Motherboards can look alike from afar, but once you begin building a computer
system with one you quickly realize where extra time has been spent to make your
life easier. Gigabyte are going to be facing stiff competition from ASUS and MSI
computer on the Intel P55 Express front, so here are a few of the refinements
PCSTATS noticed on the GA-P55-UD5 board.
Big power switch and easily accessible hard reset and CMOS clear buttons. I
almost always have to fix LED front panel header cables because the polarity on
the LED cables gets mixed up, Gigabyte add polarity indicators and printing
inside the header to clearly indicate which ports are USB2.0, and which are
Firewire.
Combination PS/2 keyboard and mouse jacks are damn handy.
Most mice are
USB, but there are many keyboards still in
use for PS/2. Though legacy, PS/2 keyboards from years gone by often have better
tactile features than the newer, extremely inexpensive and flimsy keyboards being sold
today in PC stores. ABIT tried to kill off PS/2, look
where it ended up!
Combination USB2.0 and eSATA jacks are great if you have
no use for eSATA in the first place. But really the point of these hybrid
USB/eSATA cable slots is to provide power from the USB2.0 port to an eSATA
device over one hybrid cable. eSATA alone cannot power a device, but there is
enough electricity from a USB socket to power certain devices.
The Gigabyte GA-P55-UD5 motherboard is built on a
6-layer PCB, and according to the manufacturer 2 oz copper substrate is used for
the inner grounding layers. The thicker layers of copper aid in the cooling of
board mounted electrical component and lower impedance. PCSTATS toured a massive ECS factory in Shenzhen China
last year where several million motherboard PCBs are fabricated each month. Trust us when we
say, the more layers to a motherboard the more difficult it is to make
and generally speaking, the better the quality.
The Gigabyte GA-P55-UD5 motherboard features a 24-phase
power supply for the socket 1156 CPU, shown here above. The small black
squares are low RDS MOSFETs, the larger grey cubes are Ferrite choke cores and
the aluminum tins are Japanese made solid polymer capacitors.
That concludes PCSTATS preview of the new socket 1156 Intel P55 Express Gigabyte GA-P55-UD5
motherboard! Stay tuned for the full performance review, or check out a new motherboard
right here.
Find out about this and many other reviews by joining the Weekly PCstats.com Newsletter today!
Catch all of PCSTATS latest reviews right here.
Related Articles
Here are a few other articles that you
might enjoy as well...
- ASUS
M4A78T-E AMD 790GX Socket AM3 Motherboard Review
- ASUS
Striker II NSE nVidia nForce 790i SLI Motherboard Review
- ASUS
M3A78-T AMD 790GX Socket AM2+ Motherboard Review
- ASUS
P5E3 Premium/Wifi-AP.N Intel X48 Express Motherboard Review
- Gigabyte GA-X48-DS5 Intel X48 Express Motherboard Review
-
Asus
P5Q-EM Intel G45 Express Motherboard Review
- Biostar TPower N750 nForce 750a Motherboard
Review