Gigabyte GA-A55M-S2V Review
by Brendan van Varik on March 21, 2012 9:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
- Gigabyte
- Llano
- A55
Test Setup
Processor |
AMD A6-3650 (Llano) 4 Cores, 4 Threads, 2.6 GHz |
Motherboards | Gigabyte GA-A55M-S2V |
Cooling | Corsair H50 |
Power Supply | OCZ 1250W ZX Series Gold |
Memory | Patriot Memory 2x2 GB DDR3-2133 9-11-9 Kit |
Memory Settings | DDR3-1866 |
Video Cards | Sapphire 5850 1GB Xtreme |
Video Drivers | Catalyst 11.8 |
Hard Drive | Micron RealSSD C300 256GB |
Optical Drive | LG GH22NS50 |
Case | Dimastech Test Bed |
Operating System | Windows 7 64-bit |
SATA Testing | Micron RealSSD C300 256GB |
USB 2/3 Testing | Patriot 64GB SuperSonic USB 3.0 |
Power Consumption
Power consumption was tested on the system as a whole with a wall meter connected to the power supply, while in a single GPU configuration. This method allows us to compare the power management of the UEFI and the board to supply components with power under load, and includes typical PSU losses due to efficiency. These are the real world values that consumers may expect from a typical system (minus the monitor) using this motherboard.
CPU Temperatures
With most users’ running boards on purely default BIOS settings, we are running at default settings for the CPU temperature tests. This is, in our outward view, an indication of how well (or how adventurous) the vendor has their BIOS configured on automatic settings. With a certain number of vendors not making CPU voltage, turbo voltage or LLC options configurable to the end user, which would directly affect power consumption and CPU temperatures at various usage levels, we find the test appropriate for the majority of cases. This does conflict somewhat with some vendors' methodology of providing a list of 'suggested' settings for reviewers to use. But unless those settings being implemented automatically for the end user, all these settings do for us it attempt to skew the results, and thus provide an unbalanced 'out of the box' result list to the readers who will rely on those default settings to make a judgement.
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The Clownspotter - Sunday, July 1, 2012 - link
The power supply would ruin any board efficiency and stating the power consumption with a dedicated card makes little sense. Maybe Car reviewer now too, will show the mileage of a truck, towing a trailer. Funny but not a useful review.