![]() This is why we have seen several video outputs on the H67 lineup of motherboards and none on the P67. The H67 architecture motherboards will unfortunately have a locked memory multiplier, but will be able to take advantage of Intel’s integrated graphics on the Sandy Bridge CPUs, while the P67 won’t. ![]() The P67A-UD7 will also have unlocked memory multipliers, making it easier to keep the CPU and Memory in exact clock frequencies that the user wants when they are overclocking. This adds up to 1GB/s bidirectional bandwidth. A nice change on the P67 lineup of motherboards will allow the PCI-Express slots to operate at a stunning 5GT/s, providing up to 500MB/s of bandwidth in each direction. With USB 3.0 and 6Gbps SATA interfaces connected to PCI-Express x1 slots, devices connected to these interfaces will be limited to the 250MB/s speeds. It appears that GIGABYTE is continuing this trend on the entry level motherboards as well as the top of the line P67A-UD7, and staying with the features that have brought their products such acclaim.Ĭurrent Intel chipsets support PCI-Express 2.0 at a lower 2.5GT/s, which limits each direction of a lane to a maximum of 250MB/s. In the past, GIGABYTE has included features such as Ultra Durable 3, ON/OFF Charge and 333 Onboard Acceleration on their boards with great success. We are expecting the board to launch in 2011, early January. The GIGABYTE GA-P67A-UD7 will be GIGABYTE’s flagship motherboard, competing with ASUS’ Maximus IV Extreme and MSI’s P67A-GD65 till the release of the next generation LGA2011 socket motherboards. ![]() ![]() With the release of Sandy Bridge just around the corner, GIGABYTE sent us their latest motherboard, tailored for the LGA1155 Sandy Bridge platform. The beefed up X58 and P55 motherboards pushed our Core i3, i5 and i7 CPUs to unbelievable speeds. It feels as though it has been ages since we first looked at X58 socket LGA1366 and P55 socket LGA1156 motherboards. The P67A-UD7 will be the newest flagship motherboard from GIGABYTE, scheduled to be released early 2011 to go with Intel’s new Sandy Bridge architecture. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |