ASRock Z370 Gaming K6

The Gaming K6 is the second board in the Gaming lineup. The board is styled similarly but has fewer features when comparing it to the flagship, such as removing some of the premium features like 10-gigabit Ethernet. 

The overall appearance of the board is nearly the same as its big brother. The differences worth mentioning is the power and reset buttons have moved from next to the debug LED at the bottom right to the top right-hand corner. The debug LED remains in the same location as well as the other RGB LEDs in the shrouds and chipset heatsink. Additional strips can be added using the RGB header located on the bottom of the board.

Memory capacity and supported speeds are the same as the high-end model, at 64GB and DDR4-4333 respectively. There are three reinforced full-length PCIe slots, capable of running at x16 single, x8/x8 dual, and x8/x4/x4 when all are populated. To accompany this are three open-ended PCIe x1 slots, supporting larger cards but only at x1 bandwidth. This lane configuration allows support for 2-way SLI and 3-Way Crossfire.

The Gaming K6 breaks the regular Z370 mold and gives users eight SATA ports, six from the chipset and two additional ports from an ASM1061 controller. Two M.2 slots are on the K6 with the top one supporting 80mm drives and the other one nearer the chipset supporting up to 110mm. The first M.2 slot shares lanes with SATA 0/1 ports while the second shared with SATA 4/5 ports when SATA drives are connected.

Audio is handled by the Realtek ALC1220 codec and offers the same features as the flagship Pro Gaming i7 using Nichicon Gold series audio caps and the same NE5532 headset amplifier. Sound shaping is handled by the Creative Sound Blaster Cinema 3 software. Networking responsibilities are handed off to two Intel NICs, an I219-V and I211-AT. Though wireless networking isn’t included, there is an M.2 E-Key slot in the back panel if needed.

USB connectivity is similar with the K6 offering a front panel USB 3.1 (10 Gbps) Type-C port as well as Type-C and Type-A ports on the back panel using an ASMedia chipset. Four USB 3.1 (5 Gbps) ports are on the rear panel, with two additional headers on board. Six USB 2.0 ports via three headers are also supported. The rear panel IO also has a combination PS/2 port, and uses D-Sub, DVI-D and HDMI video outputs.

ASRock Z370 Professional Gaming i7 ASRock Z370 Extreme4
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  • risa2000 - Saturday, October 21, 2017 - link

    It seems that the PCB which holds the silicon has changed between the 7th and the 8th gen. So they most likely needed to validate the CPU. The fact that they did not move the notch means they just did not want to (could not) introduce a new socket. Either because there were so many of the old ones, or there was no time, or they did not want to push the cost to MB manufacturers to revalidate the new sockets.
  • shabby - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    For a split second i thought finally some x370 goodness... but no.
    Shame, shame, shame!
  • tamalero - Saturday, October 21, 2017 - link

    I'm waiting for actual non clown disco BS Threadripper motherboards :(
  • ikjadoon - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    Amazingly well done. Excellent write-up.
  • AbRASiON - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    Stupid question, I got the AsRock simple ITX board and it won't turbo my CPU at all (8400) like no turbo PERIOD. It never ever goes over 2763mhz?

    Anyone got any ideas on this? Am I just stupid and this is normal behaviour or what?
    https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/am-i-doing-so...
  • bernstein - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    FYI: GIGABYTE Z370N-WiFi is also HDMI 2.0 capable
  • Byte - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    If nothing else, Asus makes some damn good looking boards.
  • docbones - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    My big question still on the z370 is whats the 390 going to bring? Will the 370 not support a octocore chip?
  • shabby - Friday, October 20, 2017 - link

    This is intel we're talking aboot, new chip = new mobo period.
  • Ro_Ja - Saturday, October 21, 2017 - link

    Once Kaby Lake E is released, that's a new mobo again.

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