ECS Launches H310CH5-TI: A Thin Mini-ITX Motherboard for Coffee Lake-S
by Anton Shilov on December 4, 2018 1:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
- Intel
- Mini ITX
- ECS
- thin mini ITX
- Coffee Lake
- H310
ECS has released its new Thin Mini-ITX motherboard designed for Intel’s Coffee Lake-S processors. The H310CH5-TI mainboard is aimed at miniature systems as well as upgradeable all-in-one desktops compatible with the said form-factor.
As the name suggests, the ECS H310CH5-TI is based on Intel’s H310 chipset and therefore supports the company’s 8th Generation Core i3/i5/i7 processors, as well as their cheaper Celeron and Pentium-branded brothers. The motherboard is outfitted with a 4+1-phase VRM that uses solid-state coils and capacitors to prolong lifespan of the platform and ensure stability during high loads. Unfortunately, ECS does not disclose which specific CPUs are qualified for the mainboard, but keeping in mind rather limited cooling that a Thin Mini-ITX chassis can provide, I wouldn't expect this board to be used with anything over a 65 W TDP chip.
The H310CH5-TI has two SO-DIMM slots supporting up to 32 GB of DDR4-2667 memory, one M.2-2280 slot for PCIe/SATA SSDs, two SATA 6 Gbps connectors, and one M.2 slot for a Wi-Fi/BT controller.
I/O capabilities of the motherboard are pretty typical for a Thin Mini-ITX platform. The motherboard has a GbE port (controlled by Realtek’s 8111H chip), one HDMI 1.4 output, one HDMI 1.4 input, four USB 3.0 Type-A connectors (two internal and two external), two USB 2.0 Type-A ports, and two audio jacks. It is noteworthy that the audio subsystem of the H310CH5-TI is comprised of the Realtek ALC662 codec and a six-channel DAC.
Since Slim Mini-ITX motherboards can be used for special-purpose systems and highly-integrated AIO desktops, the ECS H310CH5-TI also has numerous internal headers, including a card reader header, a webcam header, a touch board header, a camera header, an IR sensor header, and so on.
ECS has not disclosed pricing of the motherboard, but typically Intel H310-based boards are among the cheapest.
ECS Intel H310-Based Thin Mini-ITX Motherboard | ||
H310CH5-TI | ||
CPUs | Intel LGA1151 v2 CPUs | |
PCH | Intel H310 | |
Graphics | Intel UHD Graphics from CPU | |
Display Outputs | 1 × HDMI 1.4a | |
Memory | 2 × DDR4 SO-DIMM Up to 32 GB of DDR4-2667 |
|
Slots for Add-In-Cards | 1 × M.2-2230 for Wi-Fi/Bluetooth 1 × M.2-2280 for PCIe/SATA SSDs |
|
Ethernet | Realtek 8111H GbE controller | |
Storage | 2 × SATA 6 Gbps | |
Audio | Realtek ALC662 | |
USB | 4 × USB 3.0 Type-A 2 × USB 2.0 Type-A |
|
Serial Ports | - | |
Wi-Fi | optional | |
Operating Temperature | ? | |
Form-Factor | Mini-ITX (170 mm × 170 mm | 6.7" × 6.7") |
Related Reading:
- The ECS Z270H4-I Durathon 2 Mini ITX Motherboard Review
- The ASRock B360M-ITX/ac Motherboard Review: Tiny Take on B360, Sub $100
- ASRock Gives AMD Ryzen Mini-ITX Treatment, Launches X370 Gaming ITX/ac
- Habey Releases MITX-6771, J1900 Thin Mini-ITX with Long Life Cycle Support
Source: ECS (via Hermitage Akihabara)
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DanNeely - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
Looking at the m.2 slots, they're both oriented the same way, which would stack the SSD on top of the wifi card. There's nothing wrong with that as a space saving option, but it has me scratching my head at why the PCB area below the m.2 connectors and to the right of the sodimm slots is bare of any components.jeremyshaw - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
I didn't look at the manual, but I have some experience with wild guessing.The slot closer to the southbridge looks like a B-key connector. This is provides PCIex2, SATA, USB, I2C, and at least a couple of other protocols. This is usually used by SSDs, but also some WiFi cards. The one further away looks like an E key, which cuts the PCIe down to one lane, no SATA, but the rest is still there. AFAIK, this is commonly used by WiFi cards.
So the shorter wifi card goes in first, and gets secures. The M.2 SSD slot uses a slot with (still guessing) greater offset from the PCB, which allows it to go over the WiFi card. The standoffs for the screw is probably higher, too.
Again, I could go read the manual and confirm for myself, but I... didn't.
jeremyshaw - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
Apparently, I didn't check my post for grammatical/spelling errors and logical inclarities first, either.The Chill Blueberry - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
It's not bare, there's a heat sink. (Black on black is misleading, but look at the first pic you can see it.)DanNeely - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
Even on that picture it looks more like a streaky soldier mask; but a heatsink would make a lot more sense.Valantar - Wednesday, December 5, 2018 - link
It's definitely the chipset heatsink.seamonkey79 - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
Below the m.2 slots and to the right of the SO-DIMM slors is a heatsink for the chipset.jeremyshaw - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
Allright, I'm not misreading it, since it's on the ECS website, too:1 X HDMI IN Port
The other inputs make it look like it's made for kiosk work.
I wonder what are the encoding/input specs of the HDMI input (beyond which version of HDMI it supports). It could make for a decent, CPU powered streaming box.
parlinone - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
This looks nice, wish there are thin M-ITX with the Zchips available?Also, I see a 19VDC input for power which is very nice. But is there also an internal header for 19VDC?
PS why can't I login with my anandtech forums account? For the front page I need a separate account which is tied to the same mail. It's super weird.
parlinone - Tuesday, December 4, 2018 - link
I'm pretty sure there's no internal header, since it's almost always right behind the external 19VDC input. That's already a non-starter for me.