ECS Z87

When I started writing this preview, I had neither seen nor heard from ECS in many months.  There was not an emphasis on talking to me about Haswell and pre-launch information, but between the time I started writing this preview and this sentence, ECS just so happened to launch their 8-series microsite.  This microsite lists around 10 motherboard models , covering Z87 as well as B-/H-/Q- series chipsets with various tabs still with options ‘to be released’.  Needless to say I got on to the email and asked my ECS contact for details.  What came through was a series of high definition images and a list of most of their release SKUs:

ECS Pro Z87H3-AX Golden
ECS Pro Z87H3-A2X Golden
ECS Pro Z87H3-A2X Extreme
ECS Pro Z87H3-A2
ECS Deluxe Z87H3-A4
ECS Deluxe H87H3-M4
ECS Deluxe H87H3-M3
ECS Deluxe H87H3-M
ECS Deluxe H87H3-TI
ECS Essentials B85H3-M
ECS Essentials B85H3-M4
ECS Essentials B87H3-M3
ECS Essentials H81H3-A3
ECS Essentials H81H3-M4

ECS are splitting their range of motherboards up into the Pro, Deluxe and Essentials names.  While the final SKU names might not have these in the end, it at least in part splits the model numbers up such that users can determine that the Pro boards are the high end boards.  Though at first look it is possible to be confused about the Pro/Deluxe naming, given that with ASUS the Deluxe is a higher model than the Pro but with ECS it is the Pro that is the higher range.

At this point in time, we have access to the images of only several of these models.  More will come in time and we will update accordingly!

ECS (Pro) Z87H3-AX Golden

Those unfamiliar with ECS’ naming scheme may be able to determine from the list above that A means ATX, the higher the Ax or Mx number the lower down the chain, and special boards get an additional moniker such as Golden or Extreme.  At the top of this list is the Z87H3-AX Golden, another proponent of the Golden series.  Now we took a look at the ECS FM2 Golden motherboard and it was fairly dazzling.  ASUS have done something a lot more subtle, and now ECS is also scaling it down a touch:

It is worth noting that the common misconception on the ECS Golden range is that the color is actually real gold – for the most part it is not, just a golden finish.  ECS have had features in the past where some of the connectors have more gold in them to help with insertion rates and resistance, but for the most part it is just a color.  While we still have a large gold heatsink and IO panel, it does feel a little toned down from the past.

In terms of features on the AX, we notice a dual NIC, integrated WiFi on the IO, and four-way GPU without a PLX (thus an x8/x4/x4 + x4 scenario like the Z87X-OC and OC Formula).  New to the ECS range is a series of voltage check points, but around the SATA ports we see something rather interesting.  There are at least five different buttons (two of which are power/reset), and a three-digit LED debug.  Now I am quite interested in seeing what they have planned for these!

ECS Z87H3-A2X Golden

Moving down the SKU stack and the A2X is reduced in part down to three-way GPU usage.  We still have the golden heatsinks connecting through to the chipset, and the button options are now located in a tight corner on the bottom right of the board.

There is a Bluetooth module on the rear IO, as well as 8 SATA ports total (with one mSATA).  It is worth noticing that while other manufacturers are pushing audio this generation, ECS is more focused on that array of buttons in the corner.

ECS Z87H3-A2X Extreme

For users not too keen on the golden color, it seems ECS are making a range in red as well.  I can see the chipset heatsink is marked with ‘LEET Gaming’, which most likely means a tie in with a gaming clan, although there are several clans with the designation LEET Gaming.

ECS Z87H3-A4

The A4 is a more budget oriented board, more like the ECS we are used to.  This is a single GPU board with an x16+x4 PCIe configuration with six SATA ports, an mSATA, two PCI slots, a single NIC, all four video outputs, and a copper shield to protect the CPU…?

ECS call this an anti-dust shield (ADS).  I am not entirely sure what use, if any, the shield would be – if the board is vertical in a case then it would catch some dust perhaps.  It is worth noting that we are down to a few phases on this model of board.

Other ECS Motherboards

The ECS microsite has listed several more models:

We expect to have information on these boards soon!

MSI, Biostar and EVGA Final Words
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  • austinindallas - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    the asrock z77 extreme 4 was my very first experience with asrock, but i am VERY satisfied with it. and it was a GREAT price compared to others
  • Sm0kes - Friday, May 24, 2013 - link

    Better than SATA II speeds on the mSATA port. Not sure why it was gimped on the z77e-itx.
  • mutantmagnet - Tuesday, May 28, 2013 - link

    The build quality is fine. An article posted by Gigabyte was comparing the failure rate of the various motherboard makers (which they got first place last year) didn't make me think any motherboard manufacturer was significantly behind the others to single any of them out as bad.
  • crimson117 - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Asus summary:

    Channel boards:
    ASUS Z87-C
    ASUS Z87-A
    ASUS Z87-Plus (y u no A+?)
    ASUS Z87-Pro
    ASUS Z87-Deluxe

    Specific purpose boards:
    ASUS Z87-WS (for workstations)
    ASUS Z87-ITX (mITX) (for mITX cases)

    Enthusiast boards:
    ASUS Sabertooth Z87
    ASUS ROG Maximus VI Hero
    ASUS ROG Maximus VI Extreme

    mATX Enthusiast:
    ASUS Gryphon Z87 (mATX)
    ASUS ROG Maximus VI Gene (mATX)

    While I'm cautiously optimistic that they've improved over their indecipherable Z77 naming schemes, I'm taking bets regarding how long it will be until the L, LK, ML, FJ, WJK, MS, JK, and YOLO variants show up and confuse everyone.
  • c0pperbottoms - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    How about a micro-ATX board where I can have 2 dual-slot GPUs in 16x slots where the damned PCI or PCI-E 1x slot is ABOVE the GPUs so I can have a sound card (or some other accessory for that mattter)??
  • meacupla - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Because most mATX cases sport 4 slots, not 5?
    You might as well buy an ATX board and ATX case if you're going to go out of your way to buy an mATX case that has 5 slots and would also be undoubtedly large.
  • This Guy - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    I want a small, quite computer but already have an expensive sound card and need crossfire/sli to run my monitors. The Corsair Obsidian 350D looks well suited to my wants and I was thinking about getting a Z87 version of the Gigabyte D3H. A few Noctura's and it will been silent except when gaming.
  • Death666Angel - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Well, for x16 in dual GPU configuration, you need S2011. Haswell only provides enough for x8 in dual GPU configuration. But I think you are just meaning x8/x8 for 2 GPUs.
    Look at the
    Gigabyte G1.Sniper M5
    It gives you x8/x1/x4/x8 slots where you can have a dual slot graphics card in the first x8, then a PCIe in the x4 and a dual/triple slot graphics card in the last x8.
  • c0pperbottoms - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Actually I did mean two 16x, but thanks for clarifying. Not yet very well read on Haswell. Also it occurs to me that we're not really bumping up against the (admittedly negligible) bandwidth constraints of PCIE-2 anymore, so two 8x aren't really of a problem :)

    There are a number of micro-ATX cases that sport 5 slots... They're still smaller than a mid-tower full-up ATX case.
  • alwayssts - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    I'm with you on this...it's funny how many people want what we do. Here is my plan:

    I use a PC-C50b because I agree Matx in the most sensible form-factor these days. The case can house a Noctua C14 and still fit in an entertainment rack, what else do you really need? I would not call it exceptionally large. Case has 4 CONVENTIONAL slots...but a fifth at an angle so you could use with a flexible riser.

    http://www.lian-li.com/v2/en/product/product06.php...

    I very well might find myself going dual-GPU as soon as 4k60 connectivity and televisions are a consumer reality...but I know I will want one of those spiffy ROG pci-e SSDs. I suppose SATA will be a reality at some point around that time, but we'll see.

    I really wish the cards could sit next to each other because the riser slot is perpendicular, and will probably be pretty terrible for a graphics card...but that's how it has to be.

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