You will get conflicting statements.
Here's the industry secret: the vast majority of boards are all pumped out at the same factories by the same people.
You're paying for design, BIOS programming skills and support.
You will get conflicting statements.
The only contribution I can give (a very small one) refers to a few PCs in the last ten years: I don't remember the manufacturers of the motherboards I had before that. Warranty service and RMA does not apply because I live in a peripheral country.ya gotta realize, one man's prize is another man's poison
The only contribution I can give (a very small one) refers to a few PCs in the last ten years: I don't remember the manufacturers of the motherboards I had before that. Warranty service and RMA does not apply because I live in a peripheral country.
MSI for Athlon 64/X2 (2006) - Still working (on a daily basis)
ASUS M4A79T Deluxe (2009) - Still working
ASUS M4A785TD-V EVO (2009) - Still working (on a daily basis)
ASUS E35M1-M (2011) - Still working (on a daily basis)
INTEL DZ87KLT-75K (2014) - Dead after two years of use
ASUS Z97 Deluxe (2016) - The one I'm using right now
Have to agree with this, high CPU integration made mobos performance-unrelated component and demise of chipsets like SiS, Via and nForce greatly increased the overall reliability. I think that all present companies making motherboards are based in Taiwan and are pretty similar to each other and more or less it depends on your selection of particular model. You are no longer able to buy intel boards tho, since they moved out of business in this sector.it's not hard to answer.
Asus makes the best motherboards. they have bad tech support.
Gigabyte makes the second best, nearly as good as(occasionally better than) Asus. their tech support is average.
but really, these days ALL motherboards are good. it's really, really hard to buy a bad motherboard because the design technology has advanced so much; in fact, cheaper brands like ASRock, Biostar, and ECS have been used and recommended for many builds.
but really, these days ALL motherboards are good. it's really, really hard to buy a bad motherboard because the design technology has advanced so much; in fact, cheaper brands like ASRock, Biostar, and ECS have been used and recommended for many builds.
yeah but that's a specific need which also falls outside of the normal usage. if you want to do some crazy ass LN2 cooling and you buy a midrange cheap board, something's not right.
just a few years ago there were mobos whose FSB would just cap, you know, like at 300, and you could not OC past a certain speed because of that. you could genuinely say, "don't buy that board, it's crap". nowadays it's at most "that board lacks some features".
MSI was one of the last brands to git gud, and even they are now considered very good boards. (i have a msi on this rig)
And even the miserable pleasure of saying "I'll never buy an Intel board again" will be denied...Funny you say this. of all the boards I've had over the years, only one outright died way before it should and that was an Intel board. Their consumer desktop boards were notoriously unreliable.
Anyone on an EVGA board? I have been looking at those.