F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Z370A-PRO

Z370A-PRO

Z370A-PRO

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pats1325
Junior Member
14
06-21-2016, 07:59 AM
#1
You can fully rebuild your system using modern components, but you’ll need to adapt the motherboard for compatibility. An older Z370A-PRO board may require some modifications to support current hardware.
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pats1325
06-21-2016, 07:59 AM #1

You can fully rebuild your system using modern components, but you’ll need to adapt the motherboard for compatibility. An older Z370A-PRO board may require some modifications to support current hardware.

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pikkon128
Member
164
06-28-2016, 06:42 PM
#2
The top CPU choice for that board is a 9900K, but LGA 1151v2 chips are usually priced higher than their actual value in the used market. It’s more practical to purchase a fresh motherboard and AM4 components instead of risking the board. You might be able to get it sold for around $60 to $100 on eBay right now.
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pikkon128
06-28-2016, 06:42 PM #2

The top CPU choice for that board is a 9900K, but LGA 1151v2 chips are usually priced higher than their actual value in the used market. It’s more practical to purchase a fresh motherboard and AM4 components instead of risking the board. You might be able to get it sold for around $60 to $100 on eBay right now.

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Ob22007
Member
121
06-28-2016, 10:06 PM
#3
You aim to improve performance while staying within budget. Current options like i5-8400 or i7-8700 feel outdated today, but they still work well for gaming on older titles. Pairing them with a mid-range GPU such as the RX 6600 gives solid 1080p results for a couple of years ahead.
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Ob22007
06-28-2016, 10:06 PM #3

You aim to improve performance while staying within budget. Current options like i5-8400 or i7-8700 feel outdated today, but they still work well for gaming on older titles. Pairing them with a mid-range GPU such as the RX 6600 gives solid 1080p results for a couple of years ahead.

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Ilia_Zer0
Member
224
07-01-2016, 12:25 AM
#4
I’m aiming for a longer-lasting setup, possibly a completely new system.
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Ilia_Zer0
07-01-2016, 12:25 AM #4

I’m aiming for a longer-lasting setup, possibly a completely new system.

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MrShoe
Junior Member
47
07-15-2016, 07:01 AM
#5
For a budget upgrade we used 50$ per 3600(x)/80$ 5600(x). It cost around 50$ per month or about 450 in a year. If you want something future-proof, consider an upgrade to a board with at least the B650M HDV and a 6000C32/30 DDR5. Coffee Lake is only moderately appealing because of its IMC, but Comet Lake still offers a better IMC. Cezanne (1:1 DDR4 ~5000) is another option.
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MrShoe
07-15-2016, 07:01 AM #5

For a budget upgrade we used 50$ per 3600(x)/80$ 5600(x). It cost around 50$ per month or about 450 in a year. If you want something future-proof, consider an upgrade to a board with at least the B650M HDV and a 6000C32/30 DDR5. Coffee Lake is only moderately appealing because of its IMC, but Comet Lake still offers a better IMC. Cezanne (1:1 DDR4 ~5000) is another option.