Monday, May 23rd 2011
Gigabyte GA-990FXA-UD7 Top-Tier Socket AM3+ Motherboard Pictured
After displays of socket AM3+ motherboards based on AMD 990FX chipset, by ASUS, and MSI were pictured by various tech sites, it's quite expected of Gigabyte's offering to somehow make it to the web. Gigabyte is going full guns with its top AM3+ motherboard, with the GA-990FXA-UD7. Based on the same Black+Graphite+Gold color scheme as the socket LGA1155 "UD7" models based on Intel P67 and Z68, the GA-990FXA-UD7 comes with zesty dimensions that almost make it an EATX form-factor board, although it's not. The AM3+ socket is powered by a 10-phase VRM that is cooled by a long heatsink that appears to be contiguous with the northbridge heatsink, which in turn shares heat with the southbridge over a heat pipe. The socket is wired to four DDR3 DIMM slots supporting DDR3 frequencies in excess of 1866 MHz.
Gigabyte utilized each of the seven expansion slots, packing in six PCI-Express 2.0 x16 neatly spaced out to support NVIDIA 4-way SLI and AMD 4-way CrossFireX; two out of six slots two are electrical x4, wired to the southbridge. A legacy PCI slot is thrown in, just in case you hate to throw away that expensive PCI sound card that still sounds great. Storage connectivity includes eight internal SATA 6 Gb/s ports, six from the SB850 southbridge, and two from a third-party controller. There are two eSATA ports, of which one appears to be power-eSATA.Other connectivity features include 8+2 channel HD audio driven by Realtek ALC889 high-SNR CODEC with optical and coaxial SPDIF outputs, four USB 3.0 ports driven by EtronTech-made controllers (two ports internal, by headers), gigabit Ethernet, and FireWire. While Gigabyte retains its Award Software-made BIOS with DualBIOS technology, the BIOS is loaded with EFI extensions that let it boot from volumes greater than 3 TB in size. Gigabyte calls this HybridEFI. Expect the GA-990FXA-UD7 to be out in mid-June.
Source:
Hermitage Akihabara
Gigabyte utilized each of the seven expansion slots, packing in six PCI-Express 2.0 x16 neatly spaced out to support NVIDIA 4-way SLI and AMD 4-way CrossFireX; two out of six slots two are electrical x4, wired to the southbridge. A legacy PCI slot is thrown in, just in case you hate to throw away that expensive PCI sound card that still sounds great. Storage connectivity includes eight internal SATA 6 Gb/s ports, six from the SB850 southbridge, and two from a third-party controller. There are two eSATA ports, of which one appears to be power-eSATA.Other connectivity features include 8+2 channel HD audio driven by Realtek ALC889 high-SNR CODEC with optical and coaxial SPDIF outputs, four USB 3.0 ports driven by EtronTech-made controllers (two ports internal, by headers), gigabit Ethernet, and FireWire. While Gigabyte retains its Award Software-made BIOS with DualBIOS technology, the BIOS is loaded with EFI extensions that let it boot from volumes greater than 3 TB in size. Gigabyte calls this HybridEFI. Expect the GA-990FXA-UD7 to be out in mid-June.
33 Comments on Gigabyte GA-990FXA-UD7 Top-Tier Socket AM3+ Motherboard Pictured
BTW ... nice to have SLI on AMD ... :)
Looks like a nice feature-packed board, and I'm glad to see Gigabyte's new color scheme trickling over to AMD.
Not that I'm complaining, I'm looking forward to more board news from more company's.
This board is like the MSI 990FXA + ... 2!! :nutkick:
I was hoping we'd get to see the boards in advance so as to decide on the board first, then if the CPU is what it's supposed to be, pull the trigger.:)
The angled SATA power connector on the side I assume is used to supply additional power to the PCIe slots? Beats the hell out of a random molex/PCIe power connector in an uncomfortable to reach (and hide wires) location on the board.
Looking forward to the UD5 model myself; who the hell needs this much stuff? </hides in the corner so people here don't chase after him> Contiguous, maybe? :laugh:
This means only that amd this time will battle intel for sure
they should included a dual powered eSATA>SATA Adapter instead
why? that way you can use all the 10 SATA or 8 SATA + 2 eSATA, you can choose