• expired

JGINYUE B760M-VDH Mobo LGA1700 Intel 13th/12th Gen US$84.74 (~A$128.81) Delivered with GST @ JGINYUE Official Store AliExpress

70
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

With the extremely high prices of latest gen motherboards from ASUS, MSi, Gigabyte & AsRock for the most modern CPUs (Intel 600 & 700 series and AMD 600 series mobos) this B760M board compatible with the latest Intel 13th Gen CPUs provides an intriguing alternative for those looking to build a budget gaming PC with good performance.

The cheapest B760 motherboards that are similarly barebones seem to retail for $200 and up, which is absurd.

This board has been reviewed on Tech Yes City and surprisingly was found to be quite fine when tested with a Core i5-13500 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgZxJeMcJQE.

Therefore would pair very well with 13th Gen non-K i5s, i3s & the current Intel budget champions the 12th Gen i5-12400F or i3-12100F.

Related Stores

AliExpress
AliExpress
Marketplace
JGINYUE Official Store
JGINYUE Official Store

closed Comments

  • +7

    You forgot 10% gst? It's added at checkout and brings the total to AU $131.27, at least for me.

  • +12

    Really, this looks like junk.

    • https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/PRO-B760M-E-DDR4/Gallery

      This is an example of this board's competition that retails for $209 then add delivery. Looks similarly like junk (with less ports as well compared to this deal)

      Unfortunately this is what has happened with the Motherboard market and its absurd price increases.

    • +2

      why? it has a vga port

      • Yeah - that was a bit of a giveaway.
        Mind you, some would see that as a good thing.

    • After watching the video.. hmm no thanks

  • +7

    Terrible board. Specs are not great. Will have issues with support, warranty and software.
    "reviewed on Tech Yes City" dont trust that guy. Hes clearly only after money and gives the worst advice. Brake cleaner anyone.

    • -6

      You say "Will have issues with support, warranty and software."

      Do you have a time machine or know the future? How do you know that it won't work for years without any problems?

      • +3

        And if it does?
        Then you just wasted your money,
        spend more to get a better part, with correct warranty and support and better spec.

        No time machine required, just use common sence instead.

    • Brake cleaner anyone.

      I'm not a fan, I find him monotone and meh, and I think he likes to jump to conclusions.
      But, to be fair to the guy, his video uses 'Parts Cleaner'.
      The brand he uses doubles as a MAF cleaner. Nothing in this world is more delicate than a hot wire MAF.
      If it's MAF sensor safe, you KNOW it leaves no residue, and won't harm your PC.

      His giant mistake is calling it 'brake cleaner' because as an English speaking presenter, most of his audience will be in western countries.
      And OUR brake cleaner, is usually waste hydrocarbons, so you get things like acetone and such in there (no thanks).

      I've cleaned many a PC part in industrial environments where boards get oily using brands like WURTH, where you know it's mostly Xylene and Toluene.
      Lots of these PC's are running Windows 95 or earlier, because it's old CNC equipment, and has been serviced like that for decades.

      Basically, his ACTIONS aren't wrong, but his verbal advice is irresponsible.
      Unless you know WHAT types of solvents are in your parts cleaner, you don't risk it.

      • Doesn't he use a generic wd40?
        That's what I thought he was using

  • +11

    surprisingly was found to be quite fine

    That should be the company slogan. Asus: inspiring innovation, jginyue: surprisingly quite fine

    • +2

      emphasis on surprisingly

    • "an intriguing alternative"

  • +4

    H610 or b660 from a reputable brand would by my preference

    • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r3o1Ebk_jCA&t=1327s

      Best be careful even with the name brands in the budget space, quite a few were seriously outperformed by relative unknowns like Maxsun and Soyo with B660 last time

      • +3

        Yes but id prefer warranty, bios updates etc
        In this price range people arent using any of them over a 400/500 series cpu

      • +1

        Soyo are no good, they have a bad rep for bad capacitors that will die quickly. They have been like this for years. Most reviews dont look at this or research it, referral links pay out, there happy. They use early bios and do not look at bios updates or review/retest/long term testing/reliablity checking/revisit, just day one/release/ out of the box only.
        Quick google and you should find things about it.
        Maxsun boards are the same as Soyo, as they brought Soyo back 2009 i think when they went bankrupt.
        These boards are consider bad in there own market (china)

        Motherboard prices really suck at the moment, and with all companies chasing bigger profits, cutting cornors on some low end boards, there is not much you can do except wait for sales/bargins/deals on good boards sadly.

        • The Soyo you are referring to stopped making mobos in 2004 and the company went bankrupt in 2009. Maxsun effectively purchased a brand name so I think it is a stretch to directly link Soyo's capacitor issues in the early 2000s to a Soyo brand mobo today.

          I agree better to wait for a bargain on a decent board if using a decent CPU. But you still have to do thorough research as the big 4 are happy to produce absolute garbage H610, B660 etc. mobos and sell them for high prices (i.e. the Gigabyte, ASUS and AsRock mobos shown in that HUB video).

          For example, the non-K 13500 easily draws as much power as the 12600K so an unsuspecting buyer can easily buy a $200+ mobo that overheats to 100 degrees and can throttle your CPU performance by a massive 20% due to this poor behaviour from motherboard makers.

          Some of the cheap lower-mid range (but still very high performance) CPUs sadly make much less sense these days due to the lack of motherboard options that aren't total junk under $150 like in better times.

          • @AussieDeals: The cap issues date back to this year

            • @AIbot: Would you be able to point me towards more info on what is affected? I did a google search but couldn't find anything, if there are issues I'd definitely want to see and avoid Maxsun/Soyo if so

              • @AussieDeals: You will have to check chinese social media and pc forums to find the info. I have a friend that works at a popular pc store in china and has also told me about the issues there having. The basics of the b660 maxsun and soyo issues are they used two different caps, if you get a model with one type it can turn bad as they are cheaper caps. There is also a cpu socket issue, which results in memory not working. If you are able to get onto china socal media/forums, you should find a lot of post about people having issues. If I get time later, I will see if I can find some links again, but was reading alot of them less then a month ago. Russian forums have so info too.
                Its just not worth saving a few bucks to get a board with no local warranty IMO.

  • +2

    ewww

  • +2

    seriously, if I want to build an intel 13th gen high end PC, I'd want to spend $120 more on bigger brand products.

    • This is not really for a high end PC, more for someone on a strict budget that wants to a fit modern non-K i3 or i5 CPU that performs well into their budget build.

  • Thanks, this’ll go great with my new separate PS2 mouse and keyboard.

    • You joke, but PS2 is great and i'd rather have ps2 ports and a usb->ps2 adaptor then have mobo manufacturers omit them. It's not just an older port style like an AT DIN keyboard port - USB does not completely replace the functionality it offers.

      and i bought a new ps2 keyboard only 2-3 years ago.

  • +1

    i don't know man… i don't think i trust all my other parts to be installed onto that….because when the mobo goes it may take a few other (more expensive) things with it. It's not worth it skimping on the mobo. I would rather save some money on the case, or fans, PSU, or a dodgy windows key… than to go with a cheap no-name mobo.

    • +4

      No definitely do not skimp on the PSU!! A cheap PSU is much more likely to damage a GPU or other expensive components in your PC compared to a cheap no-name motherboard.

  • +1

    Note: Our B760M-VDH motherboard does not support the SATA protocol SSD, and can only use M 2 NVME

    Interesting.

    Also, the sata ports on one of the ad's pictures look wonky…

    • Can't unsee the wonkiness!

  • +1

    should send it to AHOC/Buildzoid to review the VRM

    • +1

      Are you offering

  • No header for my floppy disk drive, no deal.

  • +1

    If I was ever desperate to buy cheap and wait six weeks for shipping I might consider this.

    But then I'd come to my senses and buy something from a known brand locally.

Login or Join to leave a comment