Gigabyte Aorus X570 Master Review

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The last few days have been pretty great for the PC community, with AMD’s Ryzen CPUs, Navi GPUs and NVIDIA Super cards too, it’s been nuts. If you saw my video on sunday about the new Ryzen CPUs, you’ll know I mentioned the one possible spanner in the works, these X570 motherboards, and mostly because of their price.

Since this video is all about this Gigabyte board, I think I should start by explaining why they are so much more expensive compared to last gen. The first, and main reason is the PCIe 4.0 support. Gigabyte are using 6 layer PCB’s for this Master board, and up to 8 on their XTREME board, plus higher quality PCBs in general to be able to reliably get the most out of the new connection. 

Secondly, it’s the VRMs. Because we are looking at up to 16 cores on the same socket you can put a quad core APU in, the higher end boards have pretty beefy setups – this board in particular uses Infineon XDPE132G5C controllers, a 14 phase design and PowlRstage 50A mosfets. In the real world, that means the 3900X 12 core barely made this sweat, with the VRMs sitting at a cool 50°c or so, even the heatsink didn’t break the 40°c mark under full 100% load – so this will handle the 16 core no problem.

Alright, so now you know why it’s pricey, let’s see what else it can do. Well, it’s got 3 M.2 slots – the top runs straight to the CPU, with the lower 2 running through the chipset. What’s great about this PCIe 4 support here, is that you can stick one of the new Gen4 SSDs in the top, get the full speed from it, AND stick 2 Gen3 drives in the bottom slots and since the Gen4 connection to the chipset is equivalent to 8 Gen3 lanes, you won’t be bottlenecking ANY of your 3 drives. That’s amazing.

You’ve also got 3 x16 slots although the middle slot is x8 electrically and the bottom is x4. You also have a surprise header here, a Thunderbolt one. This is more a futureproofing move, as the next generation of USB will roll Thunderbolt into it and so you might need this then.

As you’d expect in 2019, you have plenty of RGB connections – 4 in total 2 addressable and 2 standard, along with 7 4 pin fan headers, USB 3.1 Gen 2 front panel header and 2 USB 3 headers too. 

On the back you’ve got AC Wifi – it’s actually the new WiFi 6 – a total of 10 USB ports, 1 being type c and 3 being 3.1, along with an intel gigabit ethernet port, and a realtek 2.5gb port – a bit strange to see – and 7.1 audio with SPDIF too. 

BIOS wise, it’s a slight change from usual. Gigabyte have gone with an “easy mode” here where you can set your boot priority, XMP profile and see temps, with F2 taking you to their standard bios with all the options, including overclocking.

On the note of overclocking, neither of my samples really went over their standard boosts here, but since the board clearly has a significant amount of headroom on the VRMs, if you do get a golden sample and OC it, even the 16 core, this can handle it just fine.

So, should you buy this board? Well, it’s pretty reliable, amazing on the VRM side of things and has some nice features built in, but the not-too-far-off £400 price tag makes it a hard item to sell. When you compare it to other HEDT – think Threadripper or X299 Intel – boards, it’s not too bad, and performs just as well, but when you compare it to last gen, or even the Z390 Master, it’s a good £100-150 more, and that’s a hard pill to swallow. 

If you are on a budget, there are definitely cheaper options I’d recommend you check out, but if you want a high power, and high price, board that will support any chip on the Zen 2 product stack with ease, then this isn’t a bad shout. Would I put one in my rig? If it was my own money, probably not, but if I was buying the 16 core, or wanting to push the 12 core, then probably yes. 

Want one? Amazon: https://techteamgb.co.uk/gbtx570master

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