GigaByte GA-EP45-DS3R Intel P45 Motherboard
GigaByte GA-EP45-DS3R Intel P45 Motherboard PDF Print E-mail
Written by Jeff_Tom   
Wednesday, 17 September 2008 21:21
Article Index
GigaByte GA-EP45-DS3R Intel P45 Motherboard
Technical Specs
CoD4, CoH, World in Conflict, 3DMark
Power Consumption, Heat
Conclusion
All Pages

 

 

 

 






 

 

Intel released their X38 chipset last year and X48 chipset earlier in 2008 but both of these chipsets were very expensive and also did not see a die shrink from the 90nm manufacturing process. Luckily not long ago they've updated their mainstream chipset with a new one, the P45, a follow up to the P35, which as you'll see is quite a formidable chipset. Today we're taking a look at a board with this new chipset in Gigabyte's GA-EP45-DS3R motherboard.


The new Intel P45 chipset boasts a number of new features the first of which is the new 65nm manufacturing process. This not only should cut down on power requirements dramatically but also should put off much less heat and therefore be a great overclocker. This chipset fully supports 45nm Intel CPUs both quad and dual core.



PCI-Express 2.0 is fully supported allowing for bandwidth of 2.5 Gbit/s to 5 Gbit/s as two PCI-Express 2.0 16x lanes are featured on the motherboard supporting AMD/ATI's Crossfire technology. Gigabyte stacks on the features even more so with their well known DualBIOS feature allowing you to recover if you happen to have a bad flash or BIOS failure for whatever reason the board should bring it back with little to no hassle.

 

Other unique features include Green Ethernet which adjusts power consumption based on LAN cable lengths, dual LAN functionality which allows 2 single connections to work as one for twice the bandwidth, ultra secure TPM technology, hardware overvoltage control integrated circuits and more. Gigabyte includes quite a lot to go with the P45 chipset.

 

The external connectors on the board include a whopping 8 USB 2.0 ports, two Gigabit ports, S/PDIF output and analog 7.1 sound, both types of Firewire connectors PS/2 mouse and keyboard ports. On the board there are two PCI-Express 16x slots, 3 PCI-Express 1x slots, two PCI slots, six SATA connectors, one IDE connector, and a floppy disk connector. It might have been good to see E-SATA over one of the Firewire ports but still Gigabyte basically maxes out expansion potential.