ASRock Z370 Killer SLI and Killer SLI AC

The ASRock Z370 Extreme line consists of the Z370 Killer SLI/ac, Killer SLI, and the Extreme4. Both of the Killer SLI boards will be covered on this page as the only difference between the two is the wireless LAN which comes with the SLI/ac. Some of the differences between the Gaming line and the Extreme line are the power delivery, different controllers/caps/chokes, different heatsinks, and controller choice allowing for cost-saving efforts to keep the price to the consumer lower than the Gaming or Professional branded motherboards.

Both the Killer SLI and SLI/ac look exactly the same outside of the back panel IO where the ac model has the Intel Wi-Fi card out back. The shared board otherwise is an all-black affair, outside of some artwork on the PCB going through the socket area. The chipset heatsink is more of a simple rectangle on the Killer boards compared to the Gaming boards, and has RGB LEDs below it. An RGB header is located on the bottom of the boards for adding another LED strip. Shrouding covers the back panel and audio sections, while the last design aesthetic that sticks out is the two full-length reinforced PCIe slots.

The four memory slots support the platform maximum of 64 GB, with supported speeds up to DDR4-4266. That value is still faster than most boards covered in the roundup, but one notch below the high-end ASRock boards. There are two full-length reinforced slots fed from the CPU, capable of x16 and x8/x8 connectivity, and four x1 slots from the chipset. Both 2-way SLI and 3-way Crossfire are supported (as well as quad SLI/Crossfire with dual GPUs).

The Killer SLI and SLI/ac both include six SATA ports supporting RAID 0, 1, 5, and 10. Additional storage is handled by two M.2 slots; the first is located above the top full-length PCIe slot and supports drives up to 80mm, while the second is located towards the bottom of the board below the chipset heatsink and supports drives up to 110mm. Be aware of slot sharing; if the first M.2 slot is occupied by a SATA device, SATA5 will be disabled, while if the second M.2 slot is occupied by a SATA module, SATA0 will be disabled.

Fan control is handled through the BIOS or via the F-Stream software, and gives control to all the fan headers: a CPU fan header (1A/12W), two chassis Fan headers, and a chassis optional/water pump header (1.5A/18W). Audio duties are handled by the last generation ALC892 codec, but is upgraded with the use of Nichicon Gold series audio caps. Network connectivity is handled by a single Intel I219-V on both boards with the SLI/ac adding the Intel Wi-Fi module for wireless support. The online specifications do not state which Wi-Fi module this is, although it is likely to be the AC3165. 

 

USB connectivity is the same on both boards with neither utilizing the USB 3.1 (10 Gbps) controllers. On the back panel there are five USB 3.1 (5 Gbps) ports and one Type-C port. Additionally, there are two internal USB 2.0 headers supporting four ports, and another internal USB 3.1 (5 Gbps) header yielding two more ports. All USB ports are handled by the chipset. The back panel IO also has two video outputs with an HDMI and DVI-D port, as well as a 5 plug audio stack plus SPDIF. The Killer SLI/ac is the one with the Intel Wi-Fi antenna ports out back as well. 

 

ASRock Z370 Extreme4 ASRock Z370 Pro4
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  • EricZBA - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    The Asus Strix Z370-G mATX may be up on Amazon's website, but it has been Out of Stock ever since the page went up with no shipping date in sight. NewEgg Canada has it out of stock and NewEgg's US website doesn't even have a page for it. To call it available is inaccurate.
  • Rubinhood - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    Coffee Lake & related hardware is the new Duke Nukem Forever :)
  • xchaotic - Monday, October 23, 2017 - link

    Well, I am typing this on Asus Strix Z370 I + i5 8400 PC so not entirely vaporware. People may be whining but it seems that Intel can't keep up with the demand...
  • piiman - Thursday, October 26, 2017 - link

    got an 8600k today at Newegg. They still have stock after 4 hours so it looks like they may be starting to get large shipments. I7 is still out of stock though
  • imaheadcase - Saturday, October 21, 2017 - link

    Amazon is different than newegg, if it says Out of Stock, if you order it it will ship when it comes in stock. Sometimes it will be same day even or next day. Amazon will only show "This item is not available" if completely out of stock for foreseeable future. They do this because it stops items from completely selling out right away so supply can be steady.
  • Morawka - Saturday, October 21, 2017 - link

    I have found that Asus treats USA customers like a red headed step child. They will send units to the UK, australia, and all of Europe before they will send 1 single board to the USA.

    Some advice: Start looking at Overclockers.UK and have it imported to the USA.. The $30 DHL International shipping is faster than USPS Priority Mail or UPS International Express Saver. No VAT tax either.

    This is what i had to do to get a Rampage VI Extreme. Newegg hasn't gotten a R6E in stock for 2 months after the initial release batch.
  • SpartanJet - Sunday, October 22, 2017 - link

    Does Asus USA cover warranty issues then since you bought it from UK?
  • Xeres14 - Monday, October 23, 2017 - link

    Yeah I've been waiting on the Asus z370-g. I can't find an i7-8700k right now either so it's all right. Hopefully I'll be able to get both before Christmas (along with the rest of the upgrade).
  • stuffwhy - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    This is so great. I find it increasingly difficult to find the right mainboard and this type of posting consolidates a lot of research time.
  • SanX - Sunday, October 22, 2017 - link

    There are no "right" mobo here. Right future proof and super fast mobo has to be a dual-processor at least. Dual-SLI for example offers benefits for speed but in many cases the dual-chip is doing the same in simulations.

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