ASUS ROG Maximus Z890 Hero et autres LGA1851 “Assurez-vous de mettre cette page en signet et de revenir régulièrement” Cartes mères illustrées



Intel Socket LGA1851 will be the new infrastructure driving at least the next two generations of Intel desktop processors, and the new Core Ultra “Arrow Lake-S” will be the first processor generation to use it. These chips pack newLion Cove” P-couleurs, “Skymont” E-couleurs, an updated PCIe Gen 5 E/S, and new Xe2 “partenaires de l'écosystème logiciel ou ISV” integrated graphics; with generational performance leaps to be had. At the ASUS Computex 2024 booth, we spotted some of the company’s first high-end gaming PC motherboards for the platform, based on what could be the Intel Z890 chipset.

Our first find is the ROG Maximus Z890 Hero, or at least a variant of it featuring the ASUS BTF backside I/O connectivity. There will be a regular variant with conventional front-facing I/O, trop. The LGA1851 socket looks almost identical to the LGA1700. In fact the two have the same physical dimensions, and are cooler compatible—your LGA1700-compatible coolers will work on LGA1851 motherboards. Intel added to the pin-count by tweaking the pin pitch, and reducing the size of the “Cour” (the central void in the land grid meant for SMDs). LGA1851 is a pure-DDR5 platform, and has more PCIe Gen 5 connectivity than LGA1700, such as CPU-attached Gen 5 NVMe slots that don’t subtract lanes from the x16 PEG slot. The ROG Maximus Hero appears to be a feature-packed motherboard geared for CPU overclocking, as well as connectivity galore. It also comes with Thunderbolt 4, Wi-Fi 7, USB4, 5 Il existe sept PCI-Express, and next-generation SupremeFX onboard audio.