Review: NZXT N7 Z790

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The PCB and connectors:

The tools for clocking:

Let’s start with the elements inserted on the PCB which can be interesting tools for overclockers. Of course, they will be few since this board is not intended for overclocking.

  • The power button: allows you to turn on the motherboard.
  • The reset button: allows to restart the motherboard in case of failure.
  • The CMOS CLR: allows to erase the BIOS parameters in order to return to the default ones.
  • The Q LED : 4 LEDs (CPU – DRAM – VGA – BOOT) which allow to diagnose the errors during the boot of the board. If one of them stays on, it means that the corresponding component has a problem.

Connectors :

The rear panel has the following components. First of all the Clear CMOS as well as the antenna holders for the dual band Wi-Fi. The card has an HDMI port, 2 USB 2.0, a USB 3.2 Gen 2×2, two USB 3.2 Gen 2, three USB 3.2 Gen 1, a LAN port (RJ45), 1 Optical S/PDIF Out and the various audio outputs. Finally, the audio part is provided by a Realtek ALC1220 chip.

To power all this little world, the card has a 24-pin connector and an 8-pin + 4-pin connector that are located next to the power supply stages.

The PCB:

The PCB design of this NZXT N7 Z790 model is still most likely outsourced by ASRock. We will research for the release of the article which model it refers to. Now, as we have always said, this is a very good choice considering the good reputation of ASRock.

The motherboard is based on a 16 + 1 +2(vcore/vccgt/vccin) power supply. The CPU part consists of 16 phases with a RAA229131 controller with actually 8 phases placed in parallel.

The 16 mosfets are all 60A ISL99360. These are the same mosfets used by ASRock on some of its models like the Steel Legend. The power stage is therefore strong enough to accommodate an Intel Core i9-13900K without any difficulty. This is the one we chose