Board Layout



Most of what you need is accessible, although you’ll need a case that has long leads for front panel switches as the front panel connector is placed in the top left corner of the board. BIOS jumper access gets a bit tricky once you plug in a few SATA cables and plug leads into surrounding connectors, the ideal place for the BIOS jumper would have been on the rear I/O panel.

Tall heatsinks are out because the CPU socket is placed very close to the DIMM slots and PCIe connector. That’s not a huge kicker though; CPU Vcore is supplied by a 3 phase circuit using small vertically mounted FETs, shattering any dreams of super-duper overclocks.


Moving over to the back, the CPU socket area is crowded with components. Intel definitely have stock heatsinks in mind as there’s no clearance for coolers that need backplates.


Zotac managed to cram 10 USB ports onto the rear I/O panel of their H55 board, Intel only supply six (the remaining six are available via onboard headers only). There are no PS/2 and VGA out ports either; space could certainly have been utilized better. As we mentioned above, the BIOS jumper should have been placed here for easy access.

Board Features Test Setup and Power
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  • Forgetsalvation - Thursday, March 25, 2010 - link

    I talked to Intel presales support, i was informed that essentially this motherboard's BIOS has been locked down so that it will not support the core i7.
    unfortunately i did not discover this until after i purchased this motherboard and a i7-860.

    I was very hopeful when I saw this review showed a i7-860 that worked, how ever i still can not get my system to boot.

    Do the moderators have any suggestions for me, i very much want to run this combo but I am running out to time to return these parts if they will not work
  • Erick Thompson - Monday, March 22, 2010 - link

    I would love to use the M350 case from mini-box, but the largest power supply I can get is 102 watts. With this board and a i3 530 (using integrated graphics), along with a SSD drive, it seems like 102 watts would be enough, if pushing the edge a bit. Any thoughts?

  • fbd - Tuesday, March 16, 2010 - link

    Yeah im interested in that also... I see that actually u tested a Core i7 in the board but i read in the documentation of the board that it is designed to support cpus up to 87W TDP only, while the i7 has 95 W. What does that mean? Is some kind of hardware part ( e.g. circuitry) of the board not sufficient to support an i7 or what? Or does it support it only at lower speeds? Im a bit confused. What does this mean: "We managed to get the board to post at 21X150 BCLK, but found processor core frequency throttles down to 3GHz or so under full load to ensure safety for the CPU VRM". Does it mean that if u put a stock core i7-860 into the board it wont be able to operate over 3ghz? What about turbo boost then? It cant go over 3ghz either? Thx for any reply.
  • abnderby - Saturday, March 6, 2010 - link

    Inoticed your comment about not reviewing many intel boards. Yes I do agree with you on the fact that they do not offer the best package of thrills and frils. But it has been my experience with many of the other manufacturers that the quality and length of service of their boards are no where near that of Intels. I have run into many issues with other boards after a year of 24/7 use. Some of the board components would fail or the boards would die.

    Over the last 12 years I have only had 2 Intel boards die with less than 5 years of service. None of which were my workstation/server boards or high end PC boards. Intel does put in a tremendous amount of quality that lasts.

    Currently I run 1 dual xeon that is 6 years old with 2 3.6 GHz xeons with 64 bit Windows 7. It stills runs flawlessly. I run a core 2 on intel uBTX 3 years now flawlessly.

    So please your crowd out here is not just enthusiests that like or have to overclock everything. Many of us want the high quality and long lasting systems. Intel boards must be in that mix.

    Duane
  • MamiyaOtaru - Friday, March 5, 2010 - link

    Jet Geyser is one of my favorite thermal features in Yellowstone. Around the corner from the Fountain Paint Pots. It's not a very big one though. Wonder if Intel had it in mind when naming their board
  • mschira - Monday, March 1, 2010 - link

    Hi
    I love these powerful low power systems!
    I would be very interested in tests of a file server based on these board.
    Like using a Highpoint RocketRAID 2322 system.

    Cheers
    M.
  • AmdInside - Monday, March 1, 2010 - link

    The P45 based mini-itx board from Intel had a lot of issues. I am not sure if I would jump on this one myself.
  • hnzw rui - Tuesday, March 2, 2010 - link

    As far as I'm aware, Intel doesn't have a P45 Mini-ITX board. They do have an Intel DG45FC which is a G45 board.
  • play2learn - Monday, March 1, 2010 - link

    Usb 3.0 and 32 nm graphics...Then maybe!
  • blyndy - Monday, March 1, 2010 - link

    It looks like m-itx is the new m-atx, which is great.

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