Friday, July 26th 2013

GIGABYTE Announces its First Intel H81 Chipset Motherboards

GIGABYTE announced its first socket LGA1150 motherboards based on Intel's new H81 Express chipset for entry-level desktop platforms, among the trio of H81-based motherboards launched today, are the H81M-DS2, H81M-D2V, and H81M-D3V. The three are based on a common compact micro-ATX PCB design measuring 226 x 170 mm, and differ with connectivity features. The H81 Express is basically B85 Express without SBA, and fewer SATA 6 Gb/s ports, and PCIe gen 2.0.

The H81M-DS2 has a focus on legacy connectivity, which could go well with POS (that's point-of-sale, but we won't disagree with what you made out) PCs that are wired to old LPT printers. Its legacy ports include an LPT parallel port, an RS232 COM serial port, separate PS/2 ports for mouse and keyboard. Its lone display output is a D-Sub (VGA). The H81M-D2V sheds LPT while retaining a the RS232 COM port, and a slightly more modern display connectivity that includes D-Sub (VGA) and DVI. It features a single, common PS/2 connector. The H81M-D3V has the least legacy connectivity, with just DVI and D-Sub for display outputs, no rear-panel COM or LPT ports, and a common PS/2 connector.
As mentioned before, the three are based on a common PCB design, which draws power from a combination of 24-pin ATX and 8-pin EPS power connectors, uses a 3-phase CPU power design, and features two DDR3 DIMM slots, a PCI-Express 2.0 x16 slot (which runs at gen 2.0, even with processors that have gen 3.0 root complex), and two additional PCI-Express 2.0 x1 slots. Connectivity common to all three include 6-channel HD audio, and gigabit Ethernet. The boards are driven by AMI Aptio UEFI BIOS. The three should each be priced around the $50 mark.
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5 Comments on GIGABYTE Announces its First Intel H81 Chipset Motherboards

#1
_JP_
I like the D3V. Sucks about having PCI-e 2.0, though.
Posted on Reply
#2
Steven B
i guess there are ultra cheap people out there who want good quality, but something needs to replace H61, so i guess this is it.
Posted on Reply
#3
savumi
PCI-e 2.0 ? what the ... fun :roll:
Posted on Reply
#4
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
Are cards maxing out PCIe 2.0 yet? I really have no idea.
Posted on Reply
#5
Fourstaff
FrickAre cards maxing out PCIe 2.0 yet? I really have no idea.
Not on the Nvidia 6xx and AMD 7xxx series, not sure about Nvidia 7xx series. At most there will only be a few % performance loss from the top of the line graphics card, but who buys top of the line graphics card and use it on a H81 board?
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Apr 18th, 2024 08:49 EDT change timezone

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