Gigabyte Z87

While Gigabyte has not released anything officially, we have had a variety of leaks from press events, IDF Beijing, and on the official Facebook pages from the main Gigabyte page as well as their Tech Column and UK pages, showing off static images of motherboards in the office.  We can determine the following models will be on offer, amongst others:

Gigabyte B85-HD3
Gigabyte Z87-D3HP
Gigabyte Z87X-D3H
Gigabyte Z87X-UD4H
Gigabyte Z87X-UD5H
Gigabyte G1.Sniper 5
Gigabyte G1.Sniper M5 (mATX)
Gigabyte Z87X-OC Force
Gigabyte Z87X-OC
Gigabyte Z87N-WiFi (mITX)

Gigabyte B85-HD3

Our recent review of the Z77-HD4, and requests for some of the cheaper models to be reviewed, means that motherboards like the B85-HD3 are definitely on our radar for future reviewing.  This was snapped up at Beijing IDF:

Much like the HD4 we had in, the motherboard is not SLI certified but will support two GPUs in Crossfire – though as we discovered if that second card is at x4 it might not perform to its full capability.  The HD3 shown does not have VRM heatsinks on board, so is probably a final revision sample until some of the heatsink get worked out.  There is also a shot of the B85 silicon on show, with lines marking out the chipset heatsink area.

Gigabyte Z87-D3HP

Onto the full Z87 models now, and the D3HP is still lower down the range (the important number being ‘3’), but I would assume the H stands for HDMI, and P might be for Performance.  From the board shot we can tell that this motherboard comes in an x16/x4 configuration, but does have an Intel LAN:

Like the –C and –A from ASUS, we get PCI slots and the SATA connectors on the D3HP are at right angles to the motherboard as they are unlikely to get big PCIe cards in the way.  Gigabyte still sticks with their DualBIOS at this end of the spectrum, and it is worth noting that the two USB 3.0 headers on board might suggest that the in-the-box package comes with a front USB 3.0 panel.  Although slightly blurry, the audio chip is definitely a Realtek ALC88x, probably the 889.

Gigabyte Z87X-D3H

The X series of motherboards is where Gigabyte starts to organize PCIe lanes to benefit multi-GPU users, and as such the D3H is x8/x8 on the SLI front.  It seems that we also get a PCIe 2.0 x4 at the bottom, and a PCI slot.  Intel NICs seem to be a prominent feature up and down the Z87 range from Gigabyte, which is always a plus.

At this level we do not see any extra SATA 6 Gbps or USB 3.0 ports, either from IO organization or controllers.  As before this looks like a preview board, hence the lack of VRM heatsinks.

Gigabyte Z87X-UD4H

The board that gets the most visual makeover from Gigabyte is the UD4H, which sits in the middle of the range.  We have not got shots of the UD3H, but the UD4H comes in with a red styling, a good sized heatsink, Intel NIC, extra SATA 6 Gbps ports and what looks like an x8/x4/x4 PCIe setup.

On the top right we have our trio of power/reset/CMOS switches, alongside a pair of DIP switches.  These DIP switches help users by changing how the system sees the DualBIOS – whether it sees one or two BIOSes, and which BIOS is being used.  Further down the board we have a two-digit debug and a SATA power input for extra VGA power.  Audio is rated at 110 dB SNR, which suggests a Realtek ALC89x audio chip.

Gigabyte Z87X-UD5H

One of the favorite boards we tested in the Z77 range was the UD5H, sitting pretty at $180, and it stands to reason that Gigabyte are wanting to do something similar with the UD5H.  Our image is a blurry IDF shot, but nonetheless tells us of some of the feature set.

We are still rocking the PCI, along with ten SATA 6 Gbps ports (4 from controllers).  While it is obvious from this shot the heatsinks are not final, there seems to be a substantial power delivery system in place and a full rear IO.  I would expect to see a UD5H WiFi version on sale as well, also a UP5 soon after release with fewer IR3550s.

Gigabyte G1.Sniper 5

Sitting at the top of the gaming range for Gigabyte will be the G1.Sniper 5.  This is the UD5H on steroids:

The VRM heatsink, with additional small fan, extends around the VRMs into the middle of the board (covering a PLX 8747) and onward onto the chipset.  The PLX chip on board means that the layout will be x16/x16 to x8/x8/x8/x8 depending on the number of PCIe devices in use.  We also get ten SATA 6 Gbps ports and Sound Core 3D audio, and I also notice two USB 3.0 headers on board which means that there are some controllers for USB 3.0 on the rear IO. I also spy six fan headers. 

The audio solution on the G1.Sniper 5 is also a little different – a slide deck from Gigabyte has been released online which features a new OPAMP for audio enthusiasts:

With the motherboard comes two ICs (OPA2134 installed, LM4562NA in the package) and an upgrade kit with an additional three will be available for purchase in selected markets.

Sources: HardwareHeaven, TweakTown, KitGuru

Gigabyte G1.Sniper M5

Continuing on from the G1.Sniper M3, the M5 takes some of the Sniper 5’s features such as the OpAmp and puts it into the micro-ATX form factor.

Like the M3, we get the x16/x4/x8 PCIe configuration to allow for two triple slot cards, as well as our six SATA ports and USB 3.0 ports.  Interestingly enough the socket area looks relatively clear apart from a couple of caps, which may make it nice for overclockers to insulate.  I also like the single sided latches here.

Gigabyte Z87X-OC

Instead of retaining the UP7 name from Z77, it seems that Gigabyte want to resurrect the OC moniker for a pair of orange overclocking motherboards.  First up is the Z87X-OC.

Even though all we have is this oblique camera shot, it is clear that Gigabyte is catering to the prosumer overclocker, especially when we compare this to the OC Force below.  Nonetheless we have a vast array of OC Touch buttons next to the DIMMs, as well as DIP switches and voltage read points.  Next to the SATA ports are two USB ports, ideal for overclockers that want to remove their screenshots without having to fiddle with the back panel (also for mice/keyboards).  The PCIe layout is also a little different – notice how we do not have a PLX 8747 chip, but there is still slots for 4-way GPUs.  This must mean that Gigabyte is applying a PCIe 3.0 x8/x4/x4 + PCIe 2.0 x4 arrangement, with the final x4 from the chipset.  This means the board will go up to 4-way Crossfire, but only 2-way SLI (you need at least an x8 for SLI) – but scaling on that final x4 might be a bit of a stretch for all but compute that does not need the bandwidth.

Gigabyte Z87X-OC Force

The OC Force will be the UP7 equivalent for Haswell.  We get that PLX 8747 chip for x8/x8/x8/x8 on the PCIe, along with what looks like a bypass lane to run x16 on a single card without the PLX.  A trend in motherboard manufacturers is to now have a VRM heatsink with an integrated water cooling pipe, and now Gigabyte have this model:

Chipset fans are a feature of the model, but I would assume they can be adjusted in the software.  Like the OC, we get OC Touch buttons along the side, but instead of USB ports we have 10 SATA ports, and at least 10 total USB 3.0 ports.  On the rear IO it looks like dual HDMI with DP, as well as dual NIC.

Gigabyte Z87N-WiFi

Everyone likes a good mITX board, and Gigabyte are creating a new version of the Z77N-WiFi (we reviewed the H77 model last September).  On the face of it we have a pretty middling mini-ITX board, with a clear spot for a WiFi card, and four SATA 6 Gbps.  The memory is right up against the edge, meaning the 4-pin CPU connector is in the middle of the board, causing cables to reach over components.

Gigabyte BIOS

There have been some leaked shots of the Gigabyte BIOS, which looks like a big update from the ‘3D BIOS’ of old:

Zooming out we can see this is BIOS F3B for the Z87X-OC Force, as well as a few voltages.  But this seems great – we have all the information regarding the motherboard in the front screen all the time.  I have been going on and on about this since the start of UEFI, and I am glad this is part of the evolution!

Gigabyte Software

A few images have also come through regarding the new version of EasyTune:

In the past I have been critical of the way that Gigabyte handles the fan controls in ET6, but this new version looks good, with a few more automatic overclock options as well.

Gallery: Gigabyte Z87

ASUS Z87 ASRock Z87
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  • vailr - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    What about DDR4? Will Intel offer a revised chipset (Z88?) for DDR4 + Haswell CPU's later this year?
  • sticks435 - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    No, DDR4 will most likely debut on the new Enthusiast boards (X79 or X89 or X99). It will be either 2014 or 15 before we see it on mainstream boards.
  • Death666Angel - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Haswell doesn't seem to support DDR4. The memory support is based on the CPU since a few generations back, not the motherboard/chipset anymore. Haswell-E might support DDR4 by the looks of it.
  • Sm0kes - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Really interested to see if Thunderbolt can make any meaningful advances..... if not this year, i suspect this will be dead technology. Was really looking forward to seeing eGPU's become a reality.
  • xTRICKYxx - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Thunderbolt only has a PCI x4 access so a AMD Radeon HD 6670 is going to fully saturate it....

    I want to believe Intel will fix this so eGPU's can succeed!
  • Jaybus - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    Haswell uses the same x4 configuration, but with PCIe 3.0 and a bandwidth of 20 Gbps. Since that matches the current max Thunderbolt spec, why would they use more than 4 lanes? There simply isn't a lot of headroom for going > 20 Gbps over copper without limiting the cable length to only a few cm..They are working on silicon photonics to integrate a chip level optical interconnect to make optical Thunderbolt cheap enough, but until then there just isn't much need for more than 4 PCIe 3.0 lanes.
  • bobbozzo - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    on P1, "Within that is the cost for the chipset (a not-significant cost)"

    Do you mean not-INsignificant?

    thanks for the article!
  • Death666Angel - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Well, any of the mATX motherboards look good. My preferred brand is Gigabyte for the good value and performance. Asus usually when I have the money laying around and want a feature or two they offer. AsRock is also good if they are competitive with Gigabyte by being cheaper or offering more for the same money. The other manufacturers I have little experience or dodgy experience with. :D
    I would like a mATX with good overclocking, Intel NICs, decent onboard sound, 8 SATA connectors and maybe mSATA. I don't need wifi, more than 8 SATA, more than 2 USB 3.0, LCDs, reset/power buttons onboard, SLI/CF support or anything fancy like that.
  • Egg - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    Am I misinterpreting something, or do post of the lower end boards include PCI? I thought some of them would drop it, as people with the expansion cards that need it often will look for better boards, and it now needs an extra controller.
  • meacupla - Wednesday, May 22, 2013 - link

    They fill in the gap between the business (B series) and enthusiast (Z series) chipset.

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