With the X79 and Sandy Bridge-E platform coming to the middle of its run, we were expecting at least some of the motherboard manufacturers to update their high end lines in order to inject new enthusiasm to the platform that potentially has the bigger profit margins.  So far we have had a pair of products that meet this quota - the ASRock X79 Extreme11 which aims itself to be a full bodied workstation product by implementing dual PLX chips and an LSI SAS PCIe 3.0 chip, but comes in at $600.  The other is essentially its direct competitor - the $330 Gigabyte X79S-UP5 WiFi that we have reviewed today.

For the money, Gigabyte is also marketing the X79S-UP5 WiFi as a workstation board.  It uses the C606 server chipset rather than the X79 consumer chipset - this gives the system access to enterprise storage solutions (SAS ports) more chipset bandwidth to deal with increased IO, and access to Xeon processors with ECC support natively.  We get 14 ports for SATA devices, eight of which are also capable of dealing with SAS drives.  We tested the SAS ports with high-powered SATA drives and got a peak throughput of 2.38 GBps with a tweak of the BIOS settings.

Gigabyte is also using the X79S-UP5 WiFi to highlight their new Ultra Durable 5 methodology.  For the user this means an improved version of their power delivery by using International Rectifier PowIRstage IR3550 ICs, reported of being capable of up to 60A current and up to 60ºC cooler than traditional power delivery.  In reality, this means less phases needed on the board (cheaper) but also up to 20ºC cooler than Ultra Durable 4, resulting in higher overclocks if the power delivery was the limiting factor.  Though from what we have heard, these IR3550s do not come cheap, so for the time being they are on high-end boards only, rather than ITX boards where they could be very useful.

Elsewhere onboard we have dual NIC (one Intel, one Realtek), a Realtek ALC898 audio codec, a setup to allow three full length PCIe dual slot GPUs (or two and a pair of PCIe cards like the bundled WiFi card), 12 USB 2.0 ports, 6 USB 3.0 ports (from Via and Fresco controllers), five fan headers, TPM and some legacy in the IEEE 1394 and PS/2 connections.

In terms of performance, the X79S-UP5 WiFi benefits from the recent swathe of MultiCore Enhancement enabled boards from the Z77 chipset.  As that seems to becoming the standard, it was enabled on the X79S-UP5 WiFi and as a result it keeps pace with the ROG boards (which also have MCE) ahead of the other X79 products.  With a little push of the OC button at the back, we also go all the way up to 11 with 4.2 GHz at our disposal on an i7-3960X.

If I were to criticize the board, it would be on a few points to make.  Firstly, as an enthusiast / hobbyist builder / family solver of all things PC, I like a two-digit debug on board to help diagnose faults.  In addition, I am not too keen on a separate WiFi card - I would like space in order to maximize the airflow between the GPU slots, thus if WiFi was included we should aim for a mini-PCIe card or IO back panel solution like ECS.  Given the pricing between the non-WiFi and WiFi versions of the UD3H/UD5H, the card adds $30 to the box - without it at $300 could be a preferred SKU for many customers.  The BIOS needs some tweaking to enable the higher overclocks, NumLock, and sorting out the DPC issue.

Back when I published my ROG article, I listed the then current prices of the popular X79 boards of the time.  Here is the same list, with the ASRock X79 Extreme11 and Gigabyte X79S-UP5 added (note we have reviewed over half of these, awards are listed).

$600 - ASRock X79 Extreme11 - Bronze Award for innovation
$445 - EVGA X79 Classified
$430 - ASUS Rampage IV Extreme - Silver Award for innovation and performance
$390 - MSI Big Bang-XPower II - Bronze Award for features
$370 - ASRock X79 Champion
$370 - ASUS Rampage IV Formula
$350 - Gigabyte G1. Assassin2
$345 - ASRock X79 Extreme9
$330 - Gigabyte X79S-UP5
$320 - ASUS P9X79 Pro - Silver Award for innovation and performance during early X79
$310 - ECS X79R-AX Black Extreme - Bronze Award while on rebate
$290 - EVGA X79 SLI
$280 - ASUS Rampage IV Gene - Bronze Award for innovation for mATX
$265 - Intel DX79SI
$260 - ASUS P9X79
$260 - ASRock X79 Extreme7
$240 - Gigabyte X79-UD3
$235 - ASRock X79 Extreme4
$230 - Biostar TPower X79
$225 - ASRock X79 Extreme4-M

The Gigabyte X79S-UP5 fits right in the middle, and perhaps a non-WiFi SKU would look more favorable at the $300 price point.  The X79S-UP5 does not necessarily innovate from the chipset point of the view - we are simply swapping in a C606 chipset on what is normally an X79 board, thus opening up some SAS functionality.  We could argue that the ECS X79R-AX is a cheaper board to have SAS functionality, but it is guaranteed on the Gigabyte board, as opposed to 'Your Mileage May Vary' on the ECS.  What we do get however is use of the Ultra Durable 5 PowIRstage IR3550 ICs, which should help reduce power consumption.  However, this 'innovation' still costs a pretty penny to the consumer end. 

Workstation boards thrive on stability, functionality, and that extra bit of performance can help immensely with the extreme and heavy-duty workloads.  As a workstation product, this board would be a good recommendation.  Though given the BIOS and DPC issues, if audio is your thing then it might be worth waiting for a few more BIOS updates to ensure an element of rigidity in that context.  Gamers and normal users can still use this board to - it is set out well for a dual GPU setup, and with all the SATA ports there will never be any problems with storage.  Hit the OC button on the back and a mild CPU overclock should help any game you throw at it.   However if you are comfortable with the BIOS for some mild OC, do not need server features, or want better fan controls mixed with a good software package, then there are a few other boards that offer a cheaper alternative.

 

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  • James5mith - Friday, September 7, 2012 - link

    For what it's worth, I would personally be interested to see what 8x SAS SSD's would do vs. the 8x SATA SSD's.

    SAS is full duplex vs. SATA's half-duplex. As well, native SAS doesn't suffer the overhead of the tunneling protocol that allows SATA drives to run under a SAS controller.
  • soloburrito - Friday, September 7, 2012 - link

    why no mention of the ASUS x79 WS? It seems relevant to include in any comparison with this board.
  • loimlo - Sunday, September 9, 2012 - link

    Hi Ian
    At first, thanks for your hard work. It's a pleasure to read your article.

    Given the popularity of samrtphones/tablets, I think it is the right time to add USB charging into MB review. As almost every MB vendors have one or two USB Charging functions like USB charging during computer S5 sleep, over-current USB Charging for iPAD, it does make sense to test and include this function review.

    My suggestions are as follow:
    1. Normal USB Charging: 500mA for every samrtphones/tablets like iPhone, iPAD, Android devices. Very long charging time usually.
    2. USB charging during S5 for iPhone, iPAD, Android devices
    3. Vendor proprietary software to control over-current USB charging like 1.5A/2A for iPhone, iPAD, Android devices to shorten charging time.

    Given the 2012 Amazon Kindle tables ship without a charger, USB charging will be getting more and more popular among enthusiasts
  • drmrking - Monday, September 10, 2012 - link

    >>As stated with the ASRock X79 Extreme11 though, eight-way RAID-0 is an obscure usage scenario.

    No I totally disagree - 8 x 500gb SSD is going to be a pretty common usage for photographers - we need storage volume and speed. SSDs are very reliable (no moving parts) so its pretty productive to use Raid 0 as long as you back up changes regularly.

    Of course I can't get the full read potential (4gb/sec) out of that setup but the write performance is pretty well matched.

    Mike
  • IanCutress - Wednesday, September 12, 2012 - link

    Hi Mike,

    Thanks for letting us know that at least someone considers 8-way RAID-0. We all have our own narrow view of what constitutes normal usage, and it's always good to hear that one segment uses a particular feature to the maximum.

    Ian
  • ray1214 - Thursday, September 20, 2012 - link

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