Overview

Truth be told, I have not played with an ECS board in quite a while.  Every chipset, they come in with some product that does not really hit the radar – either in terms of price, availability, or performance.  Last year at Computex, they snapped up the award for ‘Best IC & Components’, and even showed off some of their P67 offerings (one of which will be subject to review in the near future).  In actual fact, ECS has 14 models of Sandy Bridge capable motherboard listed on their website – 4 P67, 6 H67 (1 ATX, 4 Micro-ATX, 1 Mini-ITX) and 4 H61 – so they’re definitely targeting a wide range of markets here.

After testing this board, I come away with mixed feelings.  There are certain things that ECS does quite well – the eJiffy application, 2D performance is quite good, idle power with no GPU is 13W lower than the ASRock H67, has a Debug LED and Power/Reset buttons on the board, and SATA write speeds.  However, there are plenty of things that the board does very poorly on – the BIOS is woeful, overclocking is non-existent, real-world USB performance lags behind the competition, and as the most expensive board in this roundup, leaves me scratching my head what that extra $20 is spent on.

Similar to the ASRock H67 board we tested, the ECS also fails to implement the maximum CPU turbo multiplier properly.  In single threaded mode, the CPU would run at a 3x multiplier increase rather than the 4x we are lead to believe.  It would vary rarely hit the 4x multiplier, but not in any constant sense.  In pure throughput terms, this makes the board perform worse than the P67 boards at stock, but as it has happened to all the boards here, then this must be down to a feature of the H67 chipset.

This board also defaults the RAM to a higher specification than some other boards.  If your kit is better than 1333 MHz C9, the memory will be set to 1333 MHz, 8-8-8-24 timings.  If the kit is 1333 MHz C9, then 1333 MHz C9 will be chosen.  These timings are oddly unchangeable in the BIOS. 

The ECS H67H2-M is a ‘Black Series’ edition ECS board, their premium H67 Micro-ATX model, and was available at retail for $140.

Visual Inspection

Despite what I said above, this board is quite aesthetically pleasing, as motherboards go.  The black and white livery provides stark contrast against offerings by other vendors, who like to stick to the blue and white scheme.  The VRMs are covered by a pair of heatsinks connected via pair of heat-pipes, and are considerably larger than those seen previously on even P67 boards.  This could be that ECS may have gone for cheaper VRMs that produce a little more heat to increase some profit margin, at the expense of VRM cooler size, and indeed the heatsinks are hotter to touch than the other boards, even when left at idle.

The socket itself has no trouble fitting the stock cooler or my Corsair H50-1 water cooling solution.  While there could be an issue fitting some larger coolers, one would not be needed, as H67 does not support CPU overclocking.  The Intel stock cooler does its job here quite easily, even at full load.  However, if you are going down the Corsair H50 route, there are not enough fan-headers to go around – I found one for the pump and one for one of the fans, but you’ll need a fan extension cable and/or a 3-pin to molex converter to get a second fan enabled, if you’re that way inclined.

The board contains 5 SATA ports – two SATA 6 Gb/s and three SATA 3 Gb/s.  All but one of these ports are angled.  Underneath these are the Power/Reset buttons, a welcome addition on any board, and usually paired with a Debug LED, which is located to the left of the chipset cooler.  The front panel connector here does not have the labels applied directly – you will have to hunt around the PCB to find which pin is which.  There is also no USB 3.0 header on the board, so all USB 3.0 has to be via the back panel.

The PCIe slots are laid out in an x16, x1, x1, PCI configuration, which leaves an x1 and the PCI slot free in case of dual cards.  I would have preferred an x1, x16, x1 arrangement at the top, as if you have a RAM fan cooler (such as the G.Skill we used in testing), having a dual slot long card in the PCIe x16 doesn’t let you fit that RAM cooler.  But in changing the configuration of the PCIe, something would have to be done about the lone SATA port sticking out of the board.

The back panel of the board contains the standard four video outputs with H67 – D-Sub, DVI, HDMI and DisplayPort.  We also have 4 USB 2.0 ports, 2 USB 3.0 ports (powered by an Etron controller), one eSATA 3 Gb/s port, a set of Audio ports including SPDIF out, and two Gigabit Ethernet connectors, which is a surprising addition on a H67 board.  Technically these ports (powered by Realtek RTL8111E controllers) support Teaming, to double the combined input/output if and when required – this is a very specific application but a more than welcome addition.  You will notice that ECS do not include PS/2 ports on the back panel, though.

ASRock H67M-GE/HT: UEFI, Overclocking ECS H67H2-M: Board Features, In The Box, Software
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  • MrSpadge - Wednesday, March 30, 2011 - link

    Well done, Gigabyte! And it's a shame how poorly the others are doing in comparison. I fI wanted high power consumption I could just stick with an old machine or get an AMD..

    Not wanting to start a bashing / flame war. It's just that in my eyes the exceptional power consumption (especially idle) of the Sandy Bridge + IGP (plus excellent performance) is what makes it really attractive for really many roles.

    MrS
  • trogthefirst - Thursday, March 31, 2011 - link

    Actually i was torn between H67/61 and one of those 785G/880G platforms for my aunt recently - non gaming build In the end she needed multi display scalable to possibly 3-4 displays so i went with a cheapo 880G and an $70ish AthlonII X3 With the Surround View feature you could run, with a Radeon GPU up to 4 displays (2 from integrated graphics) and 2 off something like a passively cooled HD 4350/5450 Sounds like a lot of expansion, features, etc for such a cheap platform if u ask me!
  • loimlo - Thursday, March 31, 2011 - link

    Dear Ian

    Would you like to share us with Power cumsumption measurement detail?
    1. Is it DC or AC draws?
    2. How do you measure the watts? From the wall plug by using Kill-a-watt?
    3. Did you give not so useful MB's energy-efficiency software like ASRock IES, Gigabyte Energy Saver?
    That said, I never had good experience with these softwares, especially Gigabyte one.
  • ShadowVlican - Thursday, April 7, 2011 - link

    did you guys measure total system power consumption, or is that just motherboard? looking to build a HTPC, would love something modern and doesn't eat power
  • tpk911 - Wednesday, April 20, 2011 - link

    Intel to release Z68 chipsets in first half of May
    Monica Chen, Taipei; Steve Shen, DIGITIMES [Wednesday 20 April 2011]

    http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20110419PD212.html

    Intel will release its Z68 chipsets in the first half of May, with Gigabyte Technology likely to be the first major motherboard maker to launch Z68-based products as soon as its embargo expires. Gigabyte's offerings will include its top-end GA-Z68X-UD7-B3 model.

    Motherboard makers have also reportedly been informed that Intel will focus more on its Z- and H-series chipsets.

    The share of P67-series motherboards will begin dropping once the Z68 is launched and the segment will gradually be phased out, with the P-series not being included in Intel's next generation chipsets.

    ...just a quick update, if I may :)
  • gsuburban - Sunday, February 12, 2012 - link

    I wanted to upgrade from an Asus P5 series board and found most of the P8 boards had no floppy or ide (pata) interface on them. Since I still have 2 great BenQ 1655 DVD recorders, they wouldn't be usable without buying a PCI PATA card. After looking matters over I didn't see much benefit in using up 2 of 6 SATA ports since I have at least 4 hard drives and would be limited on SATA ports etc.

    I thought it over and discovered the P8H67-V and P8H67-M Pro by Asus still had the ide interface on board. No floppy but at least the IDE was there which would yield 6 SATA ports available without using them for the DVD-Optical.

    I use XP Pro still since it does have it's advantages in some areas and not having the floppy drive is the pits as you can't load AHCI drivers via the F6 prompt in setup. I tried all sorts of ideas such as a custom image that included the AHCI drivers etc without success.

    The P67 boards are totally fine and they run fast with the right CPU and memory but they are best used with Windows 7. The H67 boards save you about $250 since you don't need a video card, the boards are less than the P67's and with the select models, you get an IDE port which also frees up 2 SATA ports for those who still have IDE devices.

    H67 would be my choice for high performance every day computing since the graphics are much improved from the days of G series and price is low, around $105.

    I think it's too soon to eliminate the floppy and IDE interface at any rate.

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