ASRock X99 WS Conclusion

If we were to assign characteristics to a company based on previous launches, ASRock tends to be the one that has a mountain of small new ideas. Some of these ideas work really well and become essential parts of the package, while others initially sound confusing and drop off the radar. While the workstation route is somewhat new to ASRock’s consumer motherboard design team, it seems that the historic characteristics of ASRock are not here in the X99 WS – there is very little that seems ‘new’ compared to everyone else. If we look at other motherboards in this review, we have features such as the OC Socket, the UV light-up rear-panel or interesting PCIe/storage arrangements, but it would seem that ASRock’s effort in the X99 WS is more on the components than the functionality.

The big thing ASRock is promoting with the X99 WS is full Xeon E5 v3 support with ECC and RDIMM verification up to 128GB of memory. The WS is not the only motherboard in the X99 consumer stack to accept Xeons (in fact, most of them will), although few openly announce ECC/RDIMM support. The main lynchpin with ASUS WS motherboards, for example, is QVL support for a large range of additional PCIe devices that regular users do not use (Xeon Phi, RAID cards, FPGA). Unfortunately ASRock has made no effort to communicate that support in their press or online materials, suggesting that the only move towards ‘WS’ naming is the dual Intel NIC design with vPro support (for Windows Server applications) and some higher end components for 12-phase power delivery.

With all this being said, the X99 WS is a more than capable board for a build. It gives a set of six full-length PCIe slots for additional cards, M.2 support up to 110mm and for WS users and a pair of COM headers teamed with a TPM header. We get the enhanced audio with Purity Sound 2 hiding a Realtek ALC1150 codec under an EMI shield, and the extra-large heatsinks should help with heat dissipation. One additional benefit with the WS is that the z-height is sufficient to use this motherboard in a 1U server, allowing for high-density setups. If a user is building a heavy compute platform, there are two additional power connections for PCIe cards, although the 4-pin molex connector in the middle of the board is somewhat unwieldy from a cable management perspective.

From a BIOS and software perspective, the BIOS has been rearranged slightly for manual overclocking which makes it easy to understand where everything is, although there is room for some small adjustment. The aesthetic of the BIOS is very easy to read, which is a bonus, although there is no 'simple mode' similar to the other manufacturers. The software uses the standard A-Tuning interface, and while it offers a good number of options, it does get marked down in a couple of areas where the interface could be improved for a better user experience.

The motherboard offers a number of very positive points in terms of stock performance – the MultiCore Turbo rules giving it a push ahead of the ASUS/GIGABYTE results while having the lowest idle power consumption. The audio is in the middle of the back, while the DPC and POST times are a little behind the best X99 tested in this review. Automatic overclocking offers a good number of options from 4.0 GHz to 4.5 GHz, and manual overclocking reached 4.5 GHz before peak temperatures became too high.

Overall, the ASRock X99 WS performs well out of the box and enforces the support for Xeons + ECC/RDIMMs should a user need it. However, it marks a departure from previous ASRock releases by not adding much ‘extra’ to the overall experience in terms of direct functionality.

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  • biostud - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    ASUS also has the X99-A at launch, at least here in Europe.
  • isa - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Ian, thanks for a great job overall on this article. I especially appreciated your clarity on how the PCIe and M.2 configs work.
  • SanX - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    +1
  • SanX - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    Ian is on Liquid Nitrogen.
    The Monster-review :-)
  • icrf - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Sounds like the Asus X99-A is the one for me. It keeps all the good stuff about the X99-Deluxe and saves $125. I don't need so many SATA or USB ports, I don't need wifi or dual GbE. I get the pile of fan headers and great sound, BIOS, and overclocking. Now I just need to know where the sweet spot is for memory count, speed, and timings. I suspect that's next on Ian's list.
  • Eyeshield21 - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Great roundup review. ASUS is falling lately. Did you guys heard about the burnt motherboard that their X99 had? I wonder how many people have this issue.
  • The Von Matrices - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    So somehow you have determined it is a great roundup without even reading the first page?
  • The_Assimilator - Friday, September 26, 2014 - link

    This is a really poor anti-ASUS shill comment.
  • xunknownx - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    i have the MSI x99s sli plus and its great. its beautiful and feels premium. http://imgur.com/Q7u6qjD
    not sure why the article say its not for overclockers. i overclocked my i7 5820k to 4.6ghz easily and its running stable. i don't need so many extra ports or wifi. at $230, its a great value for such an awesome board.
  • jay401 - Thursday, September 25, 2014 - link

    Because then you won't spend twice the price for a more expensive board.

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