ACER Predator Orion 7000 PO7-640 I would like to upgrade

xchriswrocpl
xchriswrocpl Member Posts: 2 New User
edited January 2023 in Predator Desktops

Does ACER Predator Orion 7000 PO7-640 motherboard support Intel 13th gen processors? I would like to upgrade my i9 to the 13th gen.

[Edited the thread to add issue detail]

Answers

  • NeoGeo
    NeoGeo Member Posts: 157 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon
    edited January 2023

    It would require a bios update as the motherboard is z690 - these boards do support 13th gen intel processors but only with bios updates, whether an update will come is doubtful as it's a prebuilt machine and the PO7-650 is on the horizon, with it's support page and downloads already active, this would be a 13th gen machine with a z790 motherboard. Best option if you really want to go 13th gen is to upgrade the motherboard of the PO7-640, to the Asus rog z690 G - it's a mATX board and is compatible with 13th gen processors.

  • Trywet
    Trywet Member Posts: 8

    Tinkerer

    @NeoGeo isn’t it better to buy the PO7-650 motherboard instead? I would like to do the same upgrade but I fear losing all the Acer features (like RGB lights) with nonAcer motherboard. Also are you sure the PO7 features z790 mb and not z690 with a new bios?

  • xchriswrocpl
    xchriswrocpl Member Posts: 2 New User

    Just for your information, it looks like PO7-640 doesn't support 13th gen Intel CPUs indeed. I've tried i9-13900kf, but no luck. When it comes to the ARGB functionality, that's not a big deal - other vendors also provide it. The biggest concern is the Windows license, probably you need to buy new one switching to a new main board.

  • Trywet
    Trywet Member Posts: 8

    Tinkerer

    edited January 2023

    @xchriswrocpl I mean Acer RGB functionality controllable by Acer PredatorSense software. I want to keep my PC OEM. And yeah, Windows license is another issue :(

  • NeoGeo
    NeoGeo Member Posts: 157 Skilled Fixer WiFi Icon

    The negatives are ,you would lose predator sense and the actual onboard leds, aswell as needing a new windows license - you would also lose any warranty i assume as at that point the system has changed significantly. However the benefits would be having a newer motherboard which can have it's own RGB on the board, a newer generation of processor and higher speeds on RAM kits.

    Personally i think it's good the option to do this even exists as with alienware cases you can't even fit your own motherboard so once that gets outdated you need to get a whole new system.

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,101 Trailblazer

    The CPU change by itself really doesn't make that much difference in system performance. You really want the new, faster chipset with the faster memory and buses. Stick with what you have until you decide you really need more then upgrade to a new system.

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