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GIGABYTE Z77X Owners/Discussion/Information/Support Thread and Club (UD5H, UD3H, D3H, and ALL)

740K views 7K replies 624 participants last post by  sixor 
#1 ·
Welcome guys since some of you already own boards or will very soon I figured I would start this club now.

Official GIGABYTE Z77X Owners Club!
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Here is GIGABYTE's Z77 Microsite: MicroSite

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Some Previews:
Z77X-UD5H Preview- by Me
Z77X-UD3H Unboxing by ZenEffect
Z77X-UD3H preview By turn and burn

Z77X-D3H Unboxing

Subzero OC Results:
6.6ghz SPI 1M with UD3H
6.5ghz SPI 32M with G1 Sniper 3
3000+MHz memory 16GB with 4DIMMs by coolalr
3000MHz with 2.8ghz stable 16Gb with 4 DIMMs by Me
Mad22 UD3H OC with 116BLCk and 2800mhz memory

Latest BIOS at Tweaktown forums

If you need help please post, i will update this thread a bit as launch gets closer. If you have questions or issues please post them here.
 
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#2 ·
That Sniper,
not in Aus yet :*(
 
#3 ·
^^Soon to be a serious wealth of knowledge. Sin is the best. I will be getting my hands on one of these eventually. Looking forward to reading up.
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#4 ·
I'll be in this soon. Waiting to sell my P67-UD7 and pick up the Z77X-UD5 Wifi model as soon as it's available.
 
#11 ·
Sorry, to many open tabs, thought I was in the AMD 7800 club. Nah we call a graphics card a card and a motherboard a board here in South Africa. I need the measurements of the graphics card, the Windforce 3x cooler as far as I know is the same size across Gigabyte's AMD/Nvidia range and on the 680 the length is 270mm so 280mm for the 7870 is just ridiculous. Sorry this is a little off topic.
 
#13 ·
Hey sin im debating between ud5h and d3h, i wont ever use more than one GPU but im concerned about the via audio the d3h has and for its ability to handle constant high overclocks 24/7. so the question is the via audio good? and can the d3h handle a 24/7 high overclock in the 4.6 to 4.8 range? will it last as long? im probably gonna get ud5h for the longer lasting parts(presumably by me)
 
#14 ·
Quote:
Originally Posted by ivymaxwell View Post

Hey sin im debating between ud5h and d3h, i wont ever use more than one GPU but im concerned about the via audio the d3h has and for its ability to handle constant high overclocks 24/7. so the question is the via audio good? and can the d3h handle a 24/7 high overclock in the 4.6 to 4.8 range? will it last as long? im probably gonna get ud5h for the longer lasting parts(presumably by me)
Sound is perfect,better then Realtek for sure.
I running 4.8 GHZ , 24/7 in ambient temperatures +33C without any problem.
As I also no need this additional "bits and pcs" D3H(X) is right choice.
 
#15 ·
BTW when you get your board I am sure you will use a 2600K or 2500K these boards work better with Ivy, just FYI it likes to hard reset everything you restart with Sandy. I reported it and it should get fixed soon. At least on the UD5H. Hard reset means it will shut down fully and start right back up, no issues. Except when you OC it might say OC fail and then show that you are currently running at your OC and then need you to enter BIOS and hit F10 lol, sandy sucks. lol Wierd thing is this doesn't happen with ivy.
 
#16 ·
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sin0822 View Post

Ultra Durable 4 is Ultra Durable 3 lol, it just shows off more features they put in to reduce RMAs, which other manufacturers do not put in all those things.
Out of curiosity, what are said features?
smile.gif
I still haven't pulled the trigger on a new board yet, convince me to go with Gigabyte if you're bored
tongue.gif
(I've had good experiences with their 880 series AMD boards and P45 series Intel boards in the past)
 
#17 ·
Just got my board
wink.gif


450
 
#20 ·
Quote:
Originally Posted by staryoshi View Post

Out of curiosity, what are said features?
smile.gif
I still haven't pulled the trigger on a new board yet, convince me to go with Gigabyte if you're bored
tongue.gif
(I've had good experiences with their 880 series AMD boards and P45 series Intel boards in the past)
Well the fiberglass in the PCB reduces humidity damage, in certain regions of the world where boards are sold there are a very high numbers of RMAs due to humidity, the fiberglass PCb is a bit more expensive but accounts for it.

2oz PCB also isn't something normally done. I know ROG boards do have this, but the rest of the mainstream asus lineup might not, it is expensive b/c of price of copper, but it also allows you to not heatsink some MOSFETs like on the UD3H.

The Anti-static (ESD) ICs are added onto the USB ports, as are one fuse per port (the fuses allow the high current output to charge the new ipad for instance(which requires 3x USB spec, and gigabyte provides this and proved it)) they also allow one port to go down and not all ports ont eh same fuse like MSI does , there actually are ICs placed so that they can protect components in case of a shock of you discharging into a USB device. Like if you were to plug in a device with a short in it into an MSI back panel, 4 of your USB ports would go down, but on a gigabyte board it would take out that single port and no more.

The Anti-surge IC is a small IC placed on the input from the 24-pin connector which will take a hit and allow operation if your PSu decides to crap out.

Those features weren't advertised in Ultra Durable 3 but are in Ultra Durable 4, ultra durable 4 however does include everyone of ultra durable 3, just called different things like high-temp protection is low-RDS ON MOSFETs for all switching power supplies, with the 2 OC copper, and the japanes caps, the power failure is dual BIOS and the anti-surge, just named different on the front end. .
Quote:
Originally Posted by jivenjune View Post

Just got my board
wink.gif

450
Very nice man!!!!!!! CONGRATS!
Quote:
Originally Posted by delow View Post

Does Lucid Virtu really give a boost in frame rates like in this video?
Yes it does.
Quote:
Originally Posted by dartuil View Post

hello ,
is the boot loop issue fixed on z77?
want the z77x-d3h
tongue.gif
Yes. It is fixed.
smile.gif
 
#23 ·
okay yea MVp wont install without first iGPU and dGPU drivers. BUT iGPU drivers wont install unless the iGPU is enabled.

Go into BIOS change the iGPU to enable, and change Init Display First to iGFX and then plug into the iGPU output, then go into windows and install the iGPU(Intel VGA) driver and then the MVp can be installed
smile.gif
.

I think iGPU is enabled but it turns itself off when a dGPU is detected unless you say iGFX should be displayed before PEG0 and then you need to plug into the iGPU. you can also just take out your GPu and install them, then put your GPU back in and install MVP. of course I just did it the way i said it first.
 
#25 ·
Hmmm... Has anyone been able to get Lucid MVP working with a Sandy Bridge processor? I haven't been able to, and I've been tweaking in the EUFI for awhile. I was able to get my monitor to display (not using DVI output -- still can't manage to get that to work for whatever reason), but Lucid MVP still comes up with an error. Intel drivers and Nvidia drivers are both installed, and the IGPU is enabled in EUFI.
 
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