Technical Details
- 8 x DIMM Slots, Quad-channel DDR3 2400(O.C.)/2133(O.C.)/1866/1600/1333/1066 MHz Support
- Digital 8+2 Phase Power Design
- 3 x PCIe 3.0 x16 (dual@x16; triple@x16/x8/x8); 1 x PCIe 3.0 x16 (@x8) + 2 x PCIe 2.0 x1
- AMD Quad-GPU CrossFireX and NVIDIA 3-Way SLI support
- LAN featuring Intel 82579V Chipset
- ASUS SSD Caching - One click away from experiencing the benefits of both SSD and HDD without any capacity limitation
- ASUS UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) BIOS
- Bluetooth v2.1 + EDR
Product Description
P9X79 DELUXE features the Intel X79 chipset supporting the Intel LGA2011 2nd Generation Intel Core i7 Processors. 8-DIMM Design provides maximum performance and versatility of memory configuration. Dual Intelligent Processors 3 technology integrated with new DIGI+ Power Control - capable of achieving most precise adjustment, enhanced performance and stability, and O.C. capacity for CPU & RAM. Fully ready for true PCIe 3.0, built to be future-proof with PCIe 3.0 switching IC for NVIDIA SLI support and future PCIe 3.0 peripherals. ASUS SSD Caching with no SSD capacity limitation, and it is as easy as one-click away.
Customer Reviews
By Rashid Karimov
My build:
- this mobo
- i7-9630x
- Corsair H80
- 32 GB of RAM (2 of 16GB kits of Corsair Vengeance Blue 16 GB PC3-12800 1600mHz)
- Cooler Master Silent Pro Gold (SPG) 800 Watts Modular Power Supply
- Cooler Master HAF X
All fits together 100%. The space is just right: cables are right length, the H80 clears the RAM heatsinks by about 1/4" . Overclocks to 4.4 with 0 effort, temps are very reasonable, pretty quiet as well. It throttles back to 1.4GHz when there's no load.
On the whole 2600k vs 96xxX debate. Think about this way: a 2600K with H80 is $200 less than a 9630x/H80 package deal. The top of the line mobos for both are in the same price range. For a performance freak in some of us the $200 is well worth it. But for most other folx it aint :)
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