Thursday, March 24th 2016

GIGABYTE Launches the X170-Extreme ECC Motherboard

GIGABYTE unveiled a new high-end socket LGA1151 motherboard, the X170-Extreme ECC. Positioned as a workstation motherboard for the high-end desktop crowd, this board is based on Intel C236 chipset, and comes with support for Intel Xeon E3-1200 V5 processors in addition to 6th generation Core "Skylake" processors. It also supports DDR4 ECC memory, which partly lends it its name. Built in the standard ATX form-factor, the board draws power from a combination of 24-pin ATX and 8-pin EPS power connectors. Expansion slots include two PCI-Express 3.0 x16 (x8/x8 with both populated), a third PCI-Express 3.0 x16 (electrical gen 3.0 x4, wired to the PCH), and three other PCIe 3.0 x1 slots.

A star attraction here is GIGABYTE's choice of an Intel-made 2-port USB 3.1 controller, which connects to the PCH over PCI-Express 3.0 x4, compared to most other USB 3.1 controllers in the market, which connect over PCI-Express 3.0 x2. This ensures consistent 10 Gb/s bandwidth dedicated to each of the two ports, without any bandwidth loss to overhead. The board offers one each of type-A and type-C ports, wired to this controller. The board offers an additional four USB 3.0 ports from the chipset and a Renesas-made hub chip. Also on offer is a 40 Gb/s Thunderbolt 3 port, with DisplayPort 1.2 passthrough.
Storage connectivity on the X170-Extreme ECC includes two 32 Gb/s M.2 slots, and four SATA-Express 16 Gb/s connectors, which break out as eight SATA 6 Gb/s ports. There are two gigabit Ethernet interfaces, one driven by an Intel I219-V controller, and another by a Killer E2400. The onboard audio solution is top-of-the-line from GIGABYTE's parts bin, with a Creative SoundCore 3D processor, TI Burr Brown OPA2134 OPAMP (user-replaceable), ground-layer isolation, and Nichicon Muse electrolytic capacitors. The board is driven by GIGABYTE's Dual-UEFI BIOS tech, with auto-switching redundant BIOS chips. The company didn't reveal pricing.
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30 Comments on GIGABYTE Launches the X170-Extreme ECC Motherboard

#26
hobo6102
i7s and i5s work. ECC will not be supported though. You need an Intel chip with an ECC memory controller to drive ECC dram e.g: Xeons

TDP has nothing to do with the chipset, TDP has to do with the VRM which is motherboard maker dependent.
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#27
Jay H.
I was perusing the pics and was quite pleased to see that beside the first M.2 slot, near the CPU, is a metallic square etched with "Turbo BCLK".
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#28
jaggerwild
valentyn0So let me ask you this (for the "enthusiasts"): You (most likely not) buy this mobo for aesthetics reasons? If so, you are beyond redemption..
I won't answer your question as I'm not an "ENTHUSIAST", I posted what I did cause it seems Gigabyte is reaching instead of doing what they have always done well. As if they wanna compete with Asus for motherboard plate forms, didn't Asus buy them out long ago but left them as a separate company?
Posted on Reply
#29
Grings
As a side note Noctua fans would go much better with this than the black and red motherboards you usually see...dammit why dosent anyone make beige cases anymore...:)
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