Box Contents and What to Expect

Over the years of reviewing motherboards, it is clear that the price of the overall package is a good indicator of what is inside the box. The cheaper motherboards below $100 rarely come with more than a couple of SATA cables, whereas the most expensive $500 comes with external goodies, like the Rampage IV Black Edition with the included OC Panel. Motherboard manufacturers often have a choice – strip the goodies out to make the product hit a lower price point, or invest in the end-user having an experience with the product as long as the extras make sense.

With X99, almost all the motherboards are in the high end category because X99 itself is a premium product, so we expect to see more than just SATA cables here. One of the common features with the gaming motherboards will be addition of licenses for gaming related software such as XSplit or even bundled games for certain regions.

ASUS X99-Deluxe In The Box

Due to the X99-Deluxe price point around $400, as well as the extra features like the vertical M.2 and Hyper x4 M.2, we get a fair amount of stuff:

Driver Disk
Manuals
Quick Installation Guide
Rear IO Shield
Vertical M.2 Brace and clips
Hyper M.2 x4 PCIe card
Wi-Fi Antenna for 3T3R
Fan Extension Card with adhesive
Two-pin Thermistor
3-Way SLI Flexible Connector
8 SATA Cables

In the past, ASUS has added extras into the box where they were not ultimately necessary – this time each addition is required to make something already on the motherboard to work. ASUS is still hedging its bets between SATA Express and M.2 however, with the vertical M.2 required to get extra functionality out of the limited PCB space.

GIGABYTE X99-UD7 WiFi In The Box

At around $310, the UD7 is just below the ASRock X99 WS in price but sits quite nicely in the middle of the X99 range between the super-high end and the low end of the spectrum. At certain points in the past GIGABYTE has given the user a reduced level of box extras in order to drive the price point of a motherboard down into another category, but that might not be so much of an issue here.

In the box we get:

Driver Disk
Manual
Rear IO Shield with LED Lighting
Flexi 2-way SLI Bridge
Short 3-way SLI Bridge
Long 3-way SLI Bridge
4-way SLI Bridge
Flexi 2-way Crossfire Bridge
WiFi Antenna
1 to 3 ATX 12V power cable
Six Sleeved SATA Cables

There is a healthy amount of SLI cables, including a long individual ones for three-way SLI with both 28 and 40 PCIe lanes CPUs. Adding the Crossfire bridge is a nice touch, as this seems to fly under everyone’s radar. Aside from the flashy IO shield and the antenna, one element stands out more than others: sleeved SATA cables!

This needs to be a thing in all motherboard boxes today. Even if it costs an extra $0.50 per motherboard for six cables (because manufacturers buy in bulk) I would certainly give this the thumbs up.

ASRock X99 WS In The Box

In our previous consumer oriented WS motherboard reviews, these types of motherboards are filled with SATA cables and SLI bridges to support multiple NVIDIA cards for compute. Workstation users might also require other connections from the COM or LPT adapters, depending on their use, although the ASRock X99 WS eschews those here in favor of its own HDD Saver cable.

In the box we get:

Driver Disk
Rear IO Panel
Manual
HDD Saver Cable for two SATA devices
Four SATA Cables
2-slot, 3-slot and 4-slot SLI bridges

ASRock is often generous with SATA cables, and previous levels of box contents have gone above and beyond the expected price point. At $324 this box bundle represents almost a bare minimum, and I would have expected a couple more SATA cables at least.

MSI X99S SLI Plus In The Box

Being the cheapest motherboard of the ones tested today, we would hazard a guess and say that it would be coming with the least kit included. $230 is in the middle to mid-high range for Z97 motherboards and might come with an extra free thing or two, but $230 is almost bottom of the pile for X99 and will most likely be treated as such. In the box we get the following:

Driver Disk
Manual
Rear IO Shield
Flexi SLI Bridge
Six SATA Cables

This is somewhat interesting. We have two more SATA cables than the ASRock motherboard, but it is odd that the X99S SLI Plus is designed around three-way GPU setups but we only get one SLI bridge in there. I would have assumed that users would be more interested in a three-way SLI Bridge than more SATA cables. However, because three-way SLI needs a strange way to connect them all, the extra cost of those cables might be prohibitive. Users will have to find SLI cables elsewhere for more than a 2-way graphics setup.

MSI X99S SLI Plus BIOS and Software 2014 Test Setup and Overclocking on X99
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  • gostan - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    feel like I'm transported back to 2001

    good job AT!
  • xunknownx - Saturday, September 27, 2014 - link

    what settings on povray is being used in this article? i would love to compare my results against theirs.
  • todo1 - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    X79 supports TRIPLE CHANNEL DDR3, not quad!
    I don't how it is even possible to make such a mistake?!?
  • tyaiyama - Wednesday, October 1, 2014 - link

    After reading the following:
    http://www.legitreviews.com/intel-x99-motherboard-...
    Is it worth recommendation from Anadtech? Almost 1 month has passed without Asus solving the problem. What's good about this M/B unable to certain hours operations(^^)
  • tyaiyama - Wednesday, October 1, 2014 - link

    BTW, MSI M/B also has an issue.
    http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&...
    Both of these M/B happened to be recommended by Anand over the other two: AsRock & Giga. What does it mean? I personally likes AsRock X99 WS which seems Asus X99-E WS w/o PLX.
  • Haravikk - Thursday, October 2, 2014 - link

    Is there a reason the motherboards with moulded shapes over the various I/O ports don't include the I/O shield built-in? I hate adding those damned things; seems unnecessary if your motherboard is shaped around the ports already.
  • Oxford Guy - Saturday, October 4, 2014 - link

    Power phases?

    Also, it seems really lazy to not check what changing the MSI load line calibration setting would actually do if changed. "This is quite odd. It would seem the efficiency of the MSI motherboard when overclocked is somehow stunted..." vdroop is supposed to be part of the Intel specification and load line calibration defeats it, right? So, it looks like there is your answer. Auto isn't the optimal setting.

    Also, if you tested these motherboards in the order you reviewed the overclocking results in, you may have fatigued the chip which explains why the results kept getting worse.
  • woj666 - Monday, October 6, 2014 - link

    Agreed, it seems very obvious that that Load Line Calibration setting of "auto" on this MSI board is in fact quite aggressive and applying vboost as described here http://www.anandtech.com/show/2404/5 and here http://linustechtips.com/main/topic/24019-load-lin...

    The OC section of this article is not comparing apples to apples as the default LLC settings are not the same for the different boards.
  • akula2 - Tuesday, October 14, 2014 - link

    It was a great review, appreciate it very much.

    1) why Asus X99-E WS is missing out of action?

    2) Asus X99-E WS ($510) or Asrock X99 WS ($310)?

    My ten X99 ultra Workstations will have the upcoming Maxwell based Nvidia Quadro and Tesla cards? I'm also evaluating Firepro W9100 card too. I don't know if there will be Maxwell based Titan Black (II or whatever name)?

    Five builds will have Xeon E5-2680 v3 (more like due to price/performance) or Xeon E5-2690 v3
    Five builds will have i7-5760X CPUs

    I never used Asrock WS boards earlier, but have many Asus WS boards (X79/Z97). So, what do you think of Asrock WS over Asus X99-E WS in the given configuration above?

    Yeah, all Xeon workstations will have Intel P3700 NVMe storage solution. Also, I'm pondering on Synology DiskStation DS2413+ for 48TB NAS solution using WD Red Pro HDDs for those planned ten X99 builds.

    Hence, what do you think about those two boards?

    3) Did you observe any PCI-e 3.0 limitations/bottleneck on those two boards? Asus X99-E board has 16-four lanes solution? Please clarify on this count.

    Thank you
  • eng.michael - Friday, January 23, 2015 - link

    HELLO
    PLEASE HELP ME
    I have one , and i install O.S windows server 2012R2 ,and install all drivers correctly EXCEPT LAN driver , any one can help me in this BIG Problem.
    THANKS

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