Basic Features: Gigabyte GA-8N SLI Quad Royal

 Specification  Gigabyte GA-8N SLI Quad Royal
CPU Interface LGA775-based Pentium 4, Pentium XE, Celeron D, and Pentium D processors
Chipset North bridge- NVIDIA nForce 4 SLI Intel Edition (Crush C19)
South bridge- NVIDIA nForce 4 SLI Edition (Athlon CK804)
Pentium D Support (Dual-Core) Full Support
Front Side Bus 1066 / 800 / 533 MHz
Front Side Bus Speeds 400-2000 MHz (in 1 MHz increments)
PCI Express x16 Slot Assignments 1-16-16-1, 0-16-8-8, 8-8-16-0, 8-8-8-8
Memory Speeds Auto- 400-1200 MHz (in 1 MHz increments)
System Clock Mode Optimal, Linked, Expert
PCI Express 90 MHz to 99 MHz in 1MHz increments; 100 MHz to 148.4357 MHz in 1.5625 MHz increments
Dynamic Overclocking C.I.A.2, (5) unique settings, dynamic increase from 5 to 19%
Core Voltage Normal, .8375V-1.80V in 0.0125V increments
DRAM Voltage Normal, +.10V to +.55V in 0.05V increments
Other Voltage North Bridge - Normal, +0.05V to +.035V in .05V steps
South Bridge - Normal, +0.05V to +.035V in .05V steps
FSB - Normal, +0.025V to +.175V in .025V steps
LDT (Hyper Transport) Ratios 1x, 2x, 3x, 4x, 5x, 3.5x
Memory Command Rate Auto, 1T, 2T
Memory Slots Four 240-pin DDR2 Slots
Dual-Channel Unbuffered Memory to 4GB
Expansion Slots (4) x16 PCIe Slots
(2) x1 PCIe Slots
(1) PCI Slot
SLI (2) x16 Fully Supported
Onboard SATA (4)-Drive SATA 2 by nForce 4
Onboard IDE (2) ATA 133/100/66 ports, (4) drive support by nForce 4
SATA/IDE RAID (4)-Drive SATA 2 RAID by nForce 4 plus
(4)-Drive IDE RAID, (8) drive support
Can be combined in RAID 0, 1, 0+1, (8 drives total)
Onboard USB 2.0/IEEE-1394 (10) USB 2.0 ports supported by NVIDIA nForce 4
(3) 1394 FireWire ports supported by TI TSB43AB23
Onboard LAN Dual Gigabit Ethernet
PCIe Gigabit LAN Support
Marvell 88E1111, Agere ET1310
Onboard Audio AC-97 8-channel audio, Realtek ALC850 codec
(1) Coaxial S/PDIF output port and (1) S/PDIF input
Power Connectors ATX 24-pin, 1 or 2 x 4-pin 12V
Other Features Gigabyte EasyTune 5 software real time detection and adjustment of various hardware settings
BIOS AWARD D6

The Gigabyte 8N SLI Quad Royal is a member of the Royal product family and, as such, is a fully featured flagship board targeted for the PC gamer, enthusiast, or general office workstation user. The board will ship with an extensive accessory package along with several features such as C.I.A. 2 (CPU Intelligent Accelerator 2), M.I.B. 2 (Memory Intelligent Booster 2), EasyTune 5, and several board enhancements including upgraded components such as capacitors and power transistors.

The BIOS options are extensive on the 8N SLI Quad, with memory voltage to 2.4V, and a full range of chipset, bus, and vCore voltage adjustments. Memory ratios are handled like other nForce4 SLI Intel Edition boards in that the number of memory dividers is so numerous that you can simply enter a target memory clock and the BIOS will select the appropriate memory divider to produce a setting as near as possible to the requested value. The board fully supports manual memory timing adjustments or allows for an Optimal setting that will set the memory to the SPD settings. This Optimal setting will adjust the memory timing settings automatically when the system is overclocked. You have the ability to set the system clock mode to Optimal (sync the fsb and memory to their rated standard), Linked (sync the fsb and memory proportionally as you increase the front side bus), or Expert (allows independent adjustment of the fsb and memory).

The new revision of the nForce4 SLI Intel Edition Chipset fully supports all dual core Pentium D processors. We confirmed that the board worked properly at stock and over clocked settings with an Intel 820 and 840 processor, and there were no problems with the board recognizing the two cores and four logical processors that are created with the Hyperthreading feature on the 840 EE processor.

Index Gigabyte 8N SLI Quad Royal: Features
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  • PrinceGaz - Friday, October 14, 2005 - link

    Great to hear you are expanding the variety of games tested.

    As for onboard audio, I did originally use the onboard Realtek ALC850 audio on my DFI LanParty nF4 SLI-DR, with the official codec from the Realtek site (at first version A375, then A376a when I noticed the problem, but it made no difference), but found that it has a rather annoying bug.

    In some games, certain sounds that I know for a fact should be played are totally missing. All the other sounds are there, but the odd one is just not played. The most obvious example was in 'Serious Sam: The Second Encounter' (not the new Serious Sam 2 as I haven't played that), where it did not play the quiet intro music for the few seconds when first loading the game, nor did it play the chainsaw sound that follows. Another game I play enough to know when something is wrong is 'Train Simulator', where on one particular route I like, the "Okay to proceed" sound that is played when you can leave each station was never being played, which was rather problematic to say the least. There could well be other sounds missing as well, but only those two were sufficiently obvious to be immediately noticed. I tried using "dxdiag" to reduce Sound Acceleration Level, but it made no difference unless reduced all the way to None (when the missing sounds were then played) but that causes more problems than it fixes.

    The C-Media CMI8738 onboard sound on my older box never had any problems with missing sounds, so I was very disappointed with the ALC850, especially as it seems almost industry standard on AMD nForce4 boards. As a result I bought an Audigy 2ZS, which works perfectly and plays all sounds, but it seems a shame that the onboard sound for me is basically useless for gaming.
  • Gary Key - Wednesday, October 19, 2005 - link

    I agree with you in regards to the static and drop out issues with the ALC850. I had nothing but issues with the a376a driver set in Call of Duty and the retail release of Fear last night. Also, the general sound effects were thin and lacking any bass in most scenes. Music was not acceptable with the general sound coming across like a cat on a hot tin roof. ;-> If I have time on the next review I will also be posting X-FI results as our high end consumer card for the test bed benchmarks now. The Intel manufactured boards with the Sigma-Tel 922x series codecs have the best overall sound of the host based audio solutions at this point. Expect to see these results and further testing of the ALC882m in the near future.
  • Calin - Thursday, October 13, 2005 - link

    As you don't have driver support for SLI on 4 cards, and probably for your 3rd and 4th video card some PCIE 1x, 2x or 4x performance would be enough, it would be a waste of money. Go buy any other SLI board.
    However, multi monitor support is usually needed by some programs that work faster on Intel processors, and buying the cheapest dual core from Intel would work faster than on any processor at that price AMD has to offer.
  • trooper11 - Thursday, October 13, 2005 - link

    its all about return on your investment

    yes the bottom of the berrel intel dual core is cheaper, but just move to the mid range where it squares up againts the X2 3800 and X2 4400 and then it swings in amd's favor.
  • TheInvincibleMustard - Wednesday, October 12, 2005 - link

    Couple o'things:

    1) Awesome to see BF2 as a benchmark (thanks Jarred!)

    2) How nicely would a setup such as this play with Intel's new virtualization technology? Would a solution that allows multiple graphics cards like this (not necessarily this exact board) be a better approach to allowing multiple users to each have their own KVM? I'm envisioning something akin to the "dumb-terminals" of yesteryear, with a family having multiple monitors, keyboards, and mice all hooked up to 1 pc in the house.

    3) On pg2 there's a pic of the BIOS showing the settings for the PCIe lanes. Is there some specific difference between the 0-3D1-16-1 and the 0-3D1-3D1-1 setup? Or are both utilizing 16 lanes for each of the 3D1's and it's just logic on the motherboard to differentiate so it accepts the correct card?

    4) Also regarding the PCIe lanes, I see there's no 0-16-16-1 or equivalent. Is this intentional on the part of Gigabyte? Will a BIOS upgrade allow for this? The reason I'm asking is because I'm curious if there would be a difference in terms of SLI speeds w.r.t. 8-8 vs 16-16, as has been somewhat hinted at in the "SLI x16" snippets I've heard thus far, and this would seem to be the perfect motherboard to test for that.

    5) Any speculation on why the Doom3 scores show such a spread while others don't show as much of one?

    6) When are they gonna be available for purchase? :D

    Thanks guys for a very neat preview of an interesting upcoming product!

    -TIM
  • Gary Key - Thursday, October 13, 2005 - link

    Part Two,

    Tim-

    quote:

    3) On pg2 there's a pic of the BIOS showing the settings for the PCIe lanes. Is there some specific difference between the 0-3D1-16-1 and the 0-3D1-3D1-1 setup? Or are both utilizing 16 lanes for each of the 3D1's and it's just logic on the motherboard to differentiate so it accepts the correct card?


    No,
    The difference between the two setups is that the third PEG slot can utlizie another card other than the 3D1 in a x16 configuration if you use the 0-3D1-16-1. In fact, due to the space limitations caused by the rear heatsink on the 3D1 rev1 cards we used both a 6600Gt and 7800GTX in this slot. The board does require the separate paddle card for the 3D1 card in order to utilize both cards correctly (100%) in my testing. The bios does allow this change but the paddle is the preferred method at least in the pre-production bios. I typically set the bios to auto and utilized the paddle card although both methods were tested to ensure it was possible. I tried the two center slots (easier to type this way) in SLI with the two outer slots in standard mode. I could not get the two center slots to work properly in SLI mode but this was due to the drivers and not the board.

    quote:

    4) Also regarding the PCIe lanes, I see there's no 0-16-16-1 or equivalent. Is this intentional on the part of Gigabyte? Will a BIOS upgrade allow for this? The reason I'm asking is because I'm curious if there would be a difference in terms of SLI speeds w.r.t. 8-8 vs 16-16, as has been somewhat hinted at in the "SLI x16" snippets I've heard thus far, and this would seem to be the perfect motherboard to test for that.


    I have a new bios coming from Gigabyte that hopefully will allow additional changes to the PCIe lanes in manual mode with the paddle card set for SLIx16. Under the auto mode the system will default to a 1-16-16-1 setting with the paddle card set to SLI. I did test in this mode but due to the inability of the 840EE to feed enough data to the two 7800GTX cards the benchmarks did not reflect any difference. I am also testing another "SLI x16" board but have the same issue with the GPU wait states.

    quote:

    5) Any speculation on why the Doom3 scores show such a spread while others don't show as much of one?


    The benchmarks jumped from the D5 to D6 bios used for all results. I re-tested the other boards with their lastest shipping bios and the Gigabyte 8I-955x Royal jumped almost 20%. I am still testing with different GTX cards (it's expensive to buy 6 of these) and driver sets. I cannot match the Abit scores yet and we are still comparing notes.

    quote:

    6) When are they gonna be available for purchase? :D


    I had included this in my article but decided to pull the information as I did not want to jinx Gigabyte or have an ATI situation. The best information I can provide at this time is December. The board is in certification testing at this time and provided there are not any issues it should be out before January unless market conditions dictate otherwise. I will update the article or post a news blurb once the board enters production. We tested the revision 1.0 board and have worked extensively with Gigabyte on some bios enhancements. The current bios is at D9 and I am expecting a new spin next week. I know it is too late to change the sound solution but we are still pushing for the 1394b setup.

    I spent more than 110 hours of testing time on this board. I can honestly say without a doubt that it is ready for production.

    Thanks,
    Gary
  • TheInvincibleMustard - Friday, October 14, 2005 - link

    Awesome replies! Better late than never!

    Thanks!

    -TIM
  • Gary Key - Thursday, October 13, 2005 - link

    All,

    I apologize for not responding sooner as some serious family issues arose the past couple of days. I want to thank Wes for handling my responsibilities.

    Tim,
    quote:

    1) Awesome to see BF2 as a benchmark (thanks Jarred!)


    Jarred worked all night right before the article was published so we could include this benchmark. I wish I could have had more time with it in the overclocking and sound section but that will come in future articles.

    quote:

    2) How nicely would a setup such as this play with Intel's new virtualization technology? Would a solution that allows multiple graphics cards like this (not necessarily this exact board) be a better approach to allowing multiple users to each have their own KVM? I'm envisioning something akin to the "dumb-terminals" of yesteryear, with a family having multiple monitors, keyboards, and mice all hooked up to 1 pc in the house.


    You are certainly on the right track with this thought process. All I can say at this time is wait until next year. ;->

  • DrMrLordX - Wednesday, October 12, 2005 - link

    . . . is this paragraph:

    It is this quick thought process along with quick action that has allowed Gigabyte to introduce several innovative products over the past year that include everything from the GA-8I945P dual graphics capable motherboard to the impressive single slot SLI based GV-3D1-68GT video card. While the true commercial success of these currently niche products are open for debate, the desire of the company to introduce these types of products is not.

    Huh? Since when was their stupid single-slot SLI card innovative? They just crammed the logic from two 6600GTs onto one card, and the result was overpriced crap. No comment about the GA-8I945P, but it all sounds like Gigabyte corporate spew to me.
  • Wesley Fink - Wednesday, October 12, 2005 - link

    Please look at your quote closely. We are talking about the 3D1-68GT, which combines two 6800 GT GPUs on a single card and NOT the earlier 6600 version. Please check the benchmarks before you trash the description as innovative. On p. 6 the 3D1-68GT outperforms the 7800GTX in both 3DMark03 and 3DMark05. That's pretty decent performance from a single slot card based on dual 6800GT (not Ultra) GPUs. The 7800GTX is still likely the better buy, but the 68GT is still an interesting idea with excellent performance.

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