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Along the right edge, we run into the first two (of four) RGB headers. In this case, it’s two of the three 3-pin ARGB headers. You’ll find the other two along the bottom edge. Shifting focus down, we run into the 24-pin ATX to power the board, along with a horizontally mounted 6-pin PCIe power connector to support 60W charging on the fron-panel USB 3.2 Gen2x2 connector (which is also here). If the supplemental power isn’t connected, the output is reduced to 27W, which is still a quick charge output for most mobile devices.

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Inside the Box of the ASRock Z790 Taichi Carrara

ASRock includes several accessories along with the motherboard. While this isn’t the most prolific set of extras we’ve covered, the basics are included, along with an extra 120mm Carrara Edition fan. Below is a complete list of the included accessories.

  • User Manual
  • (4) SATA Data Cables
  • Wireless Dongle USB Bracket
  • 12CM Carrara Edition Cooling FAN
  • ASRock WiFi 2.4/5/6 GHz Antenna
  • (4) Screws for M.2 Sockets

Design of the Taichi Lite

Image 1 of 3
(Image credit: ASRock)
(Image credit: ASRock)
(Image credit: ASRock)

Taking the Z790 Taichi Lite’s look at face value, the matte-black 8-layer E-ATX PCB with oversized black heatsinks doesn’t look bad. It just doesn’t give off the same premium vibes the original does with its 3D design and RGB implementation. Instead of heatsinks and shrouds covering the PCB, more is exposed, giving way to strips of heatsinks for the M.2 sockets compared to the full coverage the non-lite version has. RGB lighting has also changed, now hiding only under the bottom M.2 heatsink. It’s still bright, with saturated colors and will easily light up the inside of your chassis.

(Image credit: ASRock)

Starting in the upper-left corner, we see two 8-pin EPS connectors (one required) to power the processor. We also get a better look at the new design on the VRM heatsinks here. Along with all the dark gray cogs, we see the Taichi branding at the bottom, sa well as deep mitered cutouts to promote airflow and increase surface area. The cog design bleeds into the black socket area, which looks cool with all the other black on the board.

Just past the socket area above the top VRM heatsink are the first two (of eight) 4-pin fan headers. Each supports PWM- and DC-controlled devices and is managed through the BIOS or via ASRock’s A-Tuning software. There’s plenty of power to go around, too, with output ranging from 1A/12W to 3A/36E, depending on the header (check the manual). Overall, there are plenty of headers, even if you want to run custom watercooling.

Just past the socket area are four unreinforced DRAM slots with locking mechanisms on both sides. The four slots support up to 192 GB of DDR5 RAM with speeds listed to DDR5-7200, a slight increase over the original Taichi (DDR5-7000). We didn’t have any issues in our testing up to that limit either, as the system tested stable when overclocked using the Teamgroup DDR5-7200 kit, the fastest in our stable.

In the right corner, we run into the first two (of four total) RGB headers. In this case, it’s two of the three 4-pin ARGB headers. Along the bottom edge, you’ll find others, 3-pin and the third 4-pin headers. Control over these devices and the integrated RGBs is handled through the Polychrome RGB software or inside the BIOS.

Continuing down the right edge, we run into the 24-pin ATX connector to power the motherboard and a horizontally mounted 6-pin PCIe adapter to enable USB PD 3.0 up to 20V@3A (60W). If this plug is not used, it supports the same protocol but has lower power output at 9V@3A (27W) for fast charging. Below that is another fast USB port, USB 3.2 Gen 2×2 (20 Gbps) Type-C, for the front panel.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

For power delivery, electricity flows from the EPS connector(s) onto a 24-phase Renesas RAA229131 controller. For Vcore, power moves to the 24x 105A Renesas RAA22010540 SPS MOSFETs for a staggering 2,520A available to the processor. The VRMs on the Taichi Lite can handle our Intel Core i9-13900K at stock and while overclocked, even when using sub-ambient cooling methods.

(Image credit: ASRock)

On the bottom half of the board, we find three full-length PCIe slots, five M.2 sockets, and the audio section. Starting out on the left, we spy a fully exposed audio solution based on the flagship Realtek ALC4082 audio codec, supported by an ESS SABRE9218 DAC and red WIMA audio caps. On paper, it’s one of the best integrated audio solutions you’ll find on this platform.

We’ll start with the three PCIe slots in the middle of the board. The top slots (primarilyy for graphics) are reinforced and both source their lanes from the CPU. The top slot runs at PCIe 5.0 x16 when only the top slot is populated or x8/x8 speeds with PCIE_2 occupied. The bottom slot runs at PCIe 4.0 x4, with lanes coming from the chipset. When the bottom slot, PCIE3, is occupied, SATA ports 0-4 will be disabled, so you must carefully populate the board with your hardware. For those considering a multi-GPU setup (who are you?), this configuration supports AMD Crossfire, but NVIDIA SLI is not listed.

If you plan to use one of the latest and greatest PCIe 5.0 M.2 SSD modules, you may want to look into ASRock’s Blazing M.2 Heatsink designed for the job. The M.2 heatsink is much larger than what comes installed on this board, and has active cooling via a small fan in the middle of the fin array. During our testing, we saw significant drops, up to 10 degrees Celsius, which prevented the drive from throttling on longer-running transfers/benchmarks. The difference wasn’t much in our testing environment, but if you want the most out of these hot-running drives, it’s best to use a larger heatsink.

Located around the PCIe slots and under heatsinks are five M.2 sockets. The top socket, M2_1, connects through the CPU and runs PCIe 5.0 x4 (128 Gbps) speeds, while M2_2 runs at PCIe 4.0 x4 (64 Gbps) and connects through the processor. These share the same physical location, so you can only run one of these two sockets at a time. Also, when M2_1 is populated, PCIE1 downgrades to x8 mode, and if PCIE2 is occupied, M2_1 will be disabled.

Along the right edge is one of the USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) connectors and eight SATA ports. If you’d like to RAID your storage, the boards support RAID0/1/10 modes for NVMe storage and RAID0/1/5/10 modes for the SATA ports. Between all the lane and port sharing, at worst, you’re looking at four M.2 sockets (either 5.0 or 4.0) and four SATA ports available at one time. A more typical configuration, with the bottom slot unoccupied, yields four more SATA ports for a total of eight. Either should be fine for most users.

Across the bottom of the board are several exposed headers. You’ll find the usual, including additional USB ports, RGB headers, and power/reset buttons. Below is a complete list from left to right.

  • Front panel audio
  • Clear CMOS header
  • 4-pin ARGB header
  • 3-pin RGB header
  • Noise sensor
  • (2) System Fan headers
  • USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) connector
  • (2) USB 2.0 headers
  • Dr. Debug display
  • (2) System Fan headers
  • Power/Reset buttons
  • Clear CMOS button
  • TPM header
  • System fan header
  • System panel header

(Image credit: ASRock)

The rear IO plate on the Taichi Lite comes preinstalled on the motherboard. It sports a black background with grey cog desings, along with some Taichi branding. There are a total of 12 USB ports scattered across the rear IO. You get two Thunderbolt 4/USB4 (40 Gbps) Type-C ports that double as video outputs, two USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) ports (these are the lightning USB ports, yellow, with lower afvertised latency), six USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) ports, and two USB 2.0 ports. Also found here are the Killer Intel 2.5 GbE and Intel GbE ports and Killer Wi-Fi 6E antenna connections for networking. Lastly, the audio stack consists of two analog plugs and the SPDIF output.

Источники:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tit_for_tat&rut=ae10dd9bc2506a858074fcfa8c811b723c00d932e036dd6da4dadc5a1af4241f
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songs_for_the_Deaf&rut=b8367c9be67399fef7c51c7331ab6248d48ab934c4ba742ddb4bc3d6a4d1d674
https://www.reddit.com/r/lowendgaming/comments/tk0c4u/best_lowend_games/&rut=1113a7ae5f0d3dda8d43e231106c4cf4aa7982e141b2359ca5175b1e5c148f70
https://www.gore-tex.com/&rut=de2651487005e12a832b368476e668608ae8b5faa419e9b78af8b9d8968ed6eb
https://www.reddit.com/r/gamingsuggestions/comments/14uby3a/lowspec_games_that_will_run_on_my_potato_laptop/&rut=eb60a1c72cf116432c24ca86f8186eede7dc0ecbdc81ae9a468b4a7af7afa58f
https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/asrock-z790-taichi-carrara-review&rut=19edad480f0b635116c72b23e594ff0d18857b43a118b40c15f25088cd87de7e
https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/asrock-z790-tiachi-lite-review&rut=d8223b9d7927f27458277b8d1cd10dbc387ef0e68a15f7c8ee087102d0b0ca09