Biostar Z270GT8 Review 5

Biostar Z270GT8 Review

BIOS Overview »

Board Layout


The racing theme here on the Biostar Z270GT8 is pretty obvious; checkered flags and carbon fiber are all over the place, but are still subtle enough not to be overly done. The rear of the board is boring in comparison to the front. Actually, I was a bit surprised to see that the VRM didn't have any cooling strips under the board's CPU VRM area, something Biostar has had on many of their products.


The socket area is surrounded by a rather large 12+1 CPU power design, with some rather high-end-looking parts. I'm all confused because this doesn't seem to be the Biostar I am used to. There's a single-phase DIMM power design along with four DIMM slots rated for speeds of up to 3600 MHz.


All the expansion slots are physical full-length slots, but looking at the solder pinouts on the rear of the board, three are pinned for x16 connectivity and three for x4. Specifications list the electrical maximums at x16, x8, x4, x4, x4, x4. The rear I/O panel is fitted with a PS/2 port, four USB 3.0 plugs, dual HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB 3.1 Type-A and Type-C. LAN, SPDIF, and analog audio plugs finish what is to be found here.


The board's bottom edge is ready for a ton of internal connectivity; there are many USB 2.0 headers, fan plugs, etc. You might spy dual-socketed BOIS chips here too.


LAN connectivity is provided by an Intel I-219V controller and has some built-in fortifications against surges. Drive connectivity sees a sextet of SATA ports and a duo of U.2 plugs.


The provided M.2 port is sandwiched between the CPU socket and PCIe slots, and has a large cooler on top of it, there to help keep your M.2 device cool. As you can see in the picture above, the heatsink is a long finned piece with a carbon fiber top.
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Nov 25th, 2024 08:48 EST change timezone

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