ASUS Rog Strix X570-F Gaming (AM4, AMD X570, ATX)

ASUS Rog Strix X570-F Gaming

AM4, AMD X570, ATX


Questions about ASUS Rog Strix X570-F Gaming

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0 questions and answers

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ByArchi

2 years ago

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Nemesis69

2 years ago

If the MB is still under warranty, send it in. Otherwise, at most an electronics technician can try to re-solder the pin on the MB. (But this is always a bit tricky)

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llusik

3 years ago

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gschwinds

3 years ago

Helpful answer

The 5 in "Ryzen 7 5800X" does not stand for 5th Gen CPU. This is the case with Intel, but not with AMD. Ryzen 7 5800X = Zen 3 = 3rd generation And instead of using very imprecise specifications such as "supports generation x". It is better to check with the manufacturer of the motherboard. For each board, there is a list of exactly which CPUs are supported, including the necessary BIOS version. For this one, for example, https://rog.asus.com/ch-de/motherboards/rog-strix/rog-strix-x570-f-gaming-model/helpdesk_cpu And another money-saving tip. If you buy the parts individually instead of the set, you currently save 39.-. This happens very often with sets put together by Digitec itself.

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stueliueli

4 years ago

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gschwinds

4 years ago

Manual page 44/2-8 Chapter 2.1.5 https://dlcdnets.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/SocketAM4/ROG_STRIX_X570-F_GAMING/G15827_ROG_STRIX_X570-F_GAMING_UM_v2_WEB.pdf The EATX12V_2 connection is optional. It is only needed if the CPU really needs a lot of power. E.g. extreme overclocking. The 24pin (EATXPWR) and the 8pin (EATX12V_1) are usually sufficient.

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Atomic 207

4 years ago

Does this board support 4*16GB RAM?

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Brimstone

4 years ago

Helpful answer

Yes. A maximum of 128GB (4x 32GB) is supported. See also product page -> Specifications -> ↓ Show more -> Working memory -> Max. Memory

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Anonymous

5 years ago

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Anonymous

5 years ago

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To understand the whole thing correctly: The PC posts, i.e. the boot screen appears, but the hard disk for Linux/Windows is not recognised? Where and how is the hard disk connected? If this is the case, I would go into the BIOS and see if the boot drives are recognised and listed in the correct order. Then there are the questions: Why did you carry out a BIOS update? All manufacturers actually advise against updating, as long as everything works as desired. I understand the urge to keep everything up to date (I have done this myself), but the BIOS is a pretty critical component. And have you already tried to flash the BIOS a second time or to install an older version?

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