16445ASRock P67 Extreme6 Motherboardhttps://www.pccasegear.com/products/16445/asrock-p67-extreme6-motherboardhttps://files.pccasegear.com/images/P67-E6-thb.jpgOutOfStock226AUD*See important Intel notice below * ASRock P67 Extreme6 - 1155 Motherboard. P67 Chipset, Dual Channel DDR3 up to 2133mhz (O.C), 7.1 Surround Sound, SATA2 3.0 Gb/s x 4, SATA3 6.0 Gb/s x 6, RAID (0, 1, 5, 10 and Intel Rapid Storage), PCI-E 2.0, Gigabit LAN, USB3.0 x 6, ATX, NVIDIA SLI & ATI CrossFireX.
Intel have informed the market of a design flaw in the Intel 6 Series Chipsets which is present on Socket 1155 motherboards. Please follow this link to the official announcement from Intel. This problem relates to the SATA 2.0 ports only. In some cases, the SATA 2.0 ports within the chipsets may degrade over time, potentially impacting the performance or functionality of SATA-linked devices such as hard disk drives and DVD drives. Systems using SATA ports 0 and 1, the SATA 3.0 ports or 3rd party SATA controllers are not susceptible to the issue. Intel has resolved the problem at a manufacturing level and will be shipping unaffected new chipsets to motherboard manufacturers. New motherboards not affected by this problem are expected in March 2011.
*See important Intel notice below * ASRock P67 Extreme6 - 1155 Motherboard. P67 Chipset, Dual Channel DDR3 up to 2133mhz (O.C), 7.1 Surround Sound, SATA2 3.0 Gb/s x 4, SATA3 6.0 Gb/s x 6, RAID (0, 1, 5, 10 and Intel Rapid Storage), PCI-E 2.0, Gigabit LAN, USB3.0 x 6, ATX, NVIDIA SLI & ATI CrossFireX.
Intel have informed the market of a design flaw in the Intel 6 Series Chipsets which is present on Socket 1155 motherboards. Please follow this link to the official announcement from Intel. This problem relates to the SATA 2.0 ports only. In some cases, the SATA 2.0 ports within the chipsets may degrade over time, potentially impacting the performance or functionality of SATA-linked devices such as hard disk drives and DVD drives. Systems using SATA ports 0 and 1, the SATA 3.0 ports or 3rd party SATA controllers are not susceptible to the issue. Intel has resolved the problem at a manufacturing level and will be shipping unaffected new chipsets to motherboard manufacturers. New motherboards not affected by this problem are expected in March 2011.