Conclusion: ECS Z77H2-AX

The ECS Z77H2-AX comes straight out of the box in a bedazzling gold sheen.  If you want a gold colored motherboard and do not feel like spray painting heatsinks and capacitors yourself, then the ECS Z77H2-AX has you covered.  It is just a shame that the rest of the package does not live up to that expectation.

If we start from the top, we have a PLX PEX 8747 motherboard that is retailing at the time of writing on Newegg for $310.  The ECS Z77H2-AX offers something a little different than the other motherboards such that instead of having four full-length PCIe slots for multiple GPU action, ECS have gone down to three (which takes it away from a very small minority of users) and thus x16/x8/x8 connectivity.  With this setup, we get space between the first and second full sized GPU, or space for two three-slot GPUs in an x16/x16 configuration.

On board we get built in WiFi and Bluetooth, as well as an mSATA port and the first motherboard in our Z77 reviews to use a Texas Instruments branded USB 3.0 controller.  Unfortunately, the buck stops there.

The system uses only six of the twelve USB 2.0 ports supported by the chipset, and only six USB 3.0 total compared to other motherboards in this review that offer up to twelve USB 3.0.  We have access to six SATA ports on board and an mSATA, where ECS decide to leave one of the SATA ports supported by the chipset unconnected.  To save costs we have a Realtek combination of NIC and Audio, but even then we only get the ALC892 audio rather than the ALC898.  The ECS Z77H2-AX has only one NIC, rather than the other motherboards in this review which have two each.  For video outputs, we get VGA and HDMI, which remove the use of any display above 1920x1200 due to Ivy Bridge limitations.

In terms of performance, ECS have decided not to go down the MultiCore Enhancement route.  It goes a little further than that, in the sense that our multithreaded testing on the ECS Z77H2-AX seemed a little sluggish compared to some other boards.  It should also be noted that our USB 2.0 sequential testing resulted in a 20% speed loss compared to every other Z77 motherboard we have ever tested.  For our real world copy test this meant an increase from 60 seconds to 75 seconds.

Overclocking was a little unusual, with the motherboard offering its own interpretation of Load Line Calibration causing a positive bias on the CPU voltage when at load by as much as 0.075 volts.  Nevertheless we did hit 4.7 GHz with ease.  Memory on the other hand was a little tricky to navigate, with the motherboard refusing our XMP setting or any attempt to set XMP timings.  In the end, we settled for testing on 2133 10-12-12 rather than 2400 9-11-11.

The BIOS needs a little work, particularly to correct the ClearCMOS issue and resetting to defaults, as well as adjusting the SATA configuration from IDE to AHCI by default.  Also, the BIOS seems to manipulate the video output of the GPUs to the physically lowest card plugged in, which is also an unusual situation.  We also cannot update the BIOS through the BIOS. 

The software also needs polish, with the Live Update on the drivers and utilities not working properly.  The one redeeming feature despite the lack of fan headers on board is the use of hysteresis on the fan header control, which I rather like.

For $310, the ECS Z77H2-AX is way out of its league.  My gut feeling is that ECS have overpaid for the PLX chip, or are thinking that a lick of gold paint can bring in the big money.  Even if it was brought down to $250, it would be a hard sell.  In comparison to the Gigabyte Z77X-UD5H which retails at $180, the Gigabyte board runs rings around the ECS in functionality and benchmarks.  Anyone that wants to argue otherwise has not compared the two.

Conclusion: ASRock Z77 Extreme9 Conclusion: EVGA Z77 FTW
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  • Namesblank - Tuesday, July 26, 2022 - link

    10 years later, people be looking for how to build system with 20+ GPUs lmao
  • mayankleoboy1 - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    Where are the GPGPU benchmarks? AFAIK, those are affected by the PCIE 3.0 bandwidth, as shown in the HD7970 review.

    Games are more or less happy with a PCIE2.0 x8 .
  • MrSpadge - Thursday, August 23, 2012 - link

    A few GP-GPU apps are affected, most aren't. Even PCIe 3 is slow as hell from the perspective of the GPU, so you try to avoid external communication as much as possible.
  • TimoKyyro - Wednesday, August 29, 2012 - link

    I was hoping to see some GPU rendering too. I'm using CUDA on Blender and I really need more GPU power. It would be nice to know if there is a difference between 4x 680 or 2x 690 on different PCIe setups.
  • extide - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    Thanks for providing the diagrams of lane routing. I wish ALL manufacturers would supply a diagram with their boards so you know how to set it up when you are building a system. Sadly, these diagrams are the exception, not the rule. :(
  • processinfo - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    For me only EVGA seems worth consideration (I don’t like a fan on chipset though).

    I have few requirements that others do not meet.

    I want PS/2 keyboard port (don’t care about mouse). I don’t see it as legacy. It is still superior to USB for keyboard. Works on interrupts instead of pulling, allows as many keys pressed without ghosting as you wish (know it probably does not matter in real life but I like that anyway).

    Display port output is mandatory for me these days. While it is true that this kind of mobo will run dedicated graphics card (or more than one for that matter) I like to have output here for possibility to use it with CPU graphics if my graphic cards breaks and needs replacement (I had that happen and waited almost two weeks for new one). HDMI is no go because does not support high enough resolution.

    Gigabyte is out for me because audio chip. Maybe it is better but it does not do 7.1 and I will lose two channels in my Tiamat 7.1 headset.
  • rwpritchett - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    You should check out some of the newer USB keyboards. I don't know how they do it, but some of them can now do full NKRO without PS/2. My Nighthawk X9 can do full NKRO over USB.
  • processinfo - Thursday, August 23, 2012 - link

    Interesting but this is not possible with standard USB keyboard protocol. If it does that it has to use some tricks and most likely custom keyboard driver.

    Also I have Thermaltake Meka G1 that I like and I purchased because I got tired replacing membrane keyboards so I rather buy motherboard with PS/2 then new keyboard.

    My point is that at this price point and clearly meant for gamers (who else is using more than one graphic card in non-workstation pc) they should think about such details especially when they go overboard with other ports, e.g., who needs all 4 kinds of display output on gaming mobo, or 10 USB ports on back plate alone (if you need plenty you can have them on bracket connected to header).
  • MacGyverSG1 - Wednesday, August 22, 2012 - link

    I loved the review. The G1.Sniper 3 was on my short list for a while. Could get back on, though.

    I'm waiting for the ASUS Maximus V Extreme to get tested next.

    I only need a motherboard to complete my new build. I plan on running this new rig for 6+ years so I want a board that can keep up with the times.
  • just4U - Thursday, August 23, 2012 - link

    I am staying away from the Rampage/Maximus lines from Asus this time out as Gigabyte has pretty much brought better value accross the board on their gamer boards. I don't expect Asus to catch up till the next chipset..

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