Caporegime
Gigabyte Z370 AORUS Ultra Gaming owners thread
OcUK Z370 Ultra Gaming Product page - https://www.overclockers.co.uk/giga...cket-1151-ddr4-atx-motherboard-mb-55v-gi.html
Gigabyte Ultra Gaming Homepage - https://www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard/Z370-AORUS-Ultra-Gaming-rev-10#kf
Features
Here we have six SATA 6Gb/s ports and next to them is a Thunderbolt connector for an add-in card.
This is the audio section made up with Realtek® ALC1220 CODEC along with WIMA Audio Capacitors (The red ones) and Nichicon Fine Gold capacitors.
At the bottom of his image is a USB3.1 and USB3.1 TypeC connectors.
• PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse port
• 2 x USB 3.1 Gen1 ports (these are also the USB DAC-UP ports to use)
• DVI-D port
• USB 3.1 Gen2
• USB Type-C
• 2 X USB 3.1 Gen1 ports
• HDMI
• Intel NIC
• 2 X USB 2.0/1.1 ports
• 7.1 Digital Audio and S/PDIF optical
• PCI-E 1X Slot
• PCI-E 16X slot (8 X when in SLI/Crossfire)
• PCI-E 1X slot
• PCI-E 8X slot
• PCI-E 1 X
• PCI-E 4 X (takes bandwidth from two of the PCI-E 1X slots)
Two M.2 32Gb/S connectors with the top one supporting type 22110 and the lower supporting 2280 length devices.
Support for RGBW and digital LED strips etc.
There are plenty of fan headers dotted around this board, these are a hybrid fan header and can detect what is connected onto them. There are also 6 temperature sensors located around this board so combined with Smart fan 5 you have more control than ever before.
Overclocking guide
LED lighting
This gives a good idea on what to expect, the boards not exactly the same but its close enough.
So there we have it, a solid board with a 3 year warranty that could be a good upgrade if you are coming from a much older generation CPU+Chipset.
You have a number of bells and whistles on this board such as the RGBW and Digital LED strip control, the slightly upgraded audio and a few other little tweaks that I haven't mentioned but are in the link to the Gigabyte product page to make this board even more durable and long lasting.
So lets see what you end users think of your Ultra Gaming boards.
OcUK Z370 Ultra Gaming Product page - https://www.overclockers.co.uk/giga...cket-1151-ddr4-atx-motherboard-mb-55v-gi.html
Gigabyte Ultra Gaming Homepage - https://www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard/Z370-AORUS-Ultra-Gaming-rev-10#kf
Features
Here we have six SATA 6Gb/s ports and next to them is a Thunderbolt connector for an add-in card.
This is the audio section made up with Realtek® ALC1220 CODEC along with WIMA Audio Capacitors (The red ones) and Nichicon Fine Gold capacitors.
At the bottom of his image is a USB3.1 and USB3.1 TypeC connectors.
• PS/2 Keyboard/Mouse port
• 2 x USB 3.1 Gen1 ports (these are also the USB DAC-UP ports to use)
• DVI-D port
• USB 3.1 Gen2
• USB Type-C
• 2 X USB 3.1 Gen1 ports
• HDMI
• Intel NIC
• 2 X USB 2.0/1.1 ports
• 7.1 Digital Audio and S/PDIF optical
• PCI-E 1X Slot
• PCI-E 16X slot (8 X when in SLI/Crossfire)
• PCI-E 1X slot
• PCI-E 8X slot
• PCI-E 1 X
• PCI-E 4 X (takes bandwidth from two of the PCI-E 1X slots)
Two M.2 32Gb/S connectors with the top one supporting type 22110 and the lower supporting 2280 length devices.
Support for RGBW and digital LED strips etc.
There are plenty of fan headers dotted around this board, these are a hybrid fan header and can detect what is connected onto them. There are also 6 temperature sensors located around this board so combined with Smart fan 5 you have more control than ever before.
Overclocking guide
LED lighting
This gives a good idea on what to expect, the boards not exactly the same but its close enough.
So there we have it, a solid board with a 3 year warranty that could be a good upgrade if you are coming from a much older generation CPU+Chipset.
You have a number of bells and whistles on this board such as the RGBW and Digital LED strip control, the slightly upgraded audio and a few other little tweaks that I haven't mentioned but are in the link to the Gigabyte product page to make this board even more durable and long lasting.
So lets see what you end users think of your Ultra Gaming boards.
Last edited: