ASUS ROG Black Metallic Capacitors On New Rampage IV Motherboards
One of the key differentiating factors that set ROG motherboards apart is their strong power delivery. For the latest X79-based batch, ROG has chosen to go with Black Metallic solid state capacitors, a feature highlighted quite prominently on retail boxes. What’s the reason for this? Well, we all know that a hardworking system needs a hardworking board, and the basis for all that diligence is a stable and reliable power supply. Plus, good quality power components mean a longer-lasting product, and since ROG motherboards represent a significant investment on the part of gamers, their reinforced power circuitry helps in the peace of mind department. You can comfortably put the new Rampage IV Extreme/Formula/GENE through the heavy gaming and overclocking wringer without having to constantly worry about a capacitor blowing up.
This is because ROG has gone with very high grade, specially-hardened and insulated capacitors, chokes, and transistors, or MOSFETs. Even higher grade than the ones used in previous ROG motherboard generations. The capacitors, for example, are rated for a capacitance of 1000uF. That means quite a lot of power can go through them comfortably, as opposed to more common components, which are usually rated for 200-600uF. Their ripple current tolerance is a massive 5000mA rms, while your average capacitor is only OK with something like 3000mA rms before problems begin and stability suffers. Further, these capacitors resist 900uA of leakage, while cheaper varieties may only sustain good operation within 600-800uA.
Certainly, some capacitors are good for one aspect of power delivery, while suffering in other departments. What ASUS engineers sought to achieve with Black Metallic capacitors is an optimized balance. Longevity is also a prime directive, so the new capacitors are rated for 10,000 hours of operation at 105゚C. Of course, since your system won’t regularly reach those temperatures, expect an even longer lifespan.
The choice of power delivery components seems to have paid off, as the new Rampage boards sure overclock very well in more ways than one!
Author
Popular Posts
How to adjust your laptop's P-Cores and E-Cores for better performance and battery life
How to Cleanly Uninstall and Reinstall Armoury Crate
Introducing the ROG Astral GeForce RTX 5090 and 5080: a new frontier of gaming graphics
How to configure your PC's RGB lighting with Aura Sync
How to upgrade the SSD and reinstall Windows on your ROG Ally or Ally X
LATEST ARTICLES

Hands-on: The ROG Raikiri Pro took my couch gaming to the next level
I've been a diehard PC gamer all my life, but I often play on the couch. The ROG Raikiri Pro has improved my living room PC gaming immeasurably thanks to a few useful features and loads of customizability.

Hands-on: The ROG Azoth became the canvas for the keyboard of my dreams
Ever since I bought my first mechanical keyboard, I’ve been on a mission to mod and upgrade, mod and upgrade. But I think the ROG Azoth may actually be my endgame.

The Zephyrus M16 blends outstanding HDR gaming performance with undeniable luxury
The new ROG Zephyrus M16, with its Nebula HDR display, is like bringing a high-end home theater gaming setup with you wherever you go.

Radeon graphics and a stellar new display reinvigorate 2022 ROG Zephyrus G14
For a long time, I had to choose between underpowered ultraportable laptop and large laptops capable of gaming. But the ROG Zephyrus G14 puts admirable gaming chops into an ultra portable machine that travels anywhere.

Ready to rumble out of the box: Hands-on with the ROG Strix SCAR 15
Living on the move or in a smaller space isn't a roadblock to high-end gaming. The ROG Strix SCAR makes portable powerful.

The ROG Zephyrus S17 is an outstanding mixture of power and portability
The S17 has it all: top-tier hardware in a slim package with all the bells and whistles.