Maximus XII Hero.

 

Regarding LED strip - on the picture it seems that there is a LED strip left of the CPU and an additional lighting above of the CPU. 

 

Bildschirmfoto 2021-02-07 um 23.40.21.png

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4 hours ago, UdoG said:

Thanks for your reply.

You're right - I checked the manual and M.2_1 is only for the 11th CPUs. Unfortunately the M.2_2 is not working together with my 10900k. This is strange...
If I use M.2_3 or M.2_4 it's OK, the FireCuda and the other M.2 is found by my motherboard.

So I have the problem that both M.2 will not working on M.2_2 and additional the USB problem 😞

I will check tomorrow the other USB 3.0 onboard connection.

 

I think it's not a problem with the PCI-E lanes allocation of 10th Gen CPUs, because I had no problem with the Maximus XII Hero.

 

Regarding LED strip - on the picture it seems that there is a LED strip left of the CPU and an additional lighting above of the CPU. 

 

Bildschirmfoto 2021-02-07 um 23.40.21.png

M.2_2 should be working with Comet lake. M.2_3 and M.2_4 are PCH attached slots. 

 

It could be a PCI-E allocation issue as USB controllers are wired to the PCH, not the CPU. For 11th gen, the bus between CPU and PCH would be DMI x8 while it's DMI x4 on 10th gen. That might be the reason for it but I have to verify that myself. 

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Yes, M.2_2 is working, but I have to configure the following setting:

ADVANCED 
- ONBOARD DEVICES CONFIGURATION
- CPU PCIE Configuration Mode = PCIEX16_1 + PCIEX16_2 + M.2_2 
 

I will check the additional USB 3 onboard later...

 

Are you able to check the LED lighting?

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Update:

It must be a firmware issue (maybe bug) because ALL onboard USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 are working within Windows!

Within BIOS only one USB 2.0 and one USB 3.0 are working.

 

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12 hours ago, UdoG said:

Yes, M.2_2 is working, but I have to configure the following setting:

ADVANCED 
- ONBOARD DEVICES CONFIGURATION
- CPU PCIE Configuration Mode = PCIEX16_1 + PCIEX16_2 + M.2_2 
 

I will check the additional USB 3 onboard later...

 

Are you able to check the LED lighting?

Oh yeah I forgot to mention that. You have to change PCI-E configuration based on your setup. 

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9 hours ago, UdoG said:

Update:

It must be a firmware issue (maybe bug) because ALL onboard USB 2.0 and USB 3.0 are working within Windows!

Within BIOS only one USB 2.0 and one USB 3.0 are working.

 

Well it’s not a firmware issue. It’s because those ports are provided by third party controllers, Genesys for USB2.0 and Asmedia for USB3.0. So they are not initialized before OS. You can change the settings in BIOS to initialize them during boot but it will make your POST time longer. 

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10 hours ago, Aznguyen316 said:

Hey guys I have a question for udog and cagoblex. 
 

was the sp (silicon predictor) for your CPU on the z490 asus bios the same value in the z590 bios you have on the hero? 

 

I have a 10900k and I have a z490 unify, but I am now testing a z590 Strix A and the sp value is showing 48 for my 10900K on the z590 mobo? Seems super low. Showing 1.55V or so just for 5.2Ghz LLC4. I figured it was a bios bug with z590 and 10th gen. However, I was able to set on my msi unify 1.36V LLC3 which under load was about 1.33V or something for 5.2Ghz and gaming stable. However on this z590 Strix board I BSOD crash at 5.2Ghz LLC6 at 1.4V doing cinebench. 
 

how can the same 10900k be good and stable on my z490 msi unify but apparently garbage on a z590 Strix A mobo. Wondering if bios needs work for 10th gen or something else strange is occurring 

That's an interesting question. I was gonna talk about it in the next review. But the snow storm has been delaying my 10700 for almost a week now 😞  The SP system is showing the same value for my processor on Z490 and on Z590. I haven't got a chance to look into overclocking, but generally SP value if not always accurate. I have SP52 processors that overclocks much better than a SP97 processor. 

 

As for your case, I am not 100% sure what's going on. But from the initial testing from motherboard manufacturers I know, Z590 is pretty strong on overclocking at least for Rocket lake processors. I believe it is related to a BIOS issue but I don't have an answer for you until I test it myself. 

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