Monday, November 7th 2011

MSI Big Bang XPower II X79 Monstrosity Smiles For The Camera

MSI is among the most secretive companies with their socket LGA2011 motherboard early information as the big Sandy Bridge-E day approaches (mid-November), yet we managed to score some early pictures of their top-end product from our spy-satellites and a network of cold war era retirees. Enter the MSI Big Bang XPower II, the company's top-tier socket LGA2011 motherboard for enthusiasts. This board is designed in the XL-ATX form-factor, and will fit in cases with at least 10 expansion slot bays. Thanks to the added board area, it's able to accommodate both a strong VRM, and high room for expansion (with eight DDR3 memory slots and seven PCI-Express slots).

To begin with, the LGA2011 socket is powered by a 24-phase VRM that makes use of driver-MOSFETs, solid-chokes, and High-C POSCAP capacitors. The memory is powered by a 4-phase VRM. The board draws power, apart from the 24-pin ATX, from two 8-pin EPS connectors, and an optional 6-pin PCIe (to stabilize PCIe slot power delivery). We can see many accessories to this VRM, such as phase-loading LEDs, and consolidated voltage measurement points. We are particularly intrigued by the design of the heatsinks over the VRM and chipset. The one over the VRM looks like the barrels of a Gatling gun, while the one over the chipset looks like a small piece from an ammo belt. You will either love it or detest it.
Moving on to expansion, although the LGA2011 processor gives out 32 PCI-Express 3.0 lanes for graphics, the board is facing a lane budget deficit to wire its seven PCI-Experss x16 slots. Perhaps there is a PCI-Express bridge chip to give out additional lanes. The lane configuration is not known.

With storage connectivity, this board will give you a total of six SATA 6 Gb/s ports, from which two come from the X79 PCH, and four from additional controllers. Apart from the two 6 Gb/s ports, the X79 chipset also gives out four SATA 3 Gb/s ports. There are no eSATA ports. The board has a total of eight USB 3.0 ports, all driven by Renesas-made controllers, out of which four are on the rear panel, and four by internal headers. A nice touch here is that the front-panel headers are angled and laid beside the SATA port clusters.

The board features a high SNR (signal-noise-ratio) HD audio CODEC (probably ALC889), backed by Creative's X-Fi MB2 software that gives it even higher fidelity and more features. X-Fi MB2 software works on top of the HDA CODEC's native drivers, and so there is zero scope for any audio driver-related problems. The CODEC is wired to 8+2 channel analog outputs, optical and coaxial SPDIF outputs. There are two gigabit Ethernet connections, and surprisingly, both are driven by Intel-made gigabit Ethernet controllers. One of the two is driven by a compact 8257x series chip wired to the chipset's GbE lane, while the other is a full-fledged PCIe GbE controller. Both are backed by Intel's solid ProNetwork software and low-overhead drivers. Firewire and USB 2.0 make for the rest of the connectivity.

The MSI BigBang XPower II will be backed by a feature-rich UEFI firmware. Expect it to be among the most premium LGA2011 boards.
Add your own comment

70 Comments on MSI Big Bang XPower II X79 Monstrosity Smiles For The Camera

#26
Hayder_Master
Like the top heat sink, munigun disgn, great look and also the idea have good cooling performance.
Posted on Reply
#27
badtaylorx
i dont get it......wont those crayons melt on the southbridge???
Posted on Reply
#28
D4S4
WTF?!?!?! if they want some military bs so desperately, they should bundle an airsoft gun with the mobo ffs. shit i'd actually be happy to buy that, but this... ain't no way in hell.
Posted on Reply
#29
DanishDevil
IMO, they took a wonderfully all black board and bundled a pack of Goldenrod Crayola Crayons.
Posted on Reply
#30
LAN_deRf_HA
Boy these asian companies are really disconnected from the western consumer. All we do is bitch about how horrible these designs are and all they do is not fucking notice.
Posted on Reply
#31
radrok
Rampage 4 is the way, ASUS always got it right with motherboard design :)
If I wanted some crayons I'd ask my nephew :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#32
heky
WTF, what is wrong with you people, i couldnt care less how the board looks. Its not like i am gonna look at it all day long. The board should perform awesome, not look awesome! The board could look like a pile of shit, it doesnt matter if it performs!
Posted on Reply
#33
Damn_Smooth
hekyWTF, what is wrong with you people, i couldnt care less how the board looks. Its not like i am gonna look at it all day long. The board should perform awesome, not look awesome! The board could look like a pile of shit, it doesnt matter if it performs!
I actually do look at my board quite a bit. :ohwell: I agree that performance is the most important issue, but I still don't like the way that these SB-e boards are being developed. I don't see the need for bullets and guns and fans and nonsense.
Posted on Reply
#34
Bundy
I'm a bit disappointed that their primuim OC model, like Gigabyte, is XL-ATX. I understand to some extent their motives but that does not change that it will not fit in my case.
Posted on Reply
#35
_JP_
hekyWTF, what is wrong with you people, i couldnt care less how the board looks. Its not like i am gonna look at it all day long. The board should perform awesome, not look awesome! The board could look like a pile of shit, it doesnt matter if it performs!
Just so happens a motherboard is the centerpiece of your system. If I'm going to pay around €250 for a motherboard, I will want to look at it (and for it to stand out). This is a board for enthusiasts. You know what enthusiasts also have? Chassis with acrylic windows in the side panels. I can't see you being taken seriously by your peers when you show up at any event saying that you have a gatling for a VRM cooler. That might work for 5 to 10 year olds, but then again, they would more interested in the gun, rather then what the heck a VRM is. ;)

EDIT: Water cooling blocks FTW!
Posted on Reply
#36
bostonbuddy
yeah the crayons for bullets might be cool to a 9yo, what 9 year old is gonna be buying this board tho.
Posted on Reply
#37
EarthDog
BundyI'm a bit disappointed that their primuim OC model, like Gigabyte, is XL-ATX. I understand to some extent their motives but that does not change that it will not fit in my case.
The UD7 is XL-ATX?
Posted on Reply
#38
burtram
the54thvoidThe ammo belt heatsink looks like a packet of yellow crayons.
was my first thought exactly. haha
Posted on Reply
#39
AnnCore
Staff
the54thvoidThe ammo belt heatsink looks like a packet of yellow crayons.
That and my wife's lipstick in a six-pack.
Posted on Reply
#40
deleted
What's with the placement of the supplemental PCIe 6-pin? It's going to be covered in any configuration that actually requires it.
Posted on Reply
#41
popswala
I like the gatlin cooler over the vrm but the crayons gotta go.

If there gonna stick nothin but pci-e's on a mobo, Why not make the board longer to be able to utilize them instead of half. Its a waste of space and plastic. I doubt your gonna stick 6-7 single slot 580's on a board. If I got a extreme board like this, I'd rather have a pci1 at the top of the pci-e instead of it gettin buried on almost all boards. And yea I know a pci1 will go on a pci-e lol.
Posted on Reply
#42
LAN_deRf_HA
Whatever. Who cares. Gigabyte boards have been pretty well ignored since their UEFI was no show and now it's a horrendous "3d" mess. MSI hasn't impressed for a long time and this just shows they aren't getting any better. If these brands fade away who gives a shit. Biostar and ASRock will fill in their market share just fine. The hard way is the only way for a company to learn anything.
Posted on Reply
#43
micropage7

seriously, Gigabyte must have err on their design department
Posted on Reply
#44
Frizz
Why do Motherboard Manufacturers continue to insist that us gamers/system builders have a fetish for bullet casings? IMO unless they are actual bullets then they look fkn terrible, why don't they just give us a free NERF gun in our motherboard box :D
Posted on Reply
#45
Major_A
What happened to actually putting on functioning heatsinks? There was a time (P4 days mostly) where the northbridge heatsink was huge, and typically had a fan. I'll take function over form any day of the week.

EDIT
Damn, I just noticed the power for the CPU. How much juice does the Sandy Bridge E need?
Posted on Reply
#46
jalex3
So the trend is to make all the "highest end" and most expansive boards appeal to 12yo boys? :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#47
ensabrenoir
Major_AWhat happened to actually putting on functioning heatsinks? There was a time (P4 days mostly) where the northbridge heatsink was huge, and typically had a fan. I'll take function over form any day of the week.

EDIT
Damn, I just noticed the power for the CPU. How much juice does the Sandy Bridge E need?
Either Intel wasn't playing around when they made this an extreme chip or this thing just ain't for the green of heart.
Posted on Reply
#48
micropage7
randomwhy don't they just give us a free NERF gun

yep, much better than that :toast:
Posted on Reply
#50
BazookaJoe
As far as the looks go .. BLAH BLAH FLAPPING BLAH - I have never understood how something so extraordinarily irrelevant has ever had anything to do with high end hardware...

GO buy a PS3 & glue some LED's to it if you're so vapid.

BUT - As far as sooo many ram slots and SOOO many Sata Sockets goes? *Drool* I think I'm in love...
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Apr 24th, 2024 21:49 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts