- May 19, 2005
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Gigabyte G1.Sniper A88X
Today we have Gigabytes G1.Sniper A88X.
It is one of the new FM2+ motherboards recently released for the upcoming Kaveri based APUs from AMD. Unfortunately FM2+ based CPUs will not be released until early 2014 as of my latest information. No worries though. This board is still backward compatible with FM2 so any Trinity or Richland based APU will drop straight in.
The Board
This is the first G1 gaming board for AMD based machines. It continues with the bold Green and Black colour scheme as seen on previous G1 based boards and would look right at home in a windowed case.
The other colour noticeable on the board is the series of gold components near the back panel. These are part of what separates the G1.Sniper from other boards. These components are actually high quality audio components designed to give superior audio, as well as the ability to custom tailor the sound via swappable audio amplifier chips.
There is also an LED lit break in the board, designed to help reduce noise in the audio circuitry.
The well lit line looks very cool and would look great in a windowed case.
Conspicuous by their absence are onboard power, reset and clear CMOS buttons. No diagnostic LED is present either. I assume this helps pay for the better audio components while keeping the price to a very reasonable $115 CDN.
I couldn't help but notice that there seemed to be a huge reduction in surface mounted components. It is a very clean looking board.
This board also carries the Gigabyte Ultra Durable 4 Plus designation. This consists of technologies to help keep the board cooler and provide a long life. Such as solid capacitors and efficient heat sink designs.
Many enthusiasts might consider the FM2 platform as low end or budget oriented, but for the vast majority of users out there, FM2 offers a well balanced set of features and is able to fill a number of roles. Everything from gaming to HTPC duty, as well as just a solid base for an office machine. G1.Sniper A88X, however, is filling a new niche for Gigabyte and AMD, as an entry level gamer board. It has an enhanced Audio subsystem so gamers can be enveloped in their game play. The high powered headphone amplifier will make it easy to drive some quality headphones for that totally immersed gaming experience.
Layout
Expansion slots are arranged as follows:
1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x16 (PCIEX16)
(The PCIEX16 slot conforms to PCI Express 3.0 standard.)
* To support PCI Express 3.0, you must install an FM2+ APU.
1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x4 (PCIEX4)
3 x PCI Express x1 slots
(The PCIEX4 and PCI Express x1 slots conform to PCI Express 2.0 standard.)
2 x PCI slots
There is ample space between the two primary PCIE16x slots for cooling and two of the three PCIE 1X slots can be populated even if you are running Crossfire, provided you are using only double slot cards.
The socket area is open and will allow for large CPU heatsinks to be used, as always, the RAM slots can be a bit close so ensure your memory sticks and heatsink will play nice together if you are planning to fill all the available ram slots. AMD has been nice enough to retain the same heatsink mounts as AM3/AM3+ and this hasnt changed in a very long time now! This makes using your current high end heatsink a simple thing if it already AMD compatible.
Today we have Gigabytes G1.Sniper A88X.
It is one of the new FM2+ motherboards recently released for the upcoming Kaveri based APUs from AMD. Unfortunately FM2+ based CPUs will not be released until early 2014 as of my latest information. No worries though. This board is still backward compatible with FM2 so any Trinity or Richland based APU will drop straight in.
The Board
This is the first G1 gaming board for AMD based machines. It continues with the bold Green and Black colour scheme as seen on previous G1 based boards and would look right at home in a windowed case.
The other colour noticeable on the board is the series of gold components near the back panel. These are part of what separates the G1.Sniper from other boards. These components are actually high quality audio components designed to give superior audio, as well as the ability to custom tailor the sound via swappable audio amplifier chips.
There is also an LED lit break in the board, designed to help reduce noise in the audio circuitry.
The well lit line looks very cool and would look great in a windowed case.
Conspicuous by their absence are onboard power, reset and clear CMOS buttons. No diagnostic LED is present either. I assume this helps pay for the better audio components while keeping the price to a very reasonable $115 CDN.
I couldn't help but notice that there seemed to be a huge reduction in surface mounted components. It is a very clean looking board.
This board also carries the Gigabyte Ultra Durable 4 Plus designation. This consists of technologies to help keep the board cooler and provide a long life. Such as solid capacitors and efficient heat sink designs.
Many enthusiasts might consider the FM2 platform as low end or budget oriented, but for the vast majority of users out there, FM2 offers a well balanced set of features and is able to fill a number of roles. Everything from gaming to HTPC duty, as well as just a solid base for an office machine. G1.Sniper A88X, however, is filling a new niche for Gigabyte and AMD, as an entry level gamer board. It has an enhanced Audio subsystem so gamers can be enveloped in their game play. The high powered headphone amplifier will make it easy to drive some quality headphones for that totally immersed gaming experience.
Layout
Expansion slots are arranged as follows:
1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x16 (PCIEX16)
(The PCIEX16 slot conforms to PCI Express 3.0 standard.)
* To support PCI Express 3.0, you must install an FM2+ APU.
1 x PCI Express x16 slot, running at x4 (PCIEX4)
3 x PCI Express x1 slots
(The PCIEX4 and PCI Express x1 slots conform to PCI Express 2.0 standard.)
2 x PCI slots
There is ample space between the two primary PCIE16x slots for cooling and two of the three PCIE 1X slots can be populated even if you are running Crossfire, provided you are using only double slot cards.
The socket area is open and will allow for large CPU heatsinks to be used, as always, the RAM slots can be a bit close so ensure your memory sticks and heatsink will play nice together if you are planning to fill all the available ram slots. AMD has been nice enough to retain the same heatsink mounts as AM3/AM3+ and this hasnt changed in a very long time now! This makes using your current high end heatsink a simple thing if it already AMD compatible.