F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Choose between the Gigabyte B450M H, B450M S2H, ASUS Prime B450M-K II, or the Gigabyte B450M S2H V2 model.

Choose between the Gigabyte B450M H, B450M S2H, ASUS Prime B450M-K II, or the Gigabyte B450M S2H V2 model.

Choose between the Gigabyte B450M H, B450M S2H, ASUS Prime B450M-K II, or the Gigabyte B450M S2H V2 model.

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Cars5
Junior Member
5
06-21-2016, 03:47 PM
#1
Comparing the options, the GIGABYTE B450M H offers the best performance among the listed models.
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Cars5
06-21-2016, 03:47 PM #1

Comparing the options, the GIGABYTE B450M H offers the best performance among the listed models.

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Saricck
Member
103
06-29-2016, 02:38 PM
#2
It doesn't matter. Everyone is the same basic level. Choose the one that interests you the most.
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Saricck
06-29-2016, 02:38 PM #2

It doesn't matter. Everyone is the same basic level. Choose the one that interests you the most.

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TheCoockie
Junior Member
33
06-29-2016, 08:39 PM
#3
I’d choose the ASUS board because of my negative experiences with Gigabyte, though they’re all quite alike and you’d be safe picking any of them.
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TheCoockie
06-29-2016, 08:39 PM #3

I’d choose the ASUS board because of my negative experiences with Gigabyte, though they’re all quite alike and you’d be safe picking any of them.

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SemperFly
Junior Member
17
07-18-2016, 12:55 PM
#4
They’re all pretty similar. A few points to note: + Gigabyte B450M S2H includes some heatsinks on the VRM, which could help prevent overheating with more demanding chips (such as 8-core or higher Ryzen). + The Asus Prime B450M-K II supports BIOS flashback, letting you update the BIOS without a CPU installed. + Other models lack this feature. - However, you’ll lose about 0.2 watts per square millimeter... Asus offers a mixed PS/2 connector; only one can be used at a time, while others provide separate PS/2 for keyboard and mouse if needed. The layout for PCI-E X1 is poor—it has two slots below the PCI-E X16, so a standard video card would block one slot. + All but the Asus model have one PCI-E X1 above the X16, making it always usable, plus the second PCI-E X1 slot remains available (with an empty space between X16 and X1), allowing a regular 2-slot card. - If you intend to use processors like Ryzen 1xxx, 2xxx or 3xxx, the Gigabyte B450M S2H v2 offers extra heatsinks and likely better value. + The original BIOS supports these models right out of the box. - For Ryzen 4xxx or 5xxx, you’ll need BIOS updates released in March. Unless the board has been sitting on shelves for months, it probably lacks the latest version. For graphics-focused 5xxx chips, you’d need BIOS from two months prior, meaning you might need an older CPU to upgrade. I doubt you’re planning a 4xxx or 5xxx build if cost is a factor—everything seems fine otherwise.
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SemperFly
07-18-2016, 12:55 PM #4

They’re all pretty similar. A few points to note: + Gigabyte B450M S2H includes some heatsinks on the VRM, which could help prevent overheating with more demanding chips (such as 8-core or higher Ryzen). + The Asus Prime B450M-K II supports BIOS flashback, letting you update the BIOS without a CPU installed. + Other models lack this feature. - However, you’ll lose about 0.2 watts per square millimeter... Asus offers a mixed PS/2 connector; only one can be used at a time, while others provide separate PS/2 for keyboard and mouse if needed. The layout for PCI-E X1 is poor—it has two slots below the PCI-E X16, so a standard video card would block one slot. + All but the Asus model have one PCI-E X1 above the X16, making it always usable, plus the second PCI-E X1 slot remains available (with an empty space between X16 and X1), allowing a regular 2-slot card. - If you intend to use processors like Ryzen 1xxx, 2xxx or 3xxx, the Gigabyte B450M S2H v2 offers extra heatsinks and likely better value. + The original BIOS supports these models right out of the box. - For Ryzen 4xxx or 5xxx, you’ll need BIOS updates released in March. Unless the board has been sitting on shelves for months, it probably lacks the latest version. For graphics-focused 5xxx chips, you’d need BIOS from two months prior, meaning you might need an older CPU to upgrade. I doubt you’re planning a 4xxx or 5xxx build if cost is a factor—everything seems fine otherwise.

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Ulster_Son
Member
69
07-18-2016, 01:02 PM
#5
Asus offers solutions for BIOS flashback and preventing unstable Gigabyte BIOS settings.
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Ulster_Son
07-18-2016, 01:02 PM #5

Asus offers solutions for BIOS flashback and preventing unstable Gigabyte BIOS settings.

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KingJjpr
Member
214
07-24-2016, 12:03 PM
#6
I own a B450M S2H V2 and nothing negative about it. It delivers 90W to my 3100 and handles my 2133MHz RAMs smoothly at 3433MHz. The only thing noted is a report that this model might include an extra VRM for RAMs, but I haven’t experienced any issues despite heavily overclocking the RAMs.
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KingJjpr
07-24-2016, 12:03 PM #6

I own a B450M S2H V2 and nothing negative about it. It delivers 90W to my 3100 and handles my 2133MHz RAMs smoothly at 3433MHz. The only thing noted is a report that this model might include an extra VRM for RAMs, but I haven’t experienced any issues despite heavily overclocking the RAMs.

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Tavado
Senior Member
505
08-01-2016, 11:41 AM
#7
They have either 4+2 or 4+3 phases.
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Tavado
08-01-2016, 11:41 AM #7

They have either 4+2 or 4+3 phases.

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xXRAXERXx
Posting Freak
817
08-02-2016, 12:35 PM
#8
Just a note: alerts won't be sent unless you include their names. The B450M S2H model is reported to have 4+2, while the B450M S2H version has 4+3. I don’t have a way to verify this.
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xXRAXERXx
08-02-2016, 12:35 PM #8

Just a note: alerts won't be sent unless you include their names. The B450M S2H model is reported to have 4+2, while the B450M S2H version has 4+3. I don’t have a way to verify this.

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Coffee_SF
Junior Member
16
08-02-2016, 01:39 PM
#9
It's not a big deal at all; the integrated graphics doesn't draw much power to need three phases. As per the link, version 2 uses just two phases for the SoC... it really depends on whether you have processors with built-in graphics, otherwise it's negligible.
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Coffee_SF
08-02-2016, 01:39 PM #9

It's not a big deal at all; the integrated graphics doesn't draw much power to need three phases. As per the link, version 2 uses just two phases for the SoC... it really depends on whether you have processors with built-in graphics, otherwise it's negligible.

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61
08-09-2016, 05:36 PM
#10
The models differ in the phase configuration: one has phases 4+2 and the other 4+3. The update addressed some issues, but not all bugs were fixed.
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TheDutchDogsNL
08-09-2016, 05:36 PM #10

The models differ in the phase configuration: one has phases 4+2 and the other 4+3. The update addressed some issues, but not all bugs were fixed.

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