- Joined
- 29 Feb 2012
- Posts
- 1,765
Thanks andi will get that UD3H gigabite then with k2500i... Unless someone can spot something better.
Sounds good, the UD3H board looks like a nice one.
Though you may want to consider going for the ~£33 cheaper Gigabyte Z77X-D3H (as previously recommended in this thread by shadow_boxer, beejjacobs and myself) since it performs very similarly to the UD3H, has almost the same features and costs a nice chunk if change less (which could be spent on components that will give you more of a performance/features boost for the money).
Thanks for recommending Gigabyte Z77X-D3H but i think it has no on board dedicated monitor output. So if something wrong with my 7850 then what am gonna do? But another gfx to diagnose problem?
as per the spec1 x D-Sub, 1 x DVI-D, 1 x HDMI
Yes, the D3H doesn't have the eSATA connectors, however it does have the same marvell 6Gbps controller chip - instead this board uses them as internal SATA ports, not eSATA type. Therefore, this isn't as good if you want to connect an external HDD that uses eSATA (though USB3 is just as fast - so long as the drive supports it) but better if you think you may plug in a lot of internal hard drives.
Also, going by the spec sheets (though not explicitly stated) the 2nd main PCIE slot on the D3H board (which runs at x8 speed and shares bandwidth with the main x16 slot - just like the UD3H) seems to only conform to PCIE gen2 spec, while the same slot on the UD3H is explicitly said to work with PCIE gen3. Therefore, if this is the case then the D3H board's 2nd main PCIE slot can only offer half of the bandwidth of the same slot on the UD3H - when using a PCIE gen3 card.
This shouldn't be a massive worry, as it has been shown that the performance hit due to to a x8 PCIE gen2 slot with a top-end graphics card is only ~3-4% (compared to a x16 PCIE gen2 or x8 PCIE gen3 slot), but is worth bearing in mind.
Fair enough, for that price the UD3H is a pretty nice deal.
Are you planning to wait for the ivy bridge release? It is expected to come out on 29th April now, but the reviews are expected to be released on the 23rd (monday). The ivy bridge equivalent to the i5 2500K is the i5 3570K, it is expected to cost ~£10-15 more than the 2500K at launch, though this does buy you a slight stock clockspeed bump (3.4GHz), a considerably faster onboard GPU and more performance per-clock. We are waiting for the 23rd for some solid info on how these CPUs overclock, it may be worth waiting until then at least - so you can make an informed decision with the performance and overclocking figures of the i5 2500K and 3570K in hand.
Look at his name...
Rusty how is your BenQ XL2420T doing? I really thinking of getting one.