Отзывы о Материнская плата Gigabyte GA-P61-S3 (socket1155)
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GIGABYTE GA-P61-S3 (socket1155)?
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Thanks to Gadget Buggy


Doesn't support 9 th gen processor




2. Works all Nvidia graphics cards.
I paired with i5 9400f with rtx 2060 and works bllastic. I would like to recommend this product. I got it for 6k




BIOS is good
Overlooking not supported
This motherboard is medium work load mate chale



Pros -
4 Fan Headers
USB 3.1 front panel header
Good CPU Cooler compatibility
Good power delivery
Turbo boots's CPU by default
Cons -
No Thunderbolt 3
Runs CPU at a higher vcore
Current Intel Lan Driver
Passively cooled VRM's
Overall I feel the cons aren't that bad and I would recommend this board. One glitch I am having is that in windows task manager says this board has 4 total slots of ram, which is kinda weird. Other than that no weird glitches or issues!


Update:
Had to clear the cmos on a brand new board during first install to get gpu to register? Board doesn't have drivers that preload so be prepared to grab drivers on a usb drive as lan port doesnt auto detect which is weird for 2020. Wanted to try gigabyte after so long but lesson learned ill stick with asus in the future. Not a bad baord but could be a bit more 2020 friendly.


But there are three annoyances:
1. To install an M.2 SSD on top of the board, a hex screwdriver is required to remove the heat sink.
2. The heat sink has a layer of glue on the bottom, covered with plastic wrap. You are supposed to install the heat sink by removing the plastic wrap and gluing the heat sink onto an SSD. But this would ruin the SSD's label, and destroying the label on my Samsung SSD would void the warranty. So I had to keep the piece of plastic between the heat sink and my SSD. This makes the heat sink useless. The heat sink would be more useful if there was no glue, so that I could put the bare metal heat sink against the SSD without being afraid of ruining the SSD label.
3, The motherboard requires a 2-pin speaker instead of the standard 4-pin, so I had to buy a 2-pin speaker on eBay.
This motherboard would be improved if Gigabyte
-Got rid of the M.2 heat sink or at least made it install-able without a screwdriver.
-Removed the glue from the M.2 heat sink so installing it won't ruin an SSD's warranty.
-Included a 2-pin speaker with the motherboard if you are going to use a non-standard 2-pin plug.


- good CPU VRM
- reports die sense voltage for CPU overclocking
- intel LAN
- most things just work
Cons:
- this board hates running dual rank ram at high frequencies! a 3600MHz kit of 2x16 GB RAM I had would intermittently (maybe 1 in 15 times) refuse to boot. At 4000MHz it refuses to boot more often and trains higher than expected RTLs & IOLs. It completely refuses to run dual rank ram >4000MHz, but I didn't have more sticks to confirm this. I would absolutely NOT recommend this board if want to run fast, dual rank ram.
- bulky VRM heatsinks make some AIO coolers incompatible (EK AIO is essentially incompatible and will collide with the VRM heatsinks or RAM unless the RAM doesn't have heat spreaders)
If neither con is applicable to your system, then it's a good board. Unfortunately both issues are applicable to me, and this was not apparently before I bought it and tried it.


Unfortunately all of that is hindered by non-existent customer service, a bios that gets less stable with each update (that’s rarely updated/not keeping up with competing brands in adding things like Resizable BAR support, or the ability to unlock the CNVi slot for use with third party wireless cards), shoddy intel 2.5Gbe networking (that still disconnects at random even after the intel firmware update) and terrible memory training algorithms (my DDR4 4000 kit that works on other brand boards only hits 3600 on this board) that limit the max RAM OC on what should theoretically be a great OC board thanks to only having two DIMM slots.
It’s so disappointing to see what should be a great motherboard just fail to perform in so many ways, and has (sadly) reminded me why I’ve avoided gigabyte for the past ~10 years.
