With the launch of Intel-based 100-series motherboards around the corner, Gigabyte unveiled some of the standout features that it will be packing on its motherboards.



Do note that not all of Gigabyte's 100-series boards will come with all of these features. Instead, take the materials below as reference info, to refer to in case you're not quite sure about some upcoming features.

Creative Certified ZxRi 120+dB SNR

With the new Creative Certified ZxRi sound card, Gigabyte claimed that it has the first onboard discrete card-level audio design. Part of the package is a Creative Sound Core3D quad-core audio processor, which is wired to a Burr-Brown DAC capable of conversion with an SNR of 127 dB. Additionally, Gigabyte will include high-end headphone amplifiers for the front and rear stereo outputs with SNRs of over 120 dB, and the surround channels accessible from the rear will have a simpler OP-Amp with an SNR of 96 dB. The rear stereo will have an individual amp per channel, while the front channel uses a single dual-channel amplifier.

7 Color LED Trace Path

A trend we've been seeing over the last couple of years is that vendors separate the audio portion of the board design with a distinct border to reduce interference, and some vendors even light them up. Some of Gigabyte's new boards with dedicated audio hardware will have trace paths that can be lit up in one of seven colors so that you can match it with the rest of your system lighting.

Killer DoubleShot Pro X3

The Z170X-Gaming G1 will come with the so-called Killer DoubleShot Pro X3 networking suite, which combines three Killer networking adapters and allows them to work together, prioritizing certain types of data over different paths. For example, real-time traffic such as online gaming will go over the path with the lowest latency, while web traffic and bulk traffic will be distributed over the remaining lines. The adapters used for this are two Killer E2200s and a single Killer E1535 Wireless AC adapter with Bluetooth 4.1 support.

Metal Shielding PCI-Express x16 slots

There's no doubt about it: you've had that worry where you think that your new, very pretty, and very heavy graphics card may break your PCI-Express slot. For that reason, Gigabyte will offer metal shielding on some of its boards, which will reinforce the PCI-Express connector and ground it, adding an added bit of protection from electrostatic discharge.

Q-Flash Plus

Simply, the Q-Flash Plus feature enables you to flash your BIOS from a USB stick without having a CPU or memory installed. It may not be all that useful today, but if you were to pick up one of these boards in a couple of years, and it were to come with an older BIOS that doesn't support the new CPU you're buying along with it, you'll be happy that you don't need to borrow a friend's older CPU to be able to flash your BIOS.



IR/Infineon 20 Digital Phase Power Design

This is another one of those features that is perhaps a bit curious. A 16+4 phase VRM design for power delivery to the CPU is overkill, except of course if you're overclocking under liquid nitrogen and need the absolute most stable power feed to achieve the highest possible overclock. Of course, some folks insist they also need this when running plain air-cooled rigs, for reasons unknown.

Turbo B-Clock

The Turbo B-Clock Tuning IC is a chip meant to help you adjust the base clock of your system, with frequency options ranging from 90 MHz through 200 MHz. Previously, for overclocking you'd have to choose from 100 MHz, 125 MHz, and 167 MHz base clocks, which didn't quite allow overclockers to fine-tune their systems.

OC Touch

Gigabyte's OC Touch design isn't anything new, but it is a feature that will remain on its overclocking-oriented SOC series of boards to make overclocking a little more accessible. When you're overclocking under liquid nitrogen on an open-bench platform, it can prove useful.

GC-M.2-MINI-SAS

With some boards, Gigabyte will include an adapter to connect a Mini-SAS device to one of the 32 Gb/s M.2 slots. Why? Well, it's so that you can connect a 2.5" Intel 750-series NVMe SSD, rather than needing to use the PCI-Express variant. The other manufacturers will be including adapters with some of their boards, too, but it is still a welcome inclusion.

G-Connector

The idea behind the G-Connector is nothing new, and plenty of motherboards already come with something similar. The idea is simple: it's an adapter into which you plug all the front I/O cables for the power and reset switches, and LEDs, which you can then plug into the I/O header on the motherboard, sparing you the hassle of fighting to plug them into a cramped space.

New Thermal Design

Ahh, the star of the show: the Z170 G1 Gaming board. Why? Well, it comes with a heap of the features mentioned above, and a new thermal design. Over the 20-phase VRM circuitry, Gigabyte built a heatsink that has support for water cooling built in, with the popular G1/4" threading.

Update, 7/17/15, 7:35pm PT: Due to a miscommunication, we posted some information in the original version of the above article that was technically under embargo. Companies such as Gigabyte, Intel and many others entrust us with information often far ahead of product launches, and we take that responsibility very seriously. Therefore, we have redacted the embargoed information.



We will, of course, write in detail about these new technologies when we're able.



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