GIGABYTE B450 Aorus Pro &
GIGABYTE B450 Aorus Pro WIFI

Both the B450 Aorus Pro and B450 Aorus Pro WIFI models feature near identical PCBs and featuresets, with the main differences being that the WIFI model has an integrated Intel dual-band 802.11ac Wi-Fi module. This also gives the B450 Aorus Pro WIFI the added benefits of Bluetooth 4.2 support.

The B450 Aorus Pro WIFI sits as the premium board from GIGABYTE’s B450 Aorus gaming line-up. The PCB has a black base color with the Aorus falcon in grey towards the PCIe section of the board. Due to GIGABYTE RGB Fusion and implemented RGB LEDs within the power delivery and chipset heatsinks, users have the option to customize the look of their system depending on how they feel; this is also supplemented by additional room for expansion due to an included RGBW LED strip header. Both the power delivery and chipset heatsinks have a metallic grey finish with orange accents which falls in lines with the Aorus branding regime.

Focusing on the PCIe real estate on offer across both models, the Aorus Pro/Pro WIFI feature a full-length PCIe 3.0 x16 slot with a reinforced metal coating to protect the slot from physical damage associated with heavy graphics cards, especially during transit. A further full-length PCIe 2.0 x4 slot sits below which shares bandwidth across both of the PCIe 2.0 full-length slots. This will operate at PCIe 2.0 x2 when either of the PCIe x1 slots is populated, with bottom full-length slot operating at PCIe 2.0 x1. Due to the PCIe configuration on offer, both AMD Quad-GPU CrossFire and dual CrossFire multi graphics cards configurations are supported; NVIDIA SLI multi-card setup aren’t supported on any of GIGABYTE’s B450 motherboard range.

The memory capabilities of both GIGABYTE B450 Aorus Pro and Pro WIFI models include support for DDR4-3200 memory with a total of 64 GB of memory supported across a total of four slots. There is support for both ECC Un-buffered and non-ECC Un-buffered memory with modules supporting XMP memory profiles also being catered for. Both models also feature DualBIOS via two installed 128 Mbit flash chips.

Both models have six SATA ports on offer with the SATA being split into two sections; four right-angled and two straight angled connectors, the latter being located more towards the single 24pin ATX power input for delivering power to the motherboard. The SATA ports across both boards have support for RAID 0, 1 and 10 arrays. In addition to the SATA ports, both the B450 Aorus Pro and Aorus Pro WIFI has a pairing of M.2 slots, with most northernly slot featuring support for PCIe 3.0 x4, and the bottom slot having support for up to PCIe 3.0 x2. In terms of sizing, the top slot has support for drives up to a size of M.2 22110 (22 x 110 mm) and the bottom slot up to M.2 2280 (22 x 80 mm); both slots have support for both PCIe and SATA M.2 SSDs. Both M.2 slots are supplemented with a pair of M.2 thermal guards designed to help dissipate heat from those hot running M.2 SSDs.

A total of five 4-pin fan headers are located around the PCB with one being dedicated for the CPU fan, one dedicated to a water cooling CPU fan, two being devoted as system fan headers and the last being committed to either a system fan or a water cooling pump. In addition to the single RGBW LED strip header, a secondary strip designed for the CPU cooler LED also doubles up as a regular RGB LED strip header giving even more design combinations thanks to the multi-zoned RGB already implemented across both boards. A single 24-pin ATX power input is present to power the motherboard and chipset, with an 8-pin ATX 12 V input dedicated to supplying power to the CPU.

Touching on the power delivery, both models from quick glance look to feature the same hybrid digital VRM as the microATX B450 Aorus M motherboard and keep the configuration consistent across the majority of the mid-range from GIGABYTE. Both B450 Aorus Pro and the Aorus Pro WIFI share the same power delivery heatsink which has a grey metallic finish, with orange accents. 

Another prevalent section of both boards is the audio section of the PCB. Both boards consist of a single Realtek ALC1220-VB audio codec, with seven Nichicon Chemicon audio capacitors and four Hi-Fi grade WIMI FKP2 audio capacitors. There is also an element of PCB separation present which is signified by an LED track along the edge of the audio area.


B450 Aorus Pro WIFI rear panel at the top, B450 Aorus Pro at the bottom.

On the rear panels of both boards, the only difference between the B450 Aorus Pro and Aorus Pro WIFI is the WIFI model has adapters present to install the Intel dual-band 802.11ac WiFi, which also includes Bluetooth 4.2 connectivity. The USB connectivity consists of four USB 3.1 5Gbps ports, with two USB 3.1 10 Gbps ports consisting of both a Type-A and a Type-C port; the USB 3.1 10 Gbps ports can be distinguished easily as the ports are colored red. Also included is a single LAN port controlled by an Intel I211-AT Gigabit networking chip, with six 3.5mm audio jacks and a single S/PDIF optical output being driven by the newer Realtek ALC1220-VB audio codec. Finishing off the rear panel on both these B450 Aorus Pro motherboards is a pairing of video outputs; a single HDMI and DVI-D output.

It’s apparent that both these boards are targeted at gamers looking for more premium features from a motherboard such as quality onboard audio and Gigabit networking capabilities but without breaking into the realms of high-end pricing. The B450 Aorus Pro WIFI going one step further and offering 802.11ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.2 connectivity on top for a stonking price of $119.99. The price for the non-WIFI version of the B450 Aorus Pro hasn't been revealed as of yet, but is expected to be $10-$15 cheaper.

GIGABYTE B450 Aorus M and B450 Aorus Elite GIGABYTE B450M DS3H
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  • bi0logic - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    It looks like the price link to the "TUF B450-Plus Gaming" is going to an amazon search for "ASRock B450M Pro4"
  • eastcoast_pete - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    Thanks Gavin, I know this is a lot of information to go through and present. I would love to see a follow-up on these questions:
    1. Especially for these compact boards, any problems with stock processor heat sinks blocking DIMM slots, i.e. do DIMMs with heat spreaders still fit with a Wraith or Spire cooler, respectively?
    2. I have my eye on the Aorus Pro WiFi or something similar, but am wary of the placement of the WiFi antenna connectors right next to two of the USB 3 connectors. I frequently use 3-4 USB 3 devices at the same time frequently, and am wary of the USB 3 - WiFi interference with that placement. Any chance Gigabyte could state if/that they got that taken care of?

    Thanks!
    Also, still looking forward to your Ryzen 2200/2400 GPU overclock chapter on that duo. Any chance we'll see it soon?
  • sonofgodfrey - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    Second to last table is labeled X470 Motherboards.
  • PingSpike - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    It looks like the ASUS ROG STRIX B450-F GAMING inherits some of the layout features of the (much more expensive) x470 Crosshair 7 in that it steals some of the CPU lanes to get a second full PCI-e 3.0 M.2 slot. Then 8x goes to PCI-e 16 1, the remaining 4x to PCI-e 16 2 and finally a chipset PCI-e 2.0

    On the surface, this seems like it has totally ignored the bifrucation limitations that supposedly are inherent to the B450 chipset.

    In other words, I thought you couldn't get that on this chipset.
  • Dragonstongue - Tuesday, July 31, 2018 - link

    well at least the pricing is "more inline" with the pricing they should be, newer boards, better componentes that actually save the maker a bit of coin per board made, so they keep the same "launch price" is acceptable in my books coming from gen 1 (I so hate the naming AMD used for Ryzen 1xxx and 2xxx needless confusion for nothing)

    x3xx to x4xx same concept, reduced price to produce so they save some money, but the vast majority of vendors used these "savings" to cram more disco light show RGB on the boards to jack the price up some instead.

    seems at least with the B4xx boards the vendors took a "better" approach beyond a few more "premium" boards which rightfully have an increased price (justifiable, maybe, but I myself have zero need of RGB and would only buy a more expensive board that offered them at the increased price if they were WORTH it as far as just overall better then lower cost boards, sadly, there seems to be little difference in more "premium" beyond a butt load of extra RGB little better in VRM etc which are much more useful and required IMO)

    they could almost have a market for the premium boards RGB free, so pay a bit less for people like me who do not want all the RGB crud but still get the increased premium sound/VRM/BIOS etc ^.^
  • WasHopingForAnHonestReview - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    Nice review. Good work.

    Im amazed that almost every comment is a nitpick. Rough life, Ian.
  • Flappergast - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    Nice overview on the last page. I’m looking for mITX WiFi - nice to see some good boards
  • Sakkura - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    As documented by Buildzoid, the Asrock B450 Pro4 does not have the claimed 6+3-phase VRM. It is a pure 3+3-phase. Same probably applies for the B450M Pro4.

    https://youtu.be/yWAwOH-egFs?t=2104
  • JohanPirlouit - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    Hi everyone,

    Am I the only one to see that on the AMD picture:
    - CPU: 2x SATA 3Gbps
    - Chipset: 6x SATA 3Gbps

    What do AMD talks about: SATA "3" (known as "6Gbps") or SATA 3Gbps (aka SATA II)?
  • Sakkura - Wednesday, August 1, 2018 - link

    They mean SATA3 = SATA 6Gbps. Annoying that we keep running into these easily confused naming schemes (see also: USB 3.1 Gen1 and Gen2). At least SATA is getting old enough that we should soon be able to just drop the version number (unlike USB 2.0 there's really no reason to make modern hardware with SATA2).

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