Asus tuf x299 mark 2 review năm 2024

The TUF line of motherboards are designed to be reliable and durable 24/7 motherboards. The Thermal Armor keeps dust off the board and with the fan, cools the chipset and M.2 device in the slots below it. The back plate not only protects the board from physical damage and improves rigidity, with the thermal pads between it and the back of the VRM, also helps to keep that area cooler as well. Though we did not see issues in our testing, I would have liked not to see the VRM heatsink covered (on any board) with a shroud to help with airflow. Outside of that, the Thermal Armor does look good to me. I'll admit, sometimes its nice not to see the all the little bits on the board. Clearly, that is a subjective opinion, appearance, but the look of the armor has come a long way since it started.

Asus tuf x299 mark 2 review năm 2024

Feature-wise, the TUF X299 Mark 1 has a lot of things going for it. The 8-phase digital VRM is shared with other boards in the lineup (Strix XE, Mark 1, Prime X299-A) and held its own during testing. Overclocking landed just where we expected it to at 4.5 GHz as we are thermally limited with the test system and parameters. The TUF did allow for a slightly lower voltage at the same clocks, but not enough of a difference to increase clocks or lower temperatures. Since we measure via software, the readings aren't as accurate so the difference was truly negligible.

Outside of that, the board gives users the full complement of six SATA ports supported by chipset as well as two M.2 slots. The first sits under the M.2 heatsink and is cooled by the chipset fan, while the second slot is a vertical M.2 slot located just below it. The vertical M.2 slot is a creative use of space and with the supplied mounting, will sit there securely. It does take some geting used to looking at a 4" stick jutting out of your motherboard though! Last, the latest USB 3.1 ports (Type-A and Type-C) are found on the back panel as well as support for a front panel USB 3.1 Type-C.

The TUF Detective 2 software for Android worked fine and showed high-level system information including a section for the debug codes. Users are able to connect to the included Bluetooth dongle and power your system on/off, reboot it, and even clear the CMOS. A useful tool indeed, however, a debug LED would have likely saved a bit of money, accomplishes the same goals, may cost less, and easier to gather information from without having your phone/tablet handy at all times.

Asus tuf x299 mark 2 review năm 2024

If gaming is going to be your primary use the TUF Mark 1 has you setup nicely, specifically in the multi-GPU space. 3-Way SLI/Crossfire is supported with a 28/44-lane CPU, and triple slot spacing helps the oversized heatsinks access to cooler air. The dual Intel network ports also have traffic priortizing software, Turbo LAN, used to adjust traffic for the best online performance of whatever application is selected as a priority.

Overall the ASUS TUF X299 Mark 1 is a sound foundation for the X299 platform with its PCIe slot configuration, dual Intel NICs, two M.2 slots, and eight SATA ports. The TUF Armor helps with both rigidity (back plate) keep dust out off the board, as well as the cooling it provides for the M.2 device and PCH heatsink. The back plate even assists with VRM cooling. Performance in our testing landed where expected for the given clock speeds so nothing is outstanding in that respect. If saving money is a concern, the TUF X299 Mark 1 is a bit less expensive and carries over a lot of the features, but less of the armor/aesthetics. If the TUF Mark 1 meets all your needs, and require a more rugged, protected board, there is no need to shy away from it.

We review the €289,- ASUS TUF X299 Mark 1 motherboard, yes, the Sabertooth series. A nice looking motherboard in a dark theme offering nice features, design and of course performance. This X299 motherboard can house Kaby Lake-X and Skylake-X processors. It has been a good few weeks ever since we tested the X299 in a review. There have been a lot of firmware/BIOS updates since, hence we are very curious how well the motherboards have improved in terms of overall performance, tweakability and power consumption.

This motherboard is intended for Intel Skylake-X processors that will be released this summer based on Socket LGA2066, however, the motherboard also supports Kaby Lake-X procs in the form of the quad-core Core i7 7740K and Core i5 7640K. We got our grubby little paws on a 10-core Skylake-X processor, as such welcome to this full review (but not thanks to Intel). Intel’s primary processor business has been releasing and refreshing quad-core processors for years now with an E type (e.g. Broadwell-E / Haswell-E) processor release every now and then. They had no rush and have been competitive and relaxed all the way for years now. Intel did anticipate Zen or Ryzen, but the AMD consumer-aimed Threadripper 16-core and Naples server segment 32-core made Intel step up its game a notch. Initially it was expected that Intel would announce a new 10 and maybe 12-core processor based on Skylake-X architecture. With everything that has been going on, there have now been a number of announcements going from top to bottom with an unexpected quad-core Kaby Lake-X release as well as announcements that entails Intel will release 18-core processors. The Skylake-X processors up-to 10 cores are going to be released initially. You will not see any availability for the 18, 16 and 14-core parts anytime sooner than October/November 2017. Skylake-X will release up-to 10-cores only. It is rumored that in August we’ll see the 12-core part - but consider that Intel isn't talking with the EU press anymore, who really knows right?

ASUS has been offering Intel X299 based boards in three motherboard series; Prime, TUF, and ROG. All aesthetically pleasing, all have RGB LEDs that can be combined with ASUS Aura Sync and all get a solid audio solution based on a Realtek S1220A codec. ASUS offers a standard sized ATX board with the TUF X299 Mark 1, it can support three-way graphics configurations from NVIDIA or AMD. ASUS will offer storage including dual M.2 PCIe slots. The main slot is hidden just below the chipset heatsink. A secondary one mounts drives vertically. At a price of €289,- the Mark 1 is actually one of the more 'affordable' models within its range. On the next page, a word or two on the processors and architecture, after which we'll dive into a full photo-shoot.

How much memory is compatible with asus tuf X299 mark 2?

The ASUS TUF X299 MARK 2 Motherboard takes the DDR4 PC4-17000 2133MHz, PC4-19200 2400MHz, PC4-21300 2666MHz Non-ECC DIMM memory type, and comes installed with basic factory installed memory.

What does TUF stand for in Asus?

ASUS TUF (The Ultimate Force), an ASUS brand for affordable, mid-range and low-end gaming products.