ECS Z170

Despite rumors of ECS leaving the motherboard market first being widespread, refuted and then that refutation ignored, we are in constant contact with the team at ECS USA and they were more than happy to discuss a few of their upcoming motherboards for the Z170 chipset. ECS’ fortunes in the consumer motherboard market is actually to the tune of several million a year, but above the base cheap designs in Asia there has been not so much of a push into North America or Europe. For the couple of years ECS has been introducing its’ L33T (‘leet’) brand for gaming, although the nuance might be wearing a bit thin for some as the naming might not necessarily gel with anyone over 14. Nonetheless, the ECS Z170 motherboards came to our attention at Computex due to their use of the new Realtek Dragon 8118AS network controller which aims to compete in the same space as the Rivet Network’s Killer offering for gaming and network traffic prioritization.

ECS Z170 Claymore

At the front is the ATX offering, called the Claymore. Unfortunately not in Scots colors, but the general black theme I am told is so that the Claymore can integrate more easily into many different builds. Aside from the Realtek Dragon 8118AS network controller, ECS goes all out with the PCIe slots offering a combination of x8/x4/x4 from the CPU as well as a couple of others from the chipset – these are mostly likely x1 or x4, or may share bandwidth.

In the middle of the PCIe slots is an M.2 port, although for some reason this only supports M.2 in PCIe 2.0 x2 mode for PCIe based storage. Given how many lanes are available on the Z170 chipset, it makes me wonder why it is not using a full PCIe 3.0 x4. Nevertheless we also get six SATA ports with two bundled with a SATA Express port. Audio comes from the Realtek ALC1150, and USB 3.1-A ports on the rear panel are from an ASMedia ASM1142 controller.

Perhaps surprising here, but ECS is listing the Claymore as supporting HDMI 2.0. This means, because there isn’t an Alpine Ridge controller onboard, that they are using an LS-Pcon in order to do so and are the only ones who are doing it as far as I can tell. I am doubly confirming as this is being written.

ECS Z170-Blade

Despite seeing the Blade at Computex, ECS is not too ready to give details on how the board will look when launched because it is still begin decided. Nonetheless, a good micro-ATX motherboard is always respected, and the Blade will also carry the Dragon Ethernet part alongside USB 3.1.

ECS Z170IU-C43 – Image from 4gamer.net

For the low end of the market, ECS is providing the Z170IU-C43 – a mini-ITX motherboard with a somewhat odd design arrangement. Here the 24-pin ATX connector is at the edge of the board, but due to the CPU and chipset arrangement the 8-pin CPU connector is in no-mans land to the bottom left of the socket. This means that with a GPU in play this connector is very hard to get to and means that cables will be all over the chassis. It’s a design point that all the motherboard manufacturers have had to contend with at some point.

ECS is stating again that we have HDMI 2.0 connectivity on this board, while other functions include the Intel I219-V based networking, the Realtek ALC892 codec for audio, two USB 3.1-A ports on the rear panel and a single PCIe 3.0 x16 slot.

EVGA Z170 Galleries
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  • SirKnobsworth - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    The uplink to the CPU is only 32 Gbps, so there's no point in attaching something with more 4 lanes to the chipset.
  • SirKnobsworth - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    x8 isn't going to be a bottleneck for the GPU.
  • repoman27 - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    In case anyone else was wondering what LSPCON actually stands for, it's a Level Shifter / Protocol CONverter. I've been trying to parse that ever since the initial Alpine Ridge announcement / slide leaks.

    I'm glad to see that Alpine Ridge actually includes an integrated LSPCON, because that wasn't entirely certain based on the earlier reports.

    MegaChips appears to be first to announce a discrete LSPCON with their MCDP28 family: http://www.megachips.us/products/documents/MCDP28x...
  • timbotim - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    So far, I have only found that ASRock have a workaround for the win7-install-via-USB stick situation. Found it in the z170m pro4s manual on p.41 (Win7 USB Patcher). Out of interest does anyone know if using a USB adapter card in an expansion slot gets around the no-EHCI-in-Z170 problem?
  • Mithan - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    I want to buy a mITX board and upgrade to one of these babies, only issue is ... which one. I am sick of big cases.
  • Mr Perfect - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    Everyone loves a mini-ITX gaming motherboard, right?


    Right!

    Even if it says Fatal1ty?


    Damn it...
  • meacupla - Thursday, August 6, 2015 - link

    I think Asrock's mITX board is still better than Gigabyte's, if for only one little detail, which is the presence of a killer branded NIC.
  • Xpl1c1t - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    Gamers these days...
    Look at all the flashy slots, shrouds and heatsinks.
    Embarrassing.
  • dtsavage - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    3/55 = 5%

    5% of these boards are mATX. What is happening with this form factor?
  • Diagrafeas - Wednesday, August 5, 2015 - link

    I don't like these motherboards.
    My ideal configuration would be:

    1st Slot: PCIE x16(x16)
    2nd Slot: none (m.2 PCIE x4)
    3rd Slot: PCIE x16(x8 electrical from CPU)
    4rth Slot: none (m.2 PCIE x4)
    5th Slot: PCIE x16(x4 electrical shared with 1st m.2)
    6th Slot: PCIE x16(x4 electrical shared with 1st m.2)
    7th Slot: PCIE x16(x4 electrical)

    Which leaves
    6+4 USB3 (preferably 2 internal)
    4 USB2 (preferably 2 internal)
    2 SATA3
    1 Gigabit LAN
    x1 PCIE for wifi ac

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