Pipe Dreams: Six P35-DDR3 Motherboards Compared

Gigabyte GA-P35C-DS3R

Two additional DDR3-capable boards arrived that also support DDR2 memory. Gigabyte's entry appears to support DDR2 primarily with the DDR3 upgrade option, and will be benchmarked in both DDR3 and DDR2 P35 Express motherboard reviews.

Features Overview

Boards that support multiple memory types are usually limited to the low-cost upgrade market, but Gigabyte wants to push the envelope with its GA-P35C-DS3R. Starting with its all-solid-capacitor construction, Gigabyte adds a more-than-adequate 6-phase power regulator. The second move is likely a tribute to the board's Pentium-D backwards compatibility, as this board is actually designed to be a highly flexible overclocking monster!

The GA-P35C-DS3R provides exceptional support for up two seven expansion cards, but only one PCI-Express x16 graphics card. None of the onboard devices are blocked by a single graphics card of nearly any size, and memory slots are located far enough towards the top of the board to prevent DIMM latch to graphics card interference problems. As to the "missing feature" of a second graphic slot, informed buyers know that the x4 pathways found on the second x16 slot of other boards are simply inadequate for use with high-performance graphics cards.

Four DDR2 slots indicate that this board was designed primarily to support older memory, while two DDR3 slots are the fewest needed for dual-channel capability.

Most cable connectors are located perfectly for traditional case designs, with the four-pin ATX12V connector at the board's top edge, the 24-pin ATX connector near the top of the front edge, a Floppy connector above center at the front edge, a Front Panel Audio connector adjacent to the rear audio jacks, and eight SATA ports near the bottom of the board. These will allow easy cable reach to the power supply, a mid-bay floppy drive, upper or lower mounted front panel audio jacks, and up to eight Serial ATA drives in lower bays.

The only design complaint concerns the Ultra ATA connector, which will force builders to stretch a wide cable over or around many components, even SATA cables, in order to reach an upper-bay optical drive. The board has a wide swath of unused space where this connector could have been placed.

Gigabyte uses standard passive chipset sinks for its GA-P35C-DS3R, with the Northbridge sink just a little larger than traditional designs. The Northbridge remains very cool in the vicinity of an Intel reference-design CPU cooler, making the oversized monsters seen on "high-end" boards appear even more ridiculous.

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Gigabyte GA-P35C-DS3R (Revision 1.01)
NorthbridgeIntel P35 GMCH
SouthbridgeIntel ICH9R
Voltage RegulatorSix Phases
BIOSF2O (5/11/2007)
266.7 MHz (FSB1066)266.7 MHz (+0.0%)
Connectors and Interfaces
Onboard1x PCIe x163x PCIe x13x PCI4x USB 2.0 (2 ports per connector)1x Floppy1x Ultra ATA8x Serial ATA 3.0Gb/s8x Serial ATA 3.0Gb/s1x Front Panel Audio1x S/P-DIF Out1x CD Audio In2x Fan 4 pins (CPU/System)2x Fan 3 pins (System)
IO panel2x PS2 (keyboard + mouse)1x Serial COM Port1x Parallel Port1x RJ-45 Network4x USB 2.02x Digital Audio Out (S/P-DIF Optical + Coaxial)6x Analog Audio (7.1 Channel + Mic-In + Line-In)
Mass Storage Controllers
Intel ICH9R6x SATA 3.0Gb/s (RAID 0,1,5,10)
GigaByte SATA2 (by JMicron)1x Ultra ATA-100 (2-drives)2x SATA 3.0Gb/s (RAID 0,1, JBOD)
Network
Realtek RTL8111B1x Gigabit LAN Connection
Audio
HDA (Azalia) Controller InterfaceRealtek ALC889A 8-Channel Codec

The scant few controllers of the GA-P35C-DS3R appear to be a move towards the low-cost upgrade market, but the added-in Serial ATA connector hints to the boards' "wolf in sheeps clothing" intent. Gigabyte also uses the more expensive raid-capable Intel ICH9R Southbridge rather than the lower cost "standard" ICH9, and even the premium ALC889A DTS-Connect and 8+2 channel multi-streaming audio codec described earlier for the upscale GA-P35T-DQ6.

Two digital audio outputs (coaxial plus optical) and six analog audio ports allow full use of audio functions.

Gigabyte clings to legacy connectors with PS/2 keyboard and mouse, parallel, and serial ports. One network and four USB ports bridge the gap between old and new technology, but all the new tech is found on the board's top side.

Thomas Soderstrom
Thomas Soderstrom is a Senior Staff Editor at Tom's Hardware US. He tests and reviews cases, cooling, memory and motherboards.
  • Dont get any biostar mobo, they all have capacitor problems in my experience.
    Reply
  • Gigabyte GA-P35C-DS3R support up to 4GB DDR3 memory. However, could 8GBs 2x4GB DDR3 modules be used as long as it is within the top 1333 limit on the board?
    Reply