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Review: Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD9 motherboard meets four-way Radeon HD 5870 CrossFire

by Parm Mann on 28 June 2010, 10:22 4.0

Tags: GA-X58A-UD9, Gigabyte (TPE:2376)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qayrn

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Final thoughts and rating

Gigabyte's GA-X58A-UD9 arrived with the ambition of becoming the granddaddy of all X58 motherboards, and in many respects it doesn't disappoint.

The board layout is excellent, the integrated cooling performs admirably, the number of expansion slots is second to none, and the feature set - including SATA 6Gbps, USB 3.0 and a BIOS tailored for overclockability - ticks many of the right boxes.

Unfortunately, the exorbitant £465.99 asking price acts as a sizeable chink in the UD9's otherwise impressive armour.

Does the implementation of four-way CrossFire/SLI support warrant a near-£200 premium over Gigabyte's own UD7? Factoring in the lack of performance gained from a four-way HD 5870 configuration, the answer has to be no, probably not.

However, whilst logical, conservative buyers will look elsewhere, there are always those who demand the very best. If price isn't an issue, X58 boards literally don't come much bigger or better than Gigabyte's GA-X58A-UD9.


The Good

Ample scope for overclocking
Supports true four-way CrossFire/SLI
Offers excellent all-round performance
USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gbps

The Bad

Very, very expensive
Four-way CrossFire shows little real-world benefit
XL-ATX form factor incompatible with most chassis

HEXUS Rating

Four Star
Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD9

HEXUS Awards

Performance
Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD9

HEXUS Where2Buy

The Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD9 motherboard can be purchased from SCAN.co.uk* priced at Ā£465.99.

HEXUS Right2Reply

At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.


*As always, UK-based HEXUS.community forum members will benefit from the SCAN2HEXUS Free Shipping initiative, which will save you a further few pounds plus also top-notch, priority customer service and technical support backed up by the SCANcare@HEXUS forum.



HEXUS Forums :: 7 Comments

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Thanks for the intro. A good next test would be to see if you get "blazing-fast frame rates" from 4 dual-GPU cards in a numerical simulation. The question is whether the two NF200 switches help 4 dual-GPU cards talk at full speed to the 24 GB a user will put into this board. Any chance you can load CUDA 3.1 and try 4 x GTX 295s? Or 4 Fermis?

Keep up the good work!
How does the overclocking compare to other boards? Do all of the extreme features actually amount to anything in the CPU overclocking game?

And what happens if you put 4 5870s into a cheaper board that doesn't have x16 in every slot?

Interested to know how many of their premium features actually amount to anything useful.
What was the power draw with 4 GPUs when overclocked then? Ouch for your electricity bill…
Shame the article doesn't compare 2 and 3-way crossfire performance with the Asus board. The P6X58D supports cards in x16 x16 x1 and x16 x8 x8 3-way crossfire/SLI. I wonder why this wasn't included.

Given the scant difference between the two boards elsewhere would the cheaper ASUS board show up the uber-expensive Gigabyte board here too?
Wot, no 4x5970 test? :p