ASRock Z170 Extreme7+ Software

In the beginning of this review, during the overview, I expressed concern that the ASRock software package had experienced the equivalent of a malignment over its direction. For the last few generations, we had one major software package (A-Tuning) which housed links to all the separate features in ASRock’s repertoire. This is good, as it minimizes the icons on the main screen and gives everything an easy path to access. It only works well of course if the software is light, clean, quick to respond and easy to use, which for the most part it was. So it leaves me scratching my head when A-Tuning has been gutted and all the useful tools in it have become their own separate software elements.

The front face of A-Tuning remains the same, with options for a performance mode overclock (constant Turbo), standard mode (normal) and power saving (slow ramp up to full speed). Selecting performance mode gives an advanced OC options menu that offers the same auto-OC modes as we saw in the BIOS:

Instead of seeing a tools menu next, A-Tuning gets the OC Tweaker menu.

Personally, I find this overclock menu a little mind-numbing to use. For overclocking like this, all the options should be in a single screen without scrolling down to find them, and in this circumstance having a sliders with no manual text input reduces the usefulness for all but the most persistent ASRock hardcore overclockers.

The System Info tab has its usual array of sensor information, as well as a link to the system browser.

In this new A-Tuning, Fan-Tastic Tuning gets its own main tab, offering both manual gradient adjustment and fan testing to find RPM deadzones within a fan profile. Other features in A-Tuning include Tech Service and a basic settings menu.

So where did all of A-Tuning’s fun tools disappear to? Well for a number of important ones, these migrate out to having their own icons, despite a number of them still retaining the A-Tuning design.

XFastLAN, which is ASRock’s skin over cFos’ network management software, still exists but again, similar to OC Tweaker, unless you are using the presets provided it becomes frustrating to use by virtue that the interface size is non-adjustable, so you can only see the priority of four programs at once.

The Dehumidifier function also gets pulled out into a separate program, with a funky red fire based taskbar.

XFastRAM, ASRock’s RAMDisk and caching software also becomes separate, with another fire based motif at the top.

But for ASRock’s software package, it ends there. No Online Management Guard software for the OS, no Good Night LED option, no all-in-one interface at all. I’m puzzled as to why – the previous concept was good enough to use. Basic options such as a resizable interface were my primary concerns, and half of me is hoping that the only reason these have been extracted from the main interface is because a new A-Tuning design is on the way. Fingers crossed.

BIOS System Performance
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  • ghostmuse - Monday, November 30, 2015 - link

    I haven't used this particular piece of software before, but it says it has been updated for Windows 10. Hopefully that = accurate readings. http://www.resplendence.com/latencymon
  • hubick - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    No 10GBASE-T? :(
  • extide - Monday, November 30, 2015 - link

    Not Extreme 11
  • msrt - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    Another pro audio user here.
    Are you sure those DPC values are caused by the BIOS and not the wireless drivers?

    On the DPC slide both boards above 200us have WIFI onboard, the others don't.

    With my quite old system I have to use streaming mode through WLAN optimizer or disable WIFI altogether to get rid of DPC spikes. Steady 60-80us vs. the frequent 300us spike.

    Maybe it's the same issue with these (The MSI G1 and this one).
    Ian, could you post an average DPC number or have a quick look with WIFI disabled?
  • Byte - Saturday, November 28, 2015 - link

    This board does not come with Wifi, but has a mPCIe for it and some holes
  • alyarb - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    I clicked on this because I wanted to see 3 nvme drives in RAID-0. It's in the title and you post a picture of such a setup on page 1, but I don't see any storage testing besides USB file copy?
  • OFelix - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    "The UEFI Tech Service is this weird idea for ASRock to receive submissions about BIOS errors and issues. I’m not sure if ASRock actually answers any of these, or if it is just used as an internal metric to move certain issues up the priority chain."

    I reported a problem last week and got a response from Taiwan in a couple of days.
  • DanNeely - Friday, November 27, 2015 - link

    Is the USB 3.1 front panel adapter something that could be used to salvage the worthless SataExpress ports on any motherboard; or did asrock have to do anything special on the board to make it work?
  • pedjache - Saturday, November 28, 2015 - link

    As pictured, speical stuff is on the board of the panel, not the mobo. You use 'normal' SATA express, usb2.0 and molex. Wonder if(when) they or anyone else will put up just the front panel on sale.
  • Byte - Saturday, November 28, 2015 - link

    Newegg has the front panels listed, but OOS. $60 though.

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