Not a bad start from Gigabyte overall, barring a few glitches we found with current BIOS releases and a couple of very minor things in bundled software.  The first BIOS glitch is the AHCI SATA optical drive time-out - the work around for this is easy enough and a patched BIOS that sorts the problem should soon be available. The second issue relates to the problems that surfaced when changing to multipliers between 23x and 25x on an i7-875K Lynnfield; which results in the board POSTing at speeds other than what you’ve actually set – it should be a quick fix.  

Had these issues not have surfaced; we’d be conducting a silver or bronze award ceremony at this point. However, we’re still on a crusade to encourage vendors to perform a little more in-house testing before they release products to retail so we’re holding back. Out of the sixteen other boards we’ve reviewed this year, there was only one other we considered for an award (ASUS’s excellent M4A89GTD Pro), and we held back there too, because we had to suggest a BIOS fix. Consider what we’ve said here today a part-accolade for the H55N-USB3 - it missed out on an award by a whisker.

Other than those gripes, the H55N-USB3 is a smooth operator in every way.  All of our plug-in peripherals work and overclocking/stability with Clarkdale processors is also excellent.  The whole journey is made very easy by Gigabyte’s BIOS, needing very few changes to reach high bus speeds.  That alone makes the H55N-USB3 the board to go for if you’ve got any kind of Clarkdale overclocking or underclocking in mind – the boards we’ve tested from ECS, DFI, Intel and Zotac don’t have the same level of options, finesse or control.

Headroom for overclocking Lynnfield processors isn’t going to set the world on fire, but is bang on-par with DFI’s P55 MI-T36. Both boards have similar limits in power delivery, so it’s going to come down to subjective preferences; either Gigabyte’s BIOS (assuming the multiplier issues cited above are fixed), and slightly higher memory speed possibilities, or DFI’s component layout which leaves more room for processor cooling.

 

Looking at things in a more discerning manner, there are a few things we’d liked to have seen Gigabyte do to really elevate the H55N-USB3; a cleaner under-socket area for aftermarket coolers, onboard WiFi, and perhaps the addition of the Dolby up-scaling package that Gigabyte bundles with their micro-ATX motherboards - as they’re essentially the same price as the H55N-USB3.  The other reason we can think of that you might want to look past the H55N-USB3 is if you’re looking to run RAID – Intel’s DH57JG is the only out-of-box mini-ITX choice for socket 1156 at present.

Apart from that, when we focus on what each vendor is offering on their mini-ITX boards as a total package, we think there are far more reasons to choose the H55N-USB3 than to shirk it. On balance, this is the best mini-ITX board currently available for Clarkdale and certainly the one we’d go for – it’s a keeper.

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  • ReaM - Thursday, June 17, 2010 - link

    For Gods SAke do not overclock a mainboard that doesnt have MOSFET cooling. It will die after 20 minutes prime or lynx.

    Put a fat, bold DO NOT OVERCLOCK into overclock section.
  • Rajinder Gill - Thursday, June 17, 2010 - link

    Heat is NOT the absolute killer of mosfet's on motherboards- it's current. Most mosfets will handle junction temperatures of 150~170 Celsius before they suffer a breakdown. What boards need are properly implemented OCP which on the face of it this board has.

    Later
    Raja
  • play2learn - Thursday, June 17, 2010 - link

    Did anyone find any information about Sound through HDMI ?
  • Rajinder Gill - Thursday, June 17, 2010 - link

    Sound through HDMI works fine into my Sony TV. As part of the power consumption test I run 1080P video and I did not get any glitches.
  • just4U - Thursday, June 17, 2010 - link

    It's a pricey board.. I was thinking it would be under $70 not over a $100.
  • Faxfane - Friday, June 18, 2010 - link

    Under 'Gaming and 3D Performance', section: AutoCAD, there is this part: 'ECS holds and advantage'. 'And' should be 'an', something easily auto-corrected by the brain, but is still unbecoming of such a professional site. Otherwise, this was a very informative and pleasurable article.
  • shady28 - Saturday, June 19, 2010 - link


    Lets get real. The main problem with ITX is the confined cases with poor cooling and small power supplies. This review is done without a case on a test bench, a high power high hea GTX 275, and with a 950W full size power supply.

    What we really need to do know is what you can practically do with this ITX board. Some poor slob is going to run out and build an ITX box and high end GPU only to find his P/S keeps tripping or worse, something gets damaged and he's out a few hundred bucks.
  • Rajinder Gill - Sunday, June 20, 2010 - link

    The Lian Li case listed in this review (PCQ08B) can hold a full sized ATX PSU and a full length graphics card. The PSU is only going to trip if you decide to buy an under-powered one.

    Regards
    Raja
  • paihuaizhe - Sunday, June 20, 2010 - link

    (nike-alliance).(com)=>is a leading worldwide wholesaler company (or u can say

    organization)
  • staryoshi - Tuesday, June 29, 2010 - link

    I am currently using this board with an i7 860 and a Corsair H50. I simply clipped off the bulk of the retention bracket such that only the studs and their surrounding plastic remain. It does not contact any of the vulnerable ICs and I get my precious H50 performance. It fits beautifully in the Sugo 05.

    I am superbly satisfied overall, but I have run into a problem:

    I can't get any changes to memory timings (G.Skill ECO DDR3-1333 7-7-7-21) to stick. It tells me that their has been an overclocking failure and it defaults back to 9-9-9-24. It acknowledges the XMP profile but will not use the timings. Is there some setting I'm overlooking?

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