Apart from Intel's own 975XBX, the Gigabyte GA-965P-DQ6 motherboard is the
only board we’ve seen that supports the new
Core 2 Duo
and Core 2 Extreme processors.
Although based around Intel’s mainstream
965P/ICH8R
chipset combination, the GA-965P-DQ6 is the new flagship board of the 965 model
line, with enough added features to allow it to claim its high-end status.
It supports 1,066/800/533MHz FSB (front side bus) Intel processors and the
four Dimm slots provide memory support for up to 8GB of 800/677/533MHz DDR2
memory.
Like a number of high-end boards that have passed through the PCW labs
lately, the GA-965P-DQ6 uses a passive heat-pipe system to keep both the
chipsets and the MOSFETs (metal-oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor)
cool.
Heat dispensation is further aided by the heat sink situated under the board,
which
Gigabyte
has decided to call Crazy Cool. Add to this the 12-phase power design and
solid capacitors (an industry first) and you can see that the board has been
designed to cope with the heavy power loads that result from extreme
overclocking.
Continuing on the overclocking theme, Gigabyte has provided a wealth of
tweaks in the Bios for adjusting FSB and PCI speeds, as well as voltage settings
for the CPU, memory, PCI Express, MCH (memory controller hub) and FSB.
Design-wise, the board is well laid out. However, the battery and Cmos reset
jumper are tucked away at the back of the board between part of the heat-pipe
cooling system and the back I/O panel. As a result, they can be fiddly to get at
once the board is installed in a case.
Expansion opportunities are available using the four free PCI Express slots
x16 (two x16, two x1) but, frankly, these are a waste of space. It would have
been a better use of board real estate to increase the number of normal PCI
slots from the meagre two provided.
Although there are two x16 PCI Express slots, this is no Crossfire board.
This is due to the lack of support for multi GPUs on the Intel 965P. You can,
however, use two graphics cards to give a quad-monitor setup.
Eight Serial ATA 3Gbit/sec ports give plenty of opportunity to set up Raid
arrays using the ICH8R Southbridge, and there’s even a backplate with four eSata
(external Serial ATA) ports.
Although it is expensive, this Gigabyte motherboard is loaded with features
that will appeal to overclockers and, of course, supports Intel's brand new Core
2 Duo and Core 2 Extreme processors.
Related
reviews
:
Core 2 Duo/Extreme
processor review - We take a closer look at these blazingly fast processors
Hi-Grade
Ultis Core 2 Extreme PC review - Hi-Grade puts the Core 2 Extreme processor
to good use in this ultra-fast PC
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