kr.testseek.com  

 
 
Search:   
 

Home » Computers » Mainboards » Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R



Working
Please wait...

  Expert reviews    

Reviews of Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R

Testseek.com have collected 25 expert reviews of the Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R and the average rating is 90%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R.
Award: Editor’s Choice May 2010
May 2010
 
(90%)
25 Reviews
Users
-
0 Reviews
90 0 100 25

 

Reviews

page 1 of 3
Order by:
Score
 
  Published: 2010-12-03, review by: xbitlabs.com

  • As we have found out in this review of the Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R (rev. 2.0), it has some differences from the senior model GA-X58A-UD5 (rev. 2.0), yet those differences are mostly insignificant. The lack of Power and Reset buttons doesn’t affect funct...

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


-
 
  Published: 2010-11-26, Author: alton , review by: legitreviews.com

  • The GIGABYTE X58A-UD3R offers good performance and nice features for the price. It may be a tad fussy, but once it works it works well. Definitely worth considering in your rig....

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2010-11-08, review by: overclock3d.net

  • Thankfully as we've previous reviewed the UD3R in its v1 guise we don't need to worry so much about the design and technology elements and can focus purely upon the improvements and performance.To that end, has the improvement to the power phases helped t...

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


(93%)
 
  Published: 2010-08-19, review by: Bit-Tech.net

  • We’re happy to say that the UD3R (rev 2) lived up to our expectations after we'd applied the latest BIOS. The board proved to be quick at stock speeds and eminently overclockable; when combined with its keen price these factors make the board extremely...

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


(90%)
 
  Published: 2010-08-11, review by: it-review.net

  • Abstract:  Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD3R and ASUS P6X58D-E review - Conclusion Author: Luka Rakamaric Date: 11 Aug 2010 We must say that the 1366 platform had little to offer to an average buyer, as the 1156 offers just a tad slower performance for a lower price. Multi GPU configurations and workstations with high memory requirements were practically the only ones that really needed the 1366. With Intel’s introduction of six core CPUs exclusively for 1366, this platform got another plus to its side. Not so much right now, as the CPUs are incredibly expensive when compared to their four core siblings, but as an upgrade. However, you have to have in mind that the 5 series of chipsets will be the only one using the current sockets, while the next generation X68 will switch to four memory channels and a new socket. Cheap motherboards (cheap in the X58 world) certainly do work. They deliver as promised, and can do almost anything the most expensive ones can. With both you’ll have the latest connectors, huge amounts of..

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


-
 
  Published: 2010-07-01, review by: hothardware.com

  • Excellent documentation, Tons of storage options, USB 3.0. It's sexy
  • No fan/noise controls to speak of, JMicron SATA controllers don't keep up with Marvell or Intel
  • Stability was also excellent. We had no problems running 12GB of RAM across all six slots, even when overclocking, and had no crashes.We like this Gigabyte motherboard and we like it quite a bit. For $200, Gigabyte has put together a package that overcloc...

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


(80%)
 
  Published: 2010-06-14, review by: pcper.com

  • Power consumption, The X58A-UD3R's power results are pretty consistent with the other LGA 1366 boards in our lineup today. It actually scored four watts less than Gigabyte's first UD3R board based on the X58 chipset. We didn't notice any special variation
  • Power consumption, The X58A-UD3R's power results are pretty consistent with the other LGA 1366 boards in our lineup today. It actually scored four watts less than Gigabyte's first UD3R board based on the X58 chipset. We didn't notice any special variation
  • We'd like to thank our friends at Gigabyte for providing the X58A-UD3R for our review today. Gigabyte packed tons of great features, bundled accessories, as well as applications and utilities into their lowest end X58A board. While the board is priced at...

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
-
 
  Published: 2010-05-07, review by: Bit-Tech.net

  • While Gigabyte has an enviable track record for producing superlative micro-ATX and budget motherboards, in our experience, it hasn’t quite enjoyed the same level of success in the mid-range and high-end of the market in recent years.One of the company...

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


(90%)
 
  Published: 2010-05-04, review by: tomshardware.com

  • The addition of USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s controllers is nothing more than an evolutionary step in X58 motherboard design, and all of today’s boards used the same parts to address these technologies. Aside from those updates, frankly, none of today’s moth...

Read the full review »
 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


-
 
  Published: 2010-04-08, review by: firingsquad.com

  • Abstract:  Of all the motherboards represented here today, this one is our favorite. The X58A-UD3R nicely blends enthusiast features you’d expect on a high-end motherboard like heatpipe cooling, gobs of SATA ports and PCIe connectivity, etc, while..

 
Was this review helpful?   
 
  Award


(94%)
    page 1 of 3 « Previous   1 2 3   Next »  
 
More popular products from the same category


Join our Consumer Panel!

  • Infuence products of the future
  • Up to 4$ per answer
TestSeek will regularly send you survey invites to your email, you choose if and when you participate.

Join now! » (opens in a new window)


×