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The Gigabyte GA-B75M-D3H motherboard is a robust Micro ATX platform designed for Intel LGA1155 processors, supporting up to 32GB DDR3 1600MHz RAM. It features advanced connectivity with USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gb/s ports, multiple PCIe slots including PCIe 3.0 x16, and AMD CrossFireX support. Enhanced with Realtek HD audio and Gigabit LAN, it delivers professional-grade performance and expandability for demanding multitasking and gaming setups.
Processor | core_i7 |
RAM | 32 GB DDR3 |
Memory Speed | 1333 MHz |
Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 4 |
Brand | GIGABYTE |
Series | GA-B75M-D3H |
Item model number | GA-B75M-D3H |
Item Weight | 2.7 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 11 x 11 x 3 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 11 x 11 x 3 inches |
Computer Memory Type | DDR3 SDRAM |
Voltage | 1.5 Volts |
Department | motherboard |
Manufacturer | Gigabyte |
Language | English |
ASIN | B007R9CRGW |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | April 5, 2012 |
M**B
Solid, full-featured motherboard
If you're building a PC with a "locked" Intel CPU, you really couldn't do much better. It doesn't support the unlock features of the Intel K series, but it's a very solid, stable motherboard with plenty of expansion. Onboard audio, ethernet, and video (with loads of different output options), along with USB 2.0 and 3.0 ports, mean you don't need much in the way of add-in cards. In fact, I only have a single video card add-in card because I like playing games. Intel's CPUs are great, and Gigabyte makes some really excellent motherboards for them. This is no exception.It also doubles as being the very cheapest Gigabyte motherboard you can get for an Ivy Bridge-based Hackintosh computer, if you want to run Mountain Lion on your PC. It's the same features and onboard peripherals as the more expensive GA-B75M-U3H, though the board itself is not as large. It works great and everything is supported in OS X with Unibeast and Multibeast, just get a CPU with HD4000 graphics or a supported graphics card.
R**6
great choice for first LGA1155 build
This was my first complete DIY build, and I made the right choice of motherboard. I already had a i3-3770 processor, so I was limited to a LGA 1155 board, but they are hard to find in decent configurations. This one fit the bill. Has four RAM slots (a must for me) and though there is only 1 SATA III header, that is enough for the C drive--other drives can utilize SATA II. Also has USB 3.0, and a USB 3.0 internal header for front ports. Easy to set up, booted fine with initial boot, and driver CD got me online quickly, so that I could load the most current drivers via the web. So far, no issues. One minor negative, I could not use two of the chassis mounts on the rear of the mobo (holes did not line up), but that may be my case, and not the board.
M**T
Quality control is very poor
This is a nice, inexpensive board if it works. I was building two identical computers, and ordered two of these mobos. The first computer worked fine, but the second showed a corrupt bios message twice, and self repaired the bios from the dual bios setup. After spending hours downloading all the usual freeware, I started getting a black screen, and when rebooting, the screen would again go black right after the welcome sign. Amazon is great about returns, and they sent me another board. The new one is completely dead, and will not respond to the power switch. Just to make sure it wasn't another component, I took the time to put the original defective board back. Same black screen after boot, so the boards are both defective. Two out of three bad.......I can't recommend these. I'll return them and order something from another manufacturer.
D**S
I bought it because of the brand and for the fat it had a good selection of PCI-E and older PCI slots on it
Its been working quite well up to this point. I bought it because of the brand and for the fat it had a good selection of PCI-E and older PCI slots on it. Something that getting harder to find these days. There are some people that still use PCI audio cards and or PCI SATA Raid cards. Another thing was it is on the list of Motherboards that work well with certain competing operating systems to the Windows and Linux platforms, the one from the fruity company. The only thing I wish is that it supported SLI. I don't use MAD/ATI graphics cards so the Crossfire solution is not for me. The SLI variant was jsut out of my price range and was simply not available anywhere. In the end its a great darn Motherboard and very stable.
B**X
Solid and dependable no frills board
My home server's motherboard recently bit the dust (Z68 chipset), and I was in search of something to replace it. Anyone who is familiar with tech knows that prices drop exponentially as it is replaced by new tech. What you forget is that it's an inverted bell curve. Towards the three or four year mark, as parts become more scarce, and prices go up exponentially. These parts are no longer being manufactured, but are still in use in many homes. So both new and old parts are scarce.I searched for a long time to find a board with similar capabilities to the Z68 that didn't cost more than a brand new current generation Z170 board. It's a little ridiculous to see four year old boards going for $200+. Supply and demand in action, folks. I was super happy to have found this board on Amazon, and reasonably priced too! This board doesn't have a ton of features, as the B75 chipset was designed more for office use.As this was for use in a home server, the number of SATA ports was important to me. And this board comes with a whopping 6 ports, which is fantastic! Only one of the ports is SATA3, which you probably want to reserve for the OS. The other ports are all SATA2, but for a server access speed is probably bottlenecked by your network anyway.One oddity is that I was unable to change my memory speed. I run this with a i2500 (non-K, locked) CPU, so I'm not sure if it is because the motherboard is incapable of changing memory speeds with a locked CPU. I've been building PCs for two decades, so either the BIOS interface is poorly designed in such a way that makes this hard to do, or this is simply not possible with the B75 chipset. My previous Z68 chipset allowed my to scale RAM speeds independently of the CPU.
K**Y
Works great - but no overclocking options
This is a nice, economical motherboard for old Socket 1155 cpus. I'm using this with an old Core i7 2600K cpu. I was hoping there would be at least some minor overclocking options, but there is nothing that a "K" series cpu can really use. Other than that, this motherboard has a lot of nice features, such as USB 3.0, dual video card support and 4 memory slots. Having only 1 Sata3 port is strange, but not really a con for me, since I have a TB SSD running on this, combined with a 2TB spinning disk. Works great with Windows 10 - I never needed the driver CD at all. So overall I'm happy, but would have liked to have a least some minor overclocking options, such as running my 2600K at 4.0 Ghz.
P**T
Check DDRAM slot carefully
I own one from Amazon. However, the DDRAM slot 3 and 4 do not work. If you buy it, let's check those 4 DDRAM slot to make sure it work. By the way, it's good to perform with that price.
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