The Supermicro C7Z370-CG-IW Motherboard Review: SM's First Mini-ITX Gaming Board
by Joe Shields on April 30, 2018 12:01 PM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
- Intel
- Mini ITX
- Supermicro
- Coffee Lake
- Z370
- i7-8700K
- C7Z370
Today we get an opportunity to look at a board from Supermicro's consumer segment, SuperO. We will look at a Mini-ITX board designed for gaming in the SuperO C7Z370-CW-IW. This diminutive board includes Wi-Fi capabilities, USB 3.1 ports, dual M.2 slots, as well as RGB LED features we are used to seeing in a board designed for gaming, all in a Mini-ITX sized package.
SuperO C7Z370-CG-IW Overview
The board we have today is pegged to be a gaming motherboard and is of Mini-ITX size. Though just because it is small, not much is missing - the C7Z370-CG-IW includes both wired and wireless LAN (Intel and Realtek driven respectively), dual M.2 slots, four SATA ports, and a VRM capable of handling the CPU both stock and overclocked. With a lack of real estate compared to MicroATX or ATX boards, about the only thing missing here is the ability to SLI or Crossfire (only one PCIe slot), as well as the maximum amount of DRAM is 32GB since there are only two slots. Outside of that, there isn't much missing and the C7Z370-CG-IW comes across as a well-rounded board, especially for its size.
We don't expect to hear the term gaming associated with SuperMicro much as they stick to server boards for the most part. SuperO on the other hand (think of it like AORUS is to GIGABYTE) brings to the table whole systems, chassis, and motherboards which they say has server DNA under the surface but gaming features on the outside. SuperO has been a presence in the market since the Z87 chipset hit the scene a few years back. Since that time, they have brought out more motherboards in three different classes - Core Business (designed for high uptime), Core Gaming (focuses on essentials for professionals, gamers seeking a well-round option), and Professional Gaming (flagships of the SuperO line, latest features and performance) and have a seemingly well balanced set of SKUs covering multiple use scenarios. SuperO is hoping the trust they built in the server space continues to translate over to the consumer side as their board certification process is similar to what is used on the server level boards.
This leads into explaining the naming: C7Z370-CG-IW is a bit of a mouthful. Breaking it down:
- C7 : Consumer
- Z370 : Z370 Chipset
- CG: Core Gaming
- I : Mini-ITX
- W : Wi-Fi
One of the recommendations we would put to the SuperO team is to have an easier naming system!
For the Z370 chipset, SuperO currently has two motherboards available, a full sized (ATX) C7Z370-CG-L, and the C7Z370-CG-IW we have for review here. The 200-series platform has a total of eight boards varying from the B250 and H270, up to the Z270 chipsets. I would gather as time goes on we will see more offerings covering their Professional Gaming and Core Business segments. For this review, we will be working with the only Mini-ITX board they have released in the C7Z370-CG-IW.
In our performance numbers, it is worth noting that in our shipping BIOS came an odd set of default parameters. The motherboard TDP limit was defaulting to 65W, perhaps because this is what the system engineers think is the suitable limit for a board of this size. No other manufacturer does this - if they have a smaller system that has a peak TDP, then this is listed in CPU support, not forced through default BIOS options. As a result, should any user want a 65W+ CPU in this board, then BIOS adjustments will have to be made.
The benchmark numbers when the TDP limit was lifted were as expected. Power consumption at idle for a smaller sized motherbroard was lower than the larger systems, however second-tier motherboard manufacturers often fail at metrics like POST time, and the CG-IW here takes around 10 seconds longer to POST than other Z370 boards from top-tier vendors. For most of the rest of the throughput benchmarks, the system was in the often within a percentage point of the top performing system, albeit in the bottom half of the stack.
Our overclocking results were a bit disappointing. In fact, due to the 65W imposed BIOS limit at stock speeds, during any testing that included AVX (Prime95, POVRay, and Blender) we saw power limit throttling which resulted in lower scoring benchmarks. Once the power limit was raised, the results were right in line with the rest of the data sets we have, except in peak frequency. Auto overclocking didn't yield much as it raised the voltage too high almost immediately, causing current limits to be hit. Manual overclocking wasn't terribly fruitful either. We were able to push all core clocks to 4.4 GHz on this board, whereas the other Z370 boards tested happily ran up to 5 GHz. The issue here according to Intel XTU was Current Limit Throttling. The problem is the board doesn't appear to have settings for current we can raise to get around it. If pushing heavy overclocks is your thing, you will have to look at other boards (ASUS ROG Strix Z370I Gaming for example). On the memory side, the board is only rated to DDR4-2666, however our DDR-3200 kit ran when XMP was applied.
For connectivity, the C7Z370-CG-IW has one full-length PCIe slot, connected via CPU, and no others on the board. The back panel I/O has a legacy PS/2 port, four USB 3.0 ports, a DisplayPort 1.2 port, an HDMI 2.0 port, the Realtek Wi-Fi card, an Intel I219-V port, two USB 3.1 ports, and the 7.1 channel audio stack. The number of USB ports available on the back may be a bit light for some. This is due in part to the orientation of the Wi-Fi antenna leads are oriented horizontally instead of vertical which would allow another stack on the back. The HDMI 2.0 is enabled by an LSPCon.
Pricing on the C7Z370-CG-IW comes in at $191 on Newegg. By form factor, the SuperO Mini-ITX board will compete with the likes of the ASUS ROG Strix Z370I-Gaming at $179 and MSI Z370I Gaming Pro Carbon AC also at $179. GIGABYTE also throws its hat into the Mini-ITX ring with its Z370N WiFi priced at $160 while ASRock has the Fatal1ty Z370 Gaming-ITX/ac sitting at $180. Prices are all within a stones throw of each other and most have similar features - the differences are to be found in the fine details such as front panel USB 3.1 support, USB ports, fan headers, or the options in the BIOS which can allow the boards to reach peak overclock.
Other AnandTech Z370 Motherboard Reviews:
- The Anandtech Coffee Lake Review: Initial Numbers on the Core i7-8700K and Core i5-8400
- Analyzing Z370 for Intel's 8th Generation Coffee Lake: A Quick Look at 50+ Motherboards
- ($397) The ASUS ROG Maximus X Apex Review [planned]
- ($250) The NZXT N7 Z370 Review [LINK]
- ($180) The ASUS Z370-I Gaming [planned]
- ($191) The SuperO C7Z370-CG-IW Review [this review]
- ($150) The GIGABYTE Z370 Ultra Gaming Review [planned]
- ($144) The GIGABYTE Z370 Gaming WiFi Review [planned]
31 Comments
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Roen - Monday, April 30, 2018 - link
Still the only 300 series ITX board to have Gen 2 Type A and Type C ports available.Surprised that this spec is so difficult to achieve.
DanNeely - Monday, April 30, 2018 - link
It's another chip to be squeezed onto a board lacking in room for chips.Halfnidea - Wednesday, May 2, 2018 - link
I'm sorry but I have an issue with the use of the word: "Still" Btw, I had installed a Biostar X370 GTB 2 months ago. Gen 2 USB A and C - confirmed. Not taking my word for it? Small Form Factor did an article back in September; where i learned about it as well.Roen - Thursday, May 17, 2018 - link
Let me rephrase: Intel 300 series.Beaver M. - Tuesday, May 1, 2018 - link
A board like that should still have a mPCIe slot. Theres just too many useful mPCIe cards available and they are not available as M.2 yet.Woomack - Monday, May 7, 2018 - link
Re Overclocking, LLC have to set separately for AC/DC and you configure it in Advanced tab/GT Slice ( don't ask me why there and not in CPU OC tab ). It affects CPU and IGP. I have no idea why they made it this way but it works.I was able to set 5.1GHz on 8600K / AIO cooler, for my review couple of weeks ago.
Max OC profile which was stable for me was 4.8GHz. Like pick from the list, save settings and it works.
Max stable memory clock was DDR4-3866, max boot with single stick DDR4-4000.
Overclocking on this board isn't easy but it's also not so bad once you figure out all settings.
Roen - Thursday, May 17, 2018 - link
Run any power draw test to see if your OC hits current limit throttling in XTU.Run memtest86 and see if you have any errors.
I can't get above 4.5 GHz non-AVX, 4.0 GHz AVX, and 2666 MHz to pass memtest86, with screenshots to prove. Using delidded 8700K and multiple Samsung B-die kits.
I actually have issue with many of the reviews out there not properly pushing the board to its limits to identify its weaknesses. Anandtech review completely mirrors my experience.
An OC isn't stable if it has more failure conditions than stock, that's my OC philosophy and that's how I test my boards.
Roen - Thursday, May 17, 2018 - link
I can't get above 4.5 GHz non-AVX, 4.0 GHz AVX in Prime95 before current throttling hits in XTU.Roen - Thursday, May 17, 2018 - link
Prime95 and memtest86 should be the minimum tests that people run, evne if they are unrealistically strict. Stock chips / boards can pass these tests with flying colors, OC'ed things should be able to as well, if they are to be called stable.Rene23 - Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - link
It's using the wrong platform, need X470 AM4 instead, ..! ;-)