Featured

Asus F2A55-M LK (A55) Motherboard Review

We mentioned in the introduction for this board, that the A55 chipset is a no frills option and is aimed at certain segments within the market, and Asus have taken note of that when developing the F2A55-M LK. We already looked at the F2A55-M back in October and found that for a board offering a no frills option, it did give some strong results and made it a contender when looking at the FM2 platform. This is no different and also plays on the pricing heartstrings that some of us have to stick by.

The F2A55-M LK really is stripped back and laid bare, with no extra features but that isn’t a bad thing, not by any means. We find a small form factor board that can house the latest FM2 APU processors including the A10-5800k that we used today and still offer some strong performance as well as some good numbers when it comes to overclocking.

The board from face value may seem pretty basic and it is, but for HTPC use or system integrators, what extra bits do they need? Nothing and that’s why this board is on the market. Even when it comes down to cooling, we see the VRMs completely naked and this would seem to most that performance and overclockability is compromised but this couldn’t be further than the truth as we managed to get our A10-5800k up to a stonking 4.3GHz which for a board with no extra cooling and aimed at a completely different market, still leaves us gobsmacked as we write the conclusion.

The board is missing some fundamental extras that we’ve all grown accustomed to including USB 3.0 but this is where the more expensive F2A55-M comes into play which shows the sales bods at Asus have targeted the market really well by positioning boards within the retail channel at particular price points.

Speaking of price point, we find this board at a frankly amazing low price of £50, making it one of the most affordable solutions on the market, and leaves us wondering how it can still rival some of the A85X based boards we used in comparison and how it’s still able to overclock to 4.3GHz and cost less than a good night out on a Friday.

No matter who you are, whether you are an enthusiast, system integrator, or just someone who can appreciate a good deal, this board is going to appeal to you no matter what as it certainly offers a lot for the money and for us, the thing that really gave it the wow factor was the overclocking. 4.3GHz out of a board that costs £50 is simply amazing, and frankly quite frightening as maybe this shows us where the future is going with basic but effective products while still giving a good price point.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Andy Ruffell

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Corsair 3000D Airflow Black Tempered Glass Mid-Tower ATX Case

The CORSAIR 3000D AIRFLOW presents a mid-tower ATX chassis with an efficient high-airflow design and…

3 days ago

Seagate FireCuda 530 Heatsink (EK) 500GB M.2 PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD/Solid State Drive

FireCuda® 530 with heatsink offers a minimalist design, anodized aluminium body, and finely textured micropore…

3 days ago

PrisTeam Gaming Wireless Charging Mouse Pad

💪 Resilient Against the Elements: Crafted with water and dirt-resistant materials, including natural rubber and…

3 days ago

ID-COOLING FROZN A410 Black CPU Air Cooler

【Better Heat Dissipation】The CPU cooler comes with 4 direct-contact heat pipes and a 120mm FDB…

3 days ago

HIHUHEN Gaming Mouse Mat/Large Mouse Pad

【Stability is very good】 Non-slip rubber material base that provides heavy grip preventing sliding or…

3 days ago

DeepCool ASSASSIN IV WH CPU Air Cooler

The elegant design of the ASSASSIN IV WH is not just visually pleasing; it also…

3 days ago