Wednesday, September 14th 2011

Gigabyte Displays its X79 High-End Motherboard Lineup at IDF

At IDF, motherboard vendors got to show off their near-complete socket LGA2011 motherboards based on the X79 chipset. Many of these were half-built and straight out of R&D at this year's Computex event, back in June. Gigabyte showed off its first X79 motherboards, the GA-X79-UD5, GA-X79-UD7, and G1.Assassin 2. Unlike previous generations of high-end Gigabyte motherboards, the UD7 isn't a beefed-up UD5 with added features and better cooling. The two are entirely different right from the PCB, to the features they offer.

The UD5 targets premium users, with eight DDR3 DIMM slots, geared for 3-card SLI/CrossFire, while the UD7 is bleeding-edge with just four DDR3 DIMM slots, but a wealth of overclocking features and support for 4-card SLI/Crossfire. Then there's the G1.Assassin 2, which targets the gamer-overclocker market with neat features such as hardware-accelerated Creative X-Fi audio and Bigfoot Killer NIC, with support for 3-card SLI/Crossfire.
The GA-X79-UD5 features a generous 14-phase CPU VRM. The LGA2011 socket is wired to eight DIMM slots, four on either side, supporting up to 64 GB of quad-channel DDR3 memory. Expansion slots include three PCI-Express 3.0 x16 (x16/x8/x8 or x16/NC/x16), two PCI-Express 3.0 x1, and a legacy PCI. There are 12 SATA ports. It's likely that Gigabyte used third-party controllers over what the PCH offers. There could be as many as six 6 Gb/s ports. The rest of the connectivity is pretty standard stuff: 8-channel HD audio, one gigabit Ethernet, four USB 3.0 ports, and power-eSATA.

The GA-X79-UD7 sees a fusion between the traditional high-end connectivity and features of UD7, and the new "Gigabyte OC" line the company released with its X58A-OC motherboard. It keeps up with the black+orange color scheme. There are just the four DDR3 DIMM slots that can hold up to 32 GB of quad-channel memory, but PCB real-estate is allotted to a strong 22-phase CPU VRM, 6-phase memory VRM, and only those features that will help overclockers a big way. This board features four PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots (x16/NC/x16/NC or x8/x8/x8/x8), 14 SATA ports, and high-grade connectivity. Apart from the 24-pin ATX connector, the board draws power from two 8-pin EPS connectors, and two SATA power inputs.

Lastly, the G1.Assassin 2 keeps up with the catchy new lineup Gigabyte built with X58 and Z68 chipset-based platforms. This board features just four DDR3 DIMM slots, but the space saved is used for bleeding-edge connectivity features that help gamers. First, there's a Bigfoot Killer NIC PCI-Express hardware-accelerated network controller, then there's a Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi hardware-accelerated audio processor (CA-20K2), with its own set of audiophile-grade capacitors to the OPAMP circuit. The board features three PCI-Express 3.0 slots (x16/NC/x16 or x16/x8/x8), 12 SATA ports, and a wealth of other connectivity.
Sources: Anandtech, TechReport
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39 Comments on Gigabyte Displays its X79 High-End Motherboard Lineup at IDF

#26
Bundy
WooHoo, a first look at my next mobo.I'm planning to do a build by years end. Now to choose which one.....
Posted on Reply
#28
[H]@RD5TUFF
repman244Pictures of Gigabyte UEFI:

images.anandtech.com/galleries/1380/DSC00936_575px.jpg

images.anandtech.com/galleries/1380/DSC00937_575px.jpg

images.anandtech.com/galleries/1380/DSC00938_575px.jpg

images.anandtech.com/galleries/1380/DSC00941_575px.jpg

images.anandtech.com/galleries/1380/DSC00945_575px.jpg

Source:
www.anandtech.com/show/4805/first-look-at-gigabytes-uefi-setup-on-x79
It's about time they got their act together and put it in there boards rather than making a bios that looked like UEFI.
Posted on Reply
#29
xBruce88x
My avatar approves of the UD7's color scheme.

These look like pretty nice boards and I like their layouts.
Posted on Reply
#30
AsRock
TPU addict
TheLaughingManThe reviews say it doesn't need one because the PSU is pretty damn good stuff, runs cool, and I don't think there fans turn off like other PSUs.
Ooh sorry i was not on about there PSU's but there fans that were linked with them.
Posted on Reply
#31
WarraWarra
Sweet memory placement, first intelligent memory placement since at/xt pc's.

Any idea if the PCI-e 3.0 is now real or fake "pci-e 2.0" again ?

Now just to get motherboard manufacturers past kindergarten / 1st grade and start to add 2 and 4 cpu slots for home use
ie: "16x4" 4 cpu's + "6950x4" 4 gpu's, now that would be sweet if only AMD would released 16core cpu's then this would be 64cores and 4x 6970HD's if Xfire is now working properly. :toast:
We know Intel is not capable of delivering 16core cpu's or they would have done so already.
:nutkick:
Posted on Reply
#32
LordJummy
I'm liking the UD5 and assassin. I love acid green and my water cooling is black/neon green so it would look quite nice...
Posted on Reply
#33
TRWOV
FreedomEclipseUgly colour scheme is ugly

(talking about the orange one)
I liked it. Would match my SATA cables.
Posted on Reply
#34
zomg
So, they have PCI-Express 3.0 print, but other sources claim Intel have problems with PCI-E 3.0 and they will release 2.0 this year.
Posted on Reply
#35
werez
very nice , however that heatpipe is useless and uglee . And wow thats a bigass socket , right there . HA !
Posted on Reply
#36
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
TRWOVI liked it. Would match my SATA cables.
Its like they got someone to throw up over a naked black PCB, then thought "hmmmm carrots" then decided to make it into a colour scheme
Posted on Reply
#37
LordJummy
werezvery nice , however that heatpipe is useless and uglee . And wow thats a bigass socket , right there . HA !
Why is the heatpipe useless? Just curious.
Posted on Reply
#38
agpnerd
Finally there is a reason for me to buy something like this:

Posted on Reply
#39
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
U think some of the team from DFI switched to GB?
Posted on Reply
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