Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5

In the land of Gigabyte marketing, we have market segregation.  The UD3/4 and below are considered primarily low end with a large dollop of mainstream at the UD3 level, and anything bearing the name UD5 or UD7+ is where their enthusiast section lies.  Gamers have the G series, consisting of models named Sniper and Assassin, depending on your needs.  Gigabyte also like to come out with one-off products, such as the X58A-OC, a board dedicated for extreme overclocking at sub-zero temperatures, or when pairing Sandy Bridge boards with onboard SSDs to take advantage of caching.

The board we have here representing the 900-series is the 990FXA-UD5, so we are talking for the most part here about the enthusiast end of the market that comes in at a steady price of $180, below both the MSI and the ASUS Sabertooth counterparts.  But does it measure up?

Overview

When it comes to selecting an appropriate 990FX board for your AMD processor, a Gigabyte model is going to appear somewhere.  At around the $180, the 990FXA-UD5 does come as an option filling a lot of requirements – plenty of PCIe functionality with some extra SATA ports.  You miss out on a little bit though, with only basic Realtek Audio/NIC functionality, and the box of goodies is not particularly numerate.  The PCIe layout could be a little improved, as to use dual video cards at maximum bandwidth leaves no gap between the GPUs.  I would have liked to see power/reset buttons on the board with a debug LED just for testing purposes.

We still have access to the old-school way of presenting a BIOS in blue and white, but this lends itself easily to overclocking the system.  There were some minor issues with reading the voltages on Bulldozer processors, resulting in some not-so-stellar overclocks which caused the VRMs to get hot.  One of the main issues with the motherboard that may irritate some users is the temperature of the VRMs, which gets obscenely high at serious loads and overclocks.  It may have been an idea to beef up the heatsinks or add active cooling in this regard.

Fan controls are not the best in the world as well, but overall the board was easy enough to use.  Looking at the notes I wrote while testing the board, the fact that my fan was essentially stopped while at idle is good, but on this revision of the board the CPU voltage ripple under load was of concern.  Audio users will want to close EasyTune6, as it causes spikes in DPC Latency which could filter through to the audio.

Visual Inspection

The Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5 does not immediately jump out in terms of looks.  The board sports the Gigabyte higher end black PCB and slots, and is combined with silver heatsinks that feel relatively substantial.  With the AM3/AM3+ socket being the size that it is, there should not be any trouble installing substantial CPU coolers, though as with previous Gigabyte models, the DRAM slots seem to be further in from the edge of the board compared to other companies designs.  This should not have much effect on the overall usage of the board.

Gigabyte has fitted the board with only four fan headers, with the 4-pin CPU fan header located at the top left of the socket.  The nearest header to this is the PWR 3-pin on the right side of the board above the 24-pin ATX connector – this is potentially frustrating for users of water cooling who would like to equip two fans to their radiator in a standard location.  The other headers are located on the bottom of the board – a 4-pin SYS header is below the SATA ports, and a 3-pin SYS header is in the bottom left below the PCIe slots.

For the heatsink design, the Gigabyte board uses a substantial sized heatsink for the VRMs, which is connected via a heatpipe to another cooler below the socket.  The chipset cooler in the bottom right is fairly big and flat, attempting to provide a balance of mass, surface area and cooling efficiency (not to mention advertising space).  Below the 24-pin ATX header is the battery, which is a little deviation from almost every other board out there – normally we see it between the PCIe slots, but as there are a lot of full length PCIe slots on the UD5, it makes sense to put the battery out of harm's way.

SATA layout starts with a Marvell 88SE9172 controller offering two SATA 6 Gbps ports (support for RAID 0, 1) in grey, followed by the six SATA 6 Gbps ports from the PCH (support for RAID 0, 1, 5, 10).  The Gigabyte board has more SATA 6 Gbps ports (non-eSATA) than any other product tested in this review.

Continuing around the board, below the chipset heatsink we find an EtronTech controller for the onboard USB 3.0 header, next to the Gigabyte standard Trusted Platform Module (TPM) header.  I have mentioned in previous reviews that Gigabyte like including this feature of the chipset as it incurs no extra cost and they apparently have enough of a user base who uses the feature.  I was told by another manufacturer that a feature is typically included in the board design if around 25% of users would use it, so it would be interesting to hear from Gigabyte regarding take up numbers.

Further along the bottom of the board are the standard array of USB 2.0 headers, a COM header, an IEEE1394 header and front panel audio.  Unfortunately, there are no signs of onboard power or reset buttons, or a Clear CMOS button even on the back panel.

It may seem odd to find the front panel audio at the bottom left of the board, when typically the front of the system is on the right – this is due to the audio subsystem being located primarily in the back panel.  This Gigabyte board sports a Realtek ALC889 audio solution which is focused to the back panel and then routed to a header.  If they were to route to the front of the board and still keep audio quality high, it would need another layer in the PCB (if not two) and would incur extra costs to the consumer.

For PCIe layout we have a single PCIe x1 at the top, but this is blocked for long PCIe x1 cards due to the heatsink.  The full length slots underneath are labeled x16, x4, x16, x4, x8, x4, PCI – this layout raises a few issues and questions.  For two GPUs to fully utilize x16/x16, they are placed in full slots in position 2 and 4 of the layout – if the GPUs are double slot wide, then this will cause the top GPU to be restricted to the air flow.  The third GPU then goes in to position 6 – what would make more sense is to have the second x16 slot in position 6, giving both GPUs room to breathe.   I should also mention that when three GPUs are used, the second x16 reduces to an x8.

The back panel is typical of a board at this range.  We have eight USB 2.0 ports in red, two USB 3.0 ports in blue, a combination PS/2 port for mice and keyboards, an optical S/PDIF output, IEEE1394 output, one eSATA 3 Gbps in red, one eSATA 3 Gbps in blue, a Realtek 8111E gigabit Ethernet port, and standard audio jacks.

ASUS Sabertooth 990FX – In The Box, Board Features, Software Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5 – BIOS and Overclocking
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  • geforce912 - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Just so you know, the supremefx x-fi 2 on the crosshair v is still a realtek chip but with higher grade capacitors and a creative software overlay. Definitely not a creative chip. Please correct it.
  • TerdFerguson - Thursday, April 5, 2012 - link

    Instead of repeatedly calling $130 cheap for a motherboard, why don't you step up and breakdown the costs associated with construction?

    This reviewer is backwards, as usual - the other boards are horribly overpriced, following the modern trend.

    I'd like to see a cost breakdown for any of the very overpriced boards. Please show us how they justify their high costs. It looks to me like Biostar simply didn't get the price-fixing memo.

    It's insane how many folks are continuing to support AMD because of its former stance as a budget option and how many of those purported fans seem to turn up their nose at any components that aren't marketed (and priced) as being premium-tier.
  • MadAd - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    sata 3, cool
    usb 3, cool
    good overclocking, cool
    dual channel ram, itll do

    four graphics slots.....groan

    am fed up paying out the wazooo for these so called enthusiast boards when I only intend to run 1 graphics card ... yes im a gamer, i want the best in all other areas (esp best sata 3 perfomance) but jeez can we have some 'normal' boards reviewed along with these high end monsters pls?
  • gilmoreisu - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    I'm a little disappointed in not seeing the ASRock Fatal1ty board. Any reason why this was left off? Otherwise, great round-up. Thank you!
  • waldojim42 - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    One of the things I see skimmed over far too often these days are the actual audio capabilities. In the day of digital audio connections and receivers, why do we still have enthusiast level boards with stereo digital audio!? This is something That needs pointed out in the motherboard reviews. MSI makes such ridiculous claims, like "Lossless 24bit/192kHz HD Audio" and "THX TruStudio PRO", yet in the end mean NOTHING when you are playing a game, as you are still limited to 3(or 4) analog 3.5mm to RCA cables for your audio.

    So which boards support DTS/Dolby Digital encoding mid game?
  • funguseater - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    Thank you for taking the time to review these motherboards. It is a relief to know that my old Gigabyte MA790X-UD4P still overclocks to the same levels with a thuban (1090t). It will be interesting to see if the next 1090 chipset will support the old Thubans.

    I only have DDR2 on my board but it doesn't seem to affect performance as much as I thought it would so I can wait for the next gen boards.

    Anyway thanks for including the 1100t in the review!
  • ranger429 - Saturday, April 7, 2012 - link

    It would have been nice to see how a FX-4170 or 4100 would do in this test
  • brahma - Saturday, April 7, 2012 - link

    excelent job, congratulations! ,... but what a shame! do you forget the asrock 990fx fatality, the unique with a fase power 12+2 !!
    salutations.
  • Sunny129 - Saturday, April 7, 2012 - link

    Ian,

    First of all, thank you for the informative review and comparison of 990FX boards. Is there any particular reason you reviewed Gigabyte's GA-990FX-UD5, and not their big dog, the UD7? would it be worth while to review the UD7, since you seem to have reviewed the top 990FX boards from ASUS and MSI? specifically, i'd like to see if the UD7 suffers from the same downsides that the UD5 does, for instance the VRM heat issues while under load, lack of decent fan control, etc.

    thanks,
    Eric
  • kukreknecmi - Saturday, April 7, 2012 - link

    What does this mean? Doesnt video encode is Floating Point intensive task??

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