ASUS Strix Z690-E Gaming WiFi Motherboard Review
Author: Dennis GarciaBenchmark Configuration
ASUS STRIX Z690-E Gaming WiFi – Z690 Chipset
Intel Core i7 12700k (3.2Ghz) Sixteen Core 12+12 32KB L2 Cache 9+9 x 1.25MB L3 Cache 25MB
Thermaltake Water 2.0 Extreme
1x nVidia RTX 2080 Super
2x Crucial PC5-4800 16GB DDR5 (40-39-39-76)
Patriot P200 512GB SSD
HP dvd1260i Multiformat 24x Writer
Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1050 Watt PSU
Windows 11 Pro 64bit
EVGA Z590 Dark – Z590 Chipset
Intel Core i9 11900k (3.5Ghz) Octo Core 8 x 512KB L2 Cache 16MB L3 Cache
Thermaltake Water 2.0 Extreme
1x nVidia RTX 2080 Super
2x GSKill TridentZ PC4-330000 8GB DDR4 (19-19-19-39)
Patriot VP4300 2TB NVMe SSD
HP dvd1260i Multiformat 24x Writer
Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1050 Watt PSU
Windows 10 Pro 64bit
ASUS Maximux XII Hero – Z490 Chipset
Intel Core i9 10900k (3.7Ghz) Deca Core 10 x 32KB L2 Cache 10 x 256KB L3 Cache 20MB
Thermaltake Water 2.0 Extreme
1x nVidia RTX 2080 Super
2x GSKill TridentZ PC4-330000 8GB DDR4 (19-19-19-39)
Crucial MX500 500GB SSD
HP dvd1260i Multiformat 24x Writer
Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1050 Watt PSU
Windows 10 Pro 64bit
ASUS Maximus XI Apex – Z390 Chipset
Intel Core i9 9900k (3.6Ghz) Octo Core 8 x 256KB L2 Cache 16MB L3 Cache
Thermaltake Water 2.0 Performer
1x nVidia GTX 980Ti
2x GSKill TridentZ PC4-27700 8GB DDR4 (16-18-18-38)
Crucial MX500 500GB SSD
HP dvd1260i Multiformat 24x Writer
Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1050 Watt PSU
Windows 10 Professional 64bit
Aorus X299X Xtreme Waterforce – X299 Chipset
Intel Core i9 7900x (3.0Ghz) Ten Core 10 x 1MB L2 Cache 13MB L3 Cache
XSPC Custom Water Loop 240mm Radiator D5 Pump
1x nVidia GTX 980Ti
4x Corsair Vengeance LPX PC4-21300 16GB DDR4 (15-17-17-35)
Crucial MX500 500GB SSD
HP dvd1260i Multiformat 24x Writer
Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1050 Watt PSU
Windows 10 Pro 64bit
Our motherboard testing suite has been compiled to subject the system to a variety of different scenarios that help uncover some of the subtle differences in motherboard design. Normally these differences are driven by the processor and BIOS programming but with the advent of an IMC and PCI Express moving to the CPU we have discovered that raw performance numbers are virtually identical across most systems using the same processor.
Our new approach is to look at total system performance and minimize the variances. The results will tell us how the system responded as a total package and also give us something to use in our comparisons.
As with most new processor and chipset releases we will be comparing the current system to previous products not only to see how they stack up but, to better understand how much of an increase we are getting by upgrading.