Gigabyte GA-MA770T-UD3P motherboard review

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Power Consumption and overclocking

 

Power Consumption

The newer AM3 Phenom II X4 processors have a pretty good TDP (peak wattage), compared to the last flagship products they shaved off 20 watts while increasing performance. We used and tested with the Phenom II X4 955BE processor that has a TDP of 125 Watt (= 125W peak, when all 4 cores in the processor are 100% utilized and stressed).
Much like the last-gen products, we have four active & independent cores here. Each core can be clocked down independently if not utilized, saving heaps of current. If the cores are temporarily inactive, they can pretty much put themselves in sleep-mode (clocking down). Hyper Transport will power down and a low-power stage is activated on the memory.

AMD's Cool'n'Quiet technology was recently updated to revision 3.0 and provides even better power management. Keywords here are improved power tuning with additional performance states, and up to 50% less power at idle compared to Cool'nQuiet 2.0

As a result we notice our test platform peak out at roughly 180 Watts power consumption when we stress the CPU cores. Our system however idles merely at 129 Watts (dedicated graphics processor used, not a integrated one).

Power Consumption Idle 100% CPU load
Phenom II X4 955BE @ 790FX 129 182
Phenom II X4 955BE @ GA-770 136 194

Now since we used an 790FX based AM3 motherboard we had to add a dedicated graphics card (GTX 280), you'll notice that the end-result overall in idle and peak wattage is very impressive.

As you can see once we stress four CPU cores with Prime95 (stress test), our power consumption maxes out at ~190 Watts. Slightly higher than 790FX though, but marginal.

 

Overclocking

If you decide to start an overclocking session with the Phenom processor; typically you are much better off with the BE editions (CPU multiplier unlocked). In today's test we will overclock the Phenom II X4 955BE (Black Edition = easy to overclock).

The key to the 790FX/GX and thus now 770 feature set is AMD's Windows compatible Overdrive interface that allows very easy overclocking of the Phenom II (and last gen Phenom X4 Black Edition) processors. It's one of the best tweak utilities out there and thanks to AMD's recently introduced Advanced Clock Calibration technology the results on a 770/790 chipset based platform, will certainly be good.

For this review we used a new 3.0 beta which has some new cool options.

In AMD overdrive you can simply max out the CPU voltage towards ~1.50V and increase the multiplier. Play around with it, don't be afraid of a crash.

Here's what we did though. With a simple OCZ Vendetta 2 35 USD air-cooler we reached 3700 MHz 100% stable within 4 seconds. If you use a decent cooler or even better, water-cooling .. 3800-4000 MHz should not be an issue. These are very common tweak frequencies for AMD Phenom II processors.

Though I admittedly on air we overclocked a little higher than with previous Phenom II processors, overclocking clearly is not an issue with Gigabyte's GA MA770-UD3P.

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