TheOverclocker Issue 21 | Page 10

Hardware Award GIGABYTE Z77X-UP7 ERP: $399.99 | Website: www.gigabyte.com Test Machine Intel Core i7 3770K Corsair Dominator Platinum 2666C10 Kingston HyperX 3K SSD GIGABYTE GV-N680OC-4GD Cooler Master M2 Silent Pro 1500W PSU Windows XP SP3/Windows 7 64-Bit SP1 I t’s never easy justifying why one should buy a $400 motherboard when a $150 one like the Z77X-UD3H does the job equally well. If you look back at that review, you’ll see that we loved that board and even to this day we still wonder how GIGABYTE ever managed to make any money 10 The OverClocker Issue 21 | 2012 of it if only because of the ridiculously low selling price. On the opposite end of the scale we have the Z77X-UP7. This one is the most expensive Z77 board from GIGABYTE and certainly the most expensive Z77 motherboard on the market period. For that however you get 4-way SLI support via PLX switching chips, but before you express your disappointment. Realize that should you use a single graphics card you’ll suffer no performance hit because of the latency involved with linking the PCI-Express hub directly to the switching chip first. On the UP7, the black primary PCI-Express slot links directly to the CPU so you’ll get maximum performance every time and all the time. The rest is your typical package, Bluetooth and WiFi connectivity, V-check points, Bclk and CPU multiplier on the fly adjustments. It’s great and we wouldn’t expect any less from GIGABYTE right now. So feature wise it’s packed. The BIOS though is more of what we’ve grown familiar with. with the UP5TH, UD3H and the like. It’s the familiar 3D BIOS with all the setting we’ve seen before. Oddly enough what we learned during this review is that, if you save a BIOS to disk with this board (and we suspect other GIGABYTE boards) not only is the BIOS file saved but the profile as well and the settings that were applied when said BIOS was