Отзывы о Материнская плата GIGABYTE H410M H (rev. 1.0)
77 отзывов пользователей o GIGABYTE H410M H (rev. 1.0)
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GIGABYTE H410M H (rev. 1.0)?
Поделитесь своим опытом и помогите другим сделать правильный выбор
- + Отличный мать
- - Нет
- + Хорошая плата за свои деньги (в текущих реалиях)
В итоге помогла прошивка Биоса до последней версии, которая Improve UHD BD (4K BD) support
- + Плата начального уровня M.2 2280,
КINGSTON A2000 SA2000M8/250G 250ГБ, M.2 2280, PCI-E x4
показал результаты скорость чтения 1500МБ/с; скорость записи, 1000МБ/с; - - цена, мало фаз питания процессора 4 всего .
- + Самая дешева на lga 1200
- + Все подошло, комп собрали, все работает, всем довольны, а дальше время покажет
- + Гонит проц инженерник аналог 10600k...QRSJ вроде называеттся до 4900 память до 3300..купить дешево смотри видос.сп за инфу братану по железу))...
- + Была по акции, самая дешёвая почти =))
- - При установке второй видеокарты в райзер - перестаёт давать изображение совсем. И даже не уверен что грузиться виндовс. Отправил...
- + Хорошая, относительно дешёвая материнка, работает как часы.
- - Биос неудобный, информация разбросана в случайном порядке. Разъём М2 не поддерживает переходники на разъём USB 3.0 для райзеров...
- + нет нареканий
- - не айтишник, а так не заметил)
- + Цена, габариты, качество сборки
- - не обнаружил
- + Вполне функциональная - много актуальных разъёмов для расширения.
- - Не выводит оперативную память на заявлению частоту, не смотря на выбор рекомендуемой модели памяти. Установка драйверов не удобна, на сайте все разбросано нет возможности загрузить одним пакетом. В комплекте очень маленькие болты крепления к корпусу, выглядит это в сборе крайне не надёжно.
- + Не найдено
- - У материнской платы были погнуты ножки сильно из-за чего не стал работать процессор
- - брак разъема под оперативку
They weren't kidding about the extra copper - This board has some serious weight to it. Flex is non existent.
The RGBs on the back and over the IO are nice.
I do wish the second M.2 PCI SSD slot came with a heat spreader as well.
The board itself-Great. No issues whatsoever.
It's a 5 star board, except for one big thing.
The BIOS sucks. It's terrible.
It has less features then the M5A99FX Pro R2.0 (My old board from about 6 years ago)
The AMD RAID Expert Utility is a pain to even navigate. When selecting options with the mouse, they usually don't actually change. You must use arrow keys and enter.
This BIOS fails to recognize PCI RAID Controllers. If you use a RAID card, you won't be able to configure it in the BIOS or boot from it. But yet if it's pre-configured, Windows will recognize it in the file explorer/disk management.
The menus that you'll actually be using are buried inside irrelevant options.
Windows 7 and this board are not a possibility as well.
It took me about two days of errors and reboots to get Windows 10 to install and actually boot. Pray it goes smooth your first time, as the rest will not. The board still thinks I've got two Windows 10 installations despite wiping all my drives.
Fun times.
Also, POST times vary from 5-60 seconds making this the SLOWEST POST I've ever seen. Windows 10 loads in literally 1 second for me, but I have to wait sometimes a full minute to get there.
If you don't have RAID setup in the BIOS it's quicker-5-25 seconds instead.
***Update***
Unfortunately I have to update this to 1 star. The BIOS is that bad. Not only is it just painful to use, it lacks basic functionality.
For instance, I got a NVMe m.2 ssd. Installed it, found it in the BIOS, tested it. It works. I boot up windows, it doesn't show in disk management. Further digging reveals in device manager, it is there but you must toggle "show hidden devices." The properties on it revealed that windows recognized it as currently disconnected.
After jerking around the BIOS, I tried turning NVMe RAID on. The device now shows in Windows, but as legacy support and not capable of the PCI gen 4 speeds I was after.
There is no and I mean no reason turning RAID on should make it populate.
If you are like me and have a lot of storage (10 drives total: 2 M.2, 1 M.2 nvme, 1 SATA SSD, 6 SATA HDDs) this motherboard is not for you.
I spent countless hours finagling settings to get it running. This is a process for my last motherboard that actually didn't even need the BIOS for anything other than the boot order and to access my PCI RAID controller.
I really wanted to like this motherboard, but Gigabyte paid almost no attention to one of the most important aspects of it.
Be patient! Here's what happened.
When you power the board, the LED lights should flash initially. This is a good sign. Press the power button or trip the pins with a screwdriver, if it doesn't respond, that doesn't mean it's dead. WAIT ~15 MINUTES AFTER PRESSING THE POWER BUTTON.
***Turns out my mobo was busy resetting BIOS, and after it was finished it powered up normally. Make sure this isn't the case with your board before thinking it's DOA.***
I had tripped the pins after troubleshooting the problem to the board and was feeling pretty defeated, I started to look at returning this and buying a replacement board. As soon as I added a replacement to the cart, fans started spinning and led strips came on.
Now, I'm not saying that this is the best board. The fact that there was no led indicator or ANY indication really that the bios was updating/resetting straight from the box made me monumentally frustrated. If I hadn't left it powered up in defeat for that long I absolutely would have returned it, because there was nothing (not even a forum post after googling) suggesting that this might happen. Now that I got it to work, though, it's fine! Boot time is a little slow, but it handles my Ryzen 3700 just fine, and is ultimately a great board for the price.
The manual is decent, but the prize is that everything that is labelled in the manual is also written on the board. It was very easy to identify all of the various connections, big and small, on the board. Gigabyte claims they used "Twice the copper as others" and from the heft of the board, it feels like they did - I installed the CPU onto the board out of the case feeling no flex getting it installed. Back panel fit fine with no goofy thin metal case-piece as with others.
I paired with a Aorus PCIE4 M.2 (so much copper on the heat sink, don't stub your toe dropping it) and a cheaper Intel (where I used the single M.2 heat-sink that the MB comes with). Both worked fine as did an old LG DVD and a newish RX480.
Windows 10 Pro installed easily, the MB came with the latest BIOS, the drivers on the CD were fine and installed easily - even uninstalling the inevitable "extra stuff" went quickly and easily. The GIgabyte website is simple to navigate and confirm I had the latest drivers. Switching on XMP by clicking Profile 1 in the BIOS was straightforward and boom, my memory is running at the rated 3600 spec. I have no interest in over-clocking, but all the features needed to pursue this are there.
I didn't need wifi and chose to go "inexpensive," but as I came to realize, I did not go "cheap" - very pleasant experience building a 3800x using GIgabyte's X570 Aorus Elite.
Used the GIGABYTE X470 AORUS for his twin brother and that board is Great. I have no doubt the X570 is good there is always going to be the DOA from every Manufacture at some point since they can't spot check every M.B. going into box's. GIGABYTE is a good company and I did not contact them directly Because of my time frame and the seller gave me back my money Instantly. thanks to all involved. I am A builder so I Fully test the DOA to be Sure and it's worth saying as soon as I dropped another M.B. in everything worked 100% and still going perfect 2 Months later(The Build Was All New Parts). have a nice Day
It works flawlessly with the r5 3600 and corsair lxp vengeance 3200/16 xmp kit. Very stable, very fast (on par with reviewer benchmarks). Bios is good, no issues. Fan is quiet on f4j BIOS.
Things that make this board standout:
- Price is good for what it has
- Excellent VRMs
- Intel NIC
- Front USB3 headers
- Gigabyte is currently the fastest at BIOS updates
Its main competitor is the Asus TUF x570, but I think this board is better on because of the points mentioned. If I were to do it again, I would do it with this board.
For reference, prior to this I had an MSI B450 Gaming Pro Carbon AC, which felt in overall experience like a more polished product, though it wouldn't run my ram at rated speeds either.
I replaced the Aorus elite with an X470 Asus Crosshair VII Hero, which is technically a downgrade in chipset functionality, but in every other way is a premium product and it looks, feels and behaves like it.
And, my very expensive 32gb x 2 of cas14 3200mhz ram at it's rated speed and voltage with no muss, no fuss, no
grief, and there hasn't been the slightest hiccup. I paid twenty or thirty bucks more for the Asus, which was old enough to be a hundred bucks less than it's launch price, and it was a bargain at the price.
Every time I try to use something other than Asus, I end up compromising somewhere.
I keep trying though.
It's a shame none of these guys can seem to slim down their product stack and put the features that
make a good board on them all, and leave off (from at least some of them) the flashy gamery stuff that
drives cost up.
Other than that, it's a very fast board. I'm using 4000 memory and it works fine. The manual says to use 3200 but the ads say it can use 4000 and beyond so I decided to try 4000. Mine runs at 3990 all the time with Patriot Blackout Profile 1.
Edit. After running it a few days, it seems to have settled in with it's settings and boots up fast... Bios comes up in about 6 seconds, maybe just a little slower than what I am used to. Also want to say and this is important: *** When you first start your PC after putting the board in, wait, wait, wait, and it will start up. You might think you have a bad board but for some reason, on the very first start up, it can take a couple minutes for it to get up and running to the point where you can press DEL and get into the Bios. ***
Then their is the horrid bios , I have been building computers since socket 7 was out , I built many AMD systems when Athlon and DDR1 came out , even a couple of Ryzen 2 x470 boards , BUT never in all my life Have I seen such a board I could get al least get up and running .
Bios is clunky , crude , not well layed out , , You have the Gigabyte bios , then the AMD bios , and they do not communicate well between each other
USB issues galore , IRQ issues , getting " No IRQ 55 Handling " errors at boot up once I upgrades the bios from F-10 to F-22 AMD releasing AGESA updates that totally screw this board do not update to anything above F-10
Memory handling issues galore , running anything above ddr2100 and look out , tried 3 different kits , even some fancy Samsung B-Die that cost me a bundle , UH, NO GO!
Spent 4 days with this board , 4 days of hell , Run , run far away from the POS
Check the Gigabyte forums and You will see for yourself
So this is my 3rd and final revision.
Revision 1.0: I went to the Ryzen 5 3400G APU on an MSI B450M Pro VDH Max, Corsair CX500 PSU, with TEAMGROUP Dark-Z 3200mhx 32GB RAM. HUGE upgrade from the old tech, lol!
Then I was like, you know, I would love to do some gaming, and since I just upgraded the monitor to a 32" Acer 2k 75hz display, wouldn't it make sense to get some hardware that can take advantage? Don't get me wrong, the 3400G is a great APU and can be perfect for some entry level gaming or non-gaming PC use, but I needed more!
Revision 2.0: Got the Ryzen 3600x and MSI 5500XT Mech OC GPU. NICE! Gaming was fun again! I could even play Gears 4 at 2k High settings for the most part. Gotta say, that little GPU surprised me with it's performance for the specs it had...but it wasn't enough! So I decided to use that build for a family member, and went to my current version:
Revision 3.0: Went from mATX to ATX, got the Fractal Meshify-C ATX case, Thermaltake Toughpower 750W Gold PSU, Ryzen 3700X CPU, WD BlACK 500gb nvme M.2 drive, and Sapphire Pulse 5700XT GPU (same RAM), and put it all on the Gigabyte X570 AORUS Elite.
OK now that we're all tracking, back to the actual review!
Like I said, I was worried about all the negative reviews...DOA boards, no POST, 20 hour initial boot, turtle-like BIOS load speed, used being sold as new, etc...I was like My God...
But two things sold me on this board...the nearly unanimous reviews that said the VRM was excellent, and the price point. Also, I had a Gigabyte F88A D3H for years that never let me down.
Package arrived in excellent condition, ALL NEW, SEALED. Board looks great, I love the design, and it has a quality feel to it, some real weight, which I appreciate. The LED strips are nice, low profile, not too gaudy at all and compliment my RGB fans perfectly.
I like the connections too. 2 CPU fan headers, 2 SYS fan headers, 2 3-pin 5V RGB headers, and 2 12V 4-pin RGB headers, 6 SATA ports, etc...nice and versatile. I don't even need the RGB headers, as I have 6 Thermaltake Riing 12 plus premium case fans wired to two controllers via one of the USB headers. Only RBG header I'm using is LED C2 for the Wraith Prism CPU fan.
Setup went without a hitch. Initial boot took maybe 30-40 seconds. Booted into BIOS to set XMP profile and rebooted to Windows 10 Pro.
And my one and only issue had arrived. My Seagate Firecuda 2TB SSHD storage drive was gone! Like...gone! BIOS saw it just fine, but windows couldn't see it at all. WTH? Tried DISKPART cmds, Disk Management, Partition software, nothing worked. I went to Device Manager and saw that "AMD SATA Drives" drivers had hardware conflicts. I tried installing latest chipset drivers from Gigabyte and AMD, still nothing.
Finally I just uninstalled via Device Manager, removed drivers, and rescanned, and that worked! All good now.
This is the nicest build I've ever done. Looks amazing, love the LEDs (so do the kids), and runs fast and smooth as butter.
Now I can play games on 2K resolution and all Ultra settings with no issues, and I love knowing I have quality power (Gold rated PSU) going to quality power management (MB VRMs), for my system.
My goal was performance and longevity, as I don't want to spend over $1,500 on building a family PC for at least another 5 years. And I cannot understate the importance of the right power delivery system for a system to run at it's optimum levels, which will ensure that longevity.
As for boot times, it's fast. I don't even notice what people were complaining about, my system loads to Windows login in like 10 seconds. I also was able to OC the CPU and tighten the timings on my RAM, using the Ryzen DRAM calc software, which is a nice bonus.
This board runs cool, also, the board fan hasn't even spun up once, even during stress tests.
I highly recommend this board for those looking for a nice, solid, reliable, but not exorbitantly priced X570 ATX board.
Happy hunting!











