veryrarium
Weaksauce
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2014
- Messages
- 125
Sorry, I stand corrected.Err yes they do.
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Sorry, I stand corrected.Err yes they do.
I can confirm that BIOS version 1.40 works fine with Corsair LPX 2x16GB 2666MHz (non-ECC).
I can confirm that BIOS version 1.40 works fine with Corsair LPX 2x16GB 2666MHz (non-ECC).
Yes I have those DIMMs, but my mobo is factory default (presumably) and will not start with them inserted so far; so did you use those DIMMs from the start or did you use other ones to update the bios first?
i, and going by asrocks forum a lot of other users have also had issues with the wifi card where it would suddenly stop responding, changing it out with an intel card fixed the issue
The Intel Wireless-AC 7265: https://www-ssl.intel.com/content/d...t-briefs/dual-band-wireless-ac-7265-brief.pdf
Mind that there are different sizes, I don't know which one fits this board.
Has anyone run into issues using 2x16GB DDR4 in the board?
Probably won't be any until Skylake E3 Xeons (E3-12xx v5) are announced, along with the associated C230 chipset (Xeons might work with ECC in regular Z170 boards, but as always that's an unofficial it-might-work-but-there's-no-guarantee). No official ETA, but leaked slides indicate releases around the end of this year.can't find any ITX skylake boards w/ ECC :/
Get an E5-2676v3.
Hey chemist_slime,
Did your 2676v3 work with this board?
Yup, worked fine, but installing the OS X on it will be a challenge that I'm still looking into as it's a 12 core processor and all other guides are either 6 or 8 cores. So not sure if the kernel supports it and also that it's a v3 processor xeon, not v2 like in the current mac pro.
I did find someone who did it but on a diff mobo, you can see here: http://www.tonymacx86.com/yosemite-desktop-guides/170818-12-core-x99-hackintosh-pro-build.html
I'm still waiting on the narrow mounting brackets for my C14, so in the mean time I decided to get my new system up and running using the cooler supplied with the ASRock board. Holy crap that thing is loud
One thing I noticed was with the mounting holes located so close to the heat sink, the screwdriver inevitably scrapes the heat sink during install, and for me this created some metal dust that needed to be carefully cleaned up. Probably not a problem most people will run into as I doubt many are using the stock cooler at all.
For those wondering if the Noctua Narrow ILM brackets can be used on their other heatsinks.... they CAN!
I used the bolts from the included Dynotron cooler as the Notcua ones are longer clash with the heatpipes, but otherwise they're a straight swap over and currently cooling my 5960X.
Thanks for the photo. I was also curious as to how csd was able to get these screwed in with a regular long-handled driver. Mine hasn't arrived yet, but if I can't get it to work, I was thinking about picking up a set of these Anex 6102T Ultra Low Profile Screwdrivers (sorry, site is in Japanese, but you should be able to find them through Amazon or other online retailers). They are cheap where I live, and look like they would do the trick.
I'm now running much quieter than with the ASRock cooler I'll post back with some temperature updates in a day or so.
Yup, worked fine, but installing the OS X on it will be a challenge that I'm still looking into as it's a 12 core processor and all other guides are either 6 or 8 cores. So not sure if the kernel supports it and also that it's a v3 processor xeon, not v2 like in the current mac pro.
I did find someone who did it but on a diff mobo, you can see here: http://www.tonymacx86.com/yosemite-desktop-guides/170818-12-core-x99-hackintosh-pro-build.html
They didn't. Ones that display that are much earlier steppings (and may be missing features). Ones that display a model followed by "(ES)" are generally the last pre-production samples and identical to retail. You're pretty much stuck with it like that.How did you mod bios for xeon es support? CPU is just displayed as 'Genuine Intel' here.
Epos7, good to hear (no pun intended), thanks. I'd be grateful if you would include your impressions on the 140 / 120 combo in terms of noise, as well. Are you getting any weird turbulance due to the size differential, or harmonics ("singing") at certain loads?
I will be attempting to run a 140 mm NF-P14r redux-1500 on top and a 120 mm NF-F12 industrial PPC-2000 on the bottom, both PWM, to cool a 5820K, a similar setup to yours. I'll have to experiment with different headers and fan profiles. If I go through with the Anex drivers, I'll update with my thoughts. Your solution with the pliers may be the more practical for most people.
First build in a long time (posted also in Ncase M1 thread and here for completeness):
Ncase M1 v4
ASRock X99E-ITX/ac
Core i7 5820K
[placeholder] bundled ASRock fan
EVGA GTX Titan Z SC
Samsung SM951 256GB NVME
[placeholder] Silverstone SX500-LG
[placeholder] Crucial DDR4 2133MHz 8GB
Silverstone PP05-E
To fit it all, the PSU is in back-to-front and the PP05-E cable kit was absolutely necessary to connect the motherboard to the PSU. The backplate on the Titan means its a bit of a squeeze to get your cables around but can be done. Additional SSD's will probably require Silverstone CP11 cables as the r-angle SATA connectors on the motherboard are almost blocked, again by the PSU.
[GRIPE]
Just one query though, the system boots in about 28 seconds! I transplanted the SSD from an ASUS VII Impact with a 4790K (and internal GPU) and that booted in ~6s. I'm running Ubuntu and I am currently planning on re-installing the OS, updating the BIOS. Any ideas on how to solve the MUCH longer boot?
I get that there are more drivers to load for the GPU and the clock speed is lower on the 5820K, but wtf?
[/GRIPE]
How's your ssd doing? Mine only got 30MB/s writes so returned it. Might not be properly supported on this mobo.