Ga-z77x-ud3h-wb wifi

Fx1

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Aug 22, 2012
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Gigabyte GA-Z77X-UD3H-WB WIFI

Anyone have any experience with this mobo?

i have the x58 version and its been fine but i want to see if anyone has used this version?

Seems great for the price including the BT and WIFI
 

UNhooked

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Jan 21, 2004
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I had the non WIFI version and it was a good board. Only reason I sold it was because if you populate all the PCIe 16 slots it disables the PCIe x1 slots. That posed to be a problem since it meant I couldn't use my wifi card with all my GPU's installed.

Not sure if this is true for other Z77 Mobo's as well, so I went with the X79 platform.
 

Fx1

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Aug 22, 2012
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I had the non WIFI version and it was a good board. Only reason I sold it was because if you populate all the PCIe 16 slots it disables the PCIe x1 slots. That posed to be a problem since it meant I couldn't use my wifi card with all my GPU's installed.

Not sure if this is true for other Z77 Mobo's as well, so I went with the X79 platform.

There is a wifi version i guess would have been good for you :)
 

UNhooked

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Jan 21, 2004
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The wifi module fits in the Msata slot doesnt it which would leave your SLI at 8x and 8x?


Got 3 GPUs hence the issue. 2 GPU's wouldn't have posed the problem.

Why not just use a pci-e x1 slot?

GPU won't fit in a PCIe X1 slot

The issue with my NON Wifi version was if I had my 3rd GPU installed in the PCI x16 @4x Speed, it would disable the PCIe X1 slots hence disabling my Wifi card.

With the Wifi version, it doesn't disable the PCIe x1 slots but halves the bandwith of the PCIe x16 slots to 8x and 4x respectively. So essentially with 3 GPU's it will run at 8x/4x/4x speeds.

Hope that helps

Now I guess a mSATA wifi module with the NON Wi fi version would have fixed my problem but I would have been out of expansion slots
 

coffeejunkee

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Jul 31, 2010
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I'm obviously talking about the wifi-module, not a graphics card.

You can clearly see it's a pci-e x1 card and the specs mention nothing about pci-e slots being disabled, either for the normal model or the wifi one. The only slots that share bandwidth are the pci-e x16 slots. It doesn't make any sense either, the pci-e x1 slots run from the southbridge, the pci-e x16 slots from the cpu itself.
 

UNhooked

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Jan 21, 2004
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I'm obviously talking about the wifi-module, not a graphics card.

You can clearly see it's a pci-e x1 card and the specs mention nothing about pci-e slots being disabled, either for the normal model or the wifi one. The only slots that share bandwidth are the pci-e x16 slots. It doesn't make any sense either, the pci-e x1 slots run from the southbridge, the pci-e x16 slots from the cpu itself.

This is the one I had NON Wifi Version

http://www.gigabyte.us/products/product-page.aspx?pid=4153#sp

3) 1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x4 (PCIEX4)
* The PCIEX4 slot shares bandwidth with all PCI Express x1 slots. All PCI Express x1 slots will become unavailable when a PCIe x4 expansion card is installed.

This is for the WIFI version

http://www.gigabyte.us/products/product-page.aspx?pid=4167#sp

3) 1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x4 (PCIEX4)
* The PCIEX4 slot is available only when an Intel 22nm (Ivy Bridge) CPU is installed.
* The PCIEX4 slot shares bandwidth with the PCIEX8 and PCIEX16 slots. When the PCIEX4 slot is populated, the PCIEX16 slot will operate at up to x8 mode and the PCIEX8 will operate at up to x4 mode.


UPDATE:

My mistake the WIFI model I was looking at was the UD5H version. The GA-Z77X-UD3H-WB WIFI is the same phyisical board as the NON WIFI version and hence the PCIe X1 do get disabled once you populate the PCIe x4 slot. This makes more sense.

Sorry for the confusion. However my original statement about the PCIe X1 slots getting disabled still stands true.

http://www.gigabyte.com/products/product-page.aspx?pid=4166#sp

3)1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x4 (PCIEX4)
* The PCIEX4 slot shares bandwidth with all PCI Express x1 slots. All PCI Express x1 slots will become unavailable when a PCIe x4 expansion card is installed.


Now what I don't know is if this is true for all Z77 chipsets? Since 16 lanes come from CPU but I thought 8 lanes comes from the chipset itself so technically there shouldn't be a need to disable the PCie X1 slots. Guess there must be some other stuff running of the other 4 lanes.
 
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coffeejunkee

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Jul 31, 2010
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My mistake too I guess, the UD5H model is indeed different from the UD3H in this department.

Technically the UD3H isn't a 'real' Z77 board since this chipset should offer x8/x4/x4 pci-e 3.0 lanes for triple gpu's. Z75 is limited to x8/x8. Looks like some costs were cut by just using the southbrige's pci lanes.

So if you actually use the included wifi-module you lose the pci-e x4 slot, probably not that relevant for most users but still a bit of a bummer.
 

Fx1

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Aug 22, 2012
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I wont be using 3 GPU''s so i guess thats not a problem. its clearly a 2 way SLI/CF board and not a Tri SLI one.
 

UNhooked

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Jan 21, 2004
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I wont be using 3 GPU''s so i guess thats not a problem. its clearly a 2 way SLI/CF board and not a Tri SLI one.
Running a CF setup. I just use the Nvidia card for Physx and Encoding. I would still however get the UD5H since you can still use all expansion slots as opposed to UD3H where it just disables the PCIe x1 slots with the last PCIe x16 @4x populated.

Other than that it really is a nice board.

Just my 2 cents :)
 

Fx1

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Aug 22, 2012
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Running a CF setup. I just use the Nvidia card for Physx and Encoding. I would still however get the UD5H since you can still use all expansion slots as opposed to UD3H where it just disables the PCIe x1 slots with the last PCIe x16 @4x populated.

Other than that it really is a nice board.

Just my 2 cents :)

Most i will ever use is the included wifi and a 2 way CF or SLI