MSI has outed its new X870 and X870E motherboards for AMD AM5 processors, including the new Ryzen 9000-series chips. The big news is ATX 3.1 support and a big boost in PCIe power supply.
MSI says the boards' new supplemental PCIe Power feature delivers a major boost in overall board and GPU power supply. That could well come in handy, what with expectations of ever greater power draw from upcoming GPUs, particularly Nvidia graphics cards like the rumoured 550 W RTX 5090.
The power boost comes courtesy of an integrated 8-pin PCIe power connector on the motherboard itself. Conceptually, it's a little like the supplemental power connectors that already feed power to the CPU socket.
The PCIe Power feature pairs with support for the new ATX 3.1 standard to enable 2.5x «power excursion» for the PCIe graphics slot. In plain English, that ups power delivery from 66 W to a maximum of 165 W for the primary PEG-16 slot.
Of course, high-end GPUs suck down a lot more juice than that. The balance will come courtesy of the new ATX 3.1 12V-2x6 power connector for graphics cards, which is very similar to, and backwards compatible with the troubled 12VHPWR connector that led to all those melty RTX 4090 GPUs.
Anyway, upping the power supplied to the PCIe slot itself serves to increase overall power budget available to GPUs. But that's not all. The PCIe Power feature actually adds more power than just that PEG-16 slot increase.
Overall it contributes an additional 252W. That combines with the existing 168 W of board power delivered by the 12V rail in the main 24-pin ATX power connector to provide a grand total of 420 W. Note, that's 420 W just for the PCIe slots, RGB and fan headers and all that gubbins. It does not include the CPU, which has its own power circuit.
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Indeed, the new MSI boards can deliver a slightly batty 132 W just to the fan headers. So, yeah, cooling shouldn't be a
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