Wednesday, September 7th 2011

Gigabyte Releases Sandy Bridge-Ready Thin Mini-ITX Motherboard to Retail Channel

What you're looking at below is one of the first "Thin mini-ITX" motherboards sold in the retail channel. The GA-MSH61DI is designed for extremely compact mini-ITX cases, that are thinner than the rear panel of ATX/ITX form-factors, and all-in-one PCs. The board draws power from an external power brick through a 12V DC input jack, the board then gives out SATA and Molex power via cables. It seats socket LGA1155 "Sandy Bridge" Intel Core i3/i5/i7 processors with a maximum TDP of 95W.

The CPU socket is powered by a 3-phase VRM. The processor is backed by Intel H61 Express chipset. It is wired to two angled DDR3 SO-DIMM slots that can hold up to 8 GB of dual-channel DDR3-1333 MHz memory. There are no perpendicular expansion slots, but there's one mSATA slot that can hold an SSD, an mPCIe that can hold a wireless networking card, and an LVDS (low-voltage differential signaling) slot that can be used for devices such as VGA connections to LCD panels. The H61 chipset gives out two SATA 3 Gb/s ports apart from the mSATA slot.
While there is an 8-channel HD audio CODEC, there isn't enough room for audio jacks. So there's one 3.5 mm line-in, and a TOSLINK connector that gives out 7.1 channel digital audio. There's also a 2-channel HDA front-panel header. There are two USB 3.0 ports and two USB 2.0 ones on the rear panel, two more ports via headers, and one gigabit Ethernet connection. The sole display output is an HDMI 1.4 connector. There's no word on the pricing.
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14 Comments on Gigabyte Releases Sandy Bridge-Ready Thin Mini-ITX Motherboard to Retail Channel

#1
mtosev
I somehow don't like sodimm ram. costs more than desktop memory
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#2
W1zzard
how do i cool the cpu with so little height available?
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#3
Completely Bonkers
I don't see how the "consumer build" will be able to put a processor and even an ultra thin cooler in a space LESS than that rear output panel. I think they should have designed it a little higher with the audio and with DVI outs, and supplied it WITH a "laptop/GPU" type cooler, possibly even WITH a case too, since putting this is a regular ITX case defeats the purpose. I found yesterdays ASROCK announcement much more appealing.
Posted on Reply
#5
LDNL
AhokZYashAwaterblock?
Had a corsair H50 in a Sugo06 so cpu isnt a problem but rather the mobo with no heatsinks over the vrm or anything else for that matter. Even if OC was an option it wasnt possible especialy on the H55 itx board without those small pin style heatsinks.
Posted on Reply
#6
Freedom4556
W1zzardhow do i cool the cpu with so little height available?
The weirdest part about this is the "to the retail channel" bit. Some enterprising (or brave, given Samsung's luck) OEM could make some slick iMac/Mac Mini knockoffs with these though.
Posted on Reply
#7
NC37
Completely BonkersI don't see how the "consumer build" will be able to put a processor and even an ultra thin cooler in a space LESS than that rear output panel. I think they should have designed it a little higher with the audio and with DVI outs, and supplied it WITH a "laptop/GPU" type cooler, possibly even WITH a case too, since putting this is a regular ITX case defeats the purpose. I found yesterdays ASROCK announcement much more appealing.
If Apple can do it in a Mini, Gigabyte and others can too. Yeah it would need a specialized HSF. Maybe they'll also make a special case for these things in the future. Wouldn't mind an APU setup like this. Something the size of a Mini with decent graphical capability would be great for me.
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#8
DrunkenMafia
I don't see the point without some form of 20mm high heatsink like whats in a laptop. They should've released something like that with the board.
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#9
DaJMasta
SO-DIMM memory at least was cheaper than the desktop versions for some time... I think it is marginally more expensive now but it's still super cheap.


For a heatsink use a block from a 1U server system then put a slim (10mm thick) fan on top. You can get something that takes up less height than a standard IO plate.
Posted on Reply
#10
de.das.dude
Pro Indian Modder
W1zzardhow do i cool the cpu with so little height available?
silver heatsink with high fins density. and one of them blower type real loud super delta fans.

im talking about server type cooling ofcourse.
Posted on Reply
#11
Completely Bonkers
NC37If Apple can do it in a Mini, Gigabyte and others can too. Yeah it would need a specialized HSF. Maybe they'll also make a special case for these things in the future. Wouldn't mind an APU setup like this. Something the size of a Mini with decent graphical capability would be great for me.
The Apple Mini is a different class of product. This doesnt even come close to Apples connectivity options, ... and dont forget that inside the Mini is a LAPTOP CPU AND LAPTOP CHIPSET that are SURFACE MOUNTED and therefore (albeit less powerful) cooler and smaller.




If you really want something that looks like an Apple, buy one! And install Bootcamp (Windows).
Posted on Reply
#13
[H]@RD5TUFF
any chance of a review once it comes out ?
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