Wednesday, March 6th 2013

Trio of GIGABYTE Z87 Motherboards Detailed

The Z87X-OC may be reserved for people who seldom patronize the PC case industry; but for everyone else, GIGABYTE has three options based on Intel's Z87 Express chipset, which supports overclocking on 4th generation Core "Haswell" K-series processors (detailed here). Leading the trio is the feature-rich Z87X-UD5H, followed by the fairly well-equipped Z87X-UD3H, and trailed by the most affordable of the three, Z87X-D3H.

The Z87X-UD5H packs a massive 16-phase CPU VRM, even if it's not backed by the Z87X-OC's voltage-control/monitoring paraphernalia. The CPU is wired to three PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slots (x16/NC/NC or x8/x8/NC or x8/x4/x4), three PCI-Express 2.0 x1, and a legacy PCI. The board features a total of ten SATA 6 Gb/s internal ports, six of which are driven by the Z87 PCH, four by third-party controllers. Display connectivity includes two HDMI ports, and one each of dual-link DVI and DisplayPort. 8-channel HD audio with TOSLINK digital output, two gigabit Ethernet interfaces, eight USB 3.0 ports (six rear, two by header), make for the rest of it.
The Z87X-UD3H goes a little easy on the features. It uses a simpler 8-phase VRM to power the CPU, retains the expansion slot layout of the Z87X-UD5H, gives you a still impressive eight SATA 6 Gb/s internal ports, swaps out the second gigabit Ethernet connection for a pair of eSATA ports, and the second HDMI port for a D-Sub (VGA).

The most affordable among the three is the Z87X-D3H. It features a similar 8-phase VRM to the Z87X-UD3H, an identical expansion slot layout to the other two, while cuts back a little on SATA and USB 3.0 connectivity. It features just the six SATA 6 Gb/s internal ports, all of which are wired to the Z87 PCH; and features "just" six USB 3.0 ports (four rear, two by header).
Source: Lab501.ro
Add your own comment

13 Comments on Trio of GIGABYTE Z87 Motherboards Detailed

#1
micropage7
come on gigabyte, put some heatsink on those vrm
Posted on Reply
#2
dj-electric
I don't understand why year after another people complain that unfinished motherboards are unfinished. Seriously, you guys.

These look - -- Juicy!
Posted on Reply
#3
micropage7
Dj-ElectriCI don't understand why year after another people complain that unfinished motherboards are unfinished. Seriously, you guys.

These look - -- Juicy!
:shadedshu
i just think that gigabyte "not serious" on this product

ok they put 10 sata ports on this board but how come they forget to put just 2 pieces heatsinks
Posted on Reply
#4
Octavean
Its simply that the heat-sink configuration and design of the heat-sinks for these boards have not been finalized.

In all likelihood these boards on display are not even functional. There purpose is to show component placement, board design, show feature set and so on. It announces their product offerings but again its still fairly early.

That chipset heat-sink shown probably wont be on the final retail product,......
Posted on Reply
#5
Prima.Vera
The PCI port is bad designed. It should have been put in front of the second PCI Express port, NOT after it. If you have dual GPU cards is gone!!
Posted on Reply
#6
cadaveca
My name is Dave
micropage7:shadedshu
i just think that gigabyte "not serious" on this product
www.techpowerup.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=50297&stc=1&d=1362579163
ok they put 10 sata ports on this board but how come they forget to put just 2 pieces heatsinks
I'd rather see a naked board so I can see what parts it's made with, rather than a heatsink, actually. Heatsinks probably aren't even fully designed yet.
Posted on Reply
#8
NeoXF
Wow, people with a billion posts on this forum and they're still not used to how prototype/reference motherboards are presented...

But seriously, there's nothing too relevant in any of these posts... not much details about them at all, it's all to plain to actually know what to expect. Other than n number of thises and m number of thats and maybe the general layout of them... all of which is subject to change anyway.
Posted on Reply
#9
nickbaldwin86
LOL somethings will never change....

back on to the technical side of things and not how to stupid board looks, who cares, way to many do and are to blind to read that these arent finished anyways..... anyways....

I was really hoping that Z87/Haswell would open up more lanes to PCIE... be really nice to have 16x/16x for SLI :)

Some day .... tell then LGA2011 is still the setup to have.
Posted on Reply
#10
MxPhenom 216
ASIC Engineer
Hopefully Gigabyte releases a UP5/7 Z87 board soon after the UD3H/5H boards.
Posted on Reply
#11
Octavean
nickbaldwin86LOL somethings will never change....

back on to the technical side of things and not how to stupid board looks, who cares, way to many do and are to blind to read that these arent finished anyways..... anyways....

I was really hoping that Z87/Haswell would open up more lanes to PCIE... be really nice to have 16x/16x for SLI :)

Some day .... tell then LGA2011 is still the setup to have.
Agreed,....

My first Gigabyte motherboard was a GA-P35C-DS3R. It was one of those boards with a color scheme that looked like a clown vomited all over it.

I really don't care all that much about how a motherboard looks (color). I don't want to look at a board anyway once its been installed. I care about functionality, performance, reliability and so on,.....not color scheme,..... that just seems childish to me,....

The racing stripe on the side wont make it go faster,...... :)
Posted on Reply
#12
nickbaldwin86
I wish they make it all black, black everything... simple, easy, I don't want to see the board black would hide it for the most part... people will always complain because it is what people do.
Posted on Reply
#13
Steven B
well now they have totally black capacitors hahaha and then you can paint the blue stripe black, and its totally black. You know when you go black you never go back?
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Oct 31st, 2024 19:50 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts