Installation
We used our robust and trusted vertical open chassis for our test rig which has plenty of room, so installation was easy. For cooling we used the Thermaltake 360 Ultra AIO cooler mounted with 3 x Corsair RX120 RGB cooling fans.
We also installed a Crucial T700 1TB PCIE Gen5 SSD, 32GB of Patriot Viper Gaming Xtreme 5 DDR5-7200 ram, and of course the GeForce RTX 4080 Super as well.
BIOS
There are two BIOS modes on the Gigabyte X870 AORUS Elite WiFi7 motherboard … Easy Mode and Advanced Mode. The Easy Mode allows you to monitor all the system status on this page such as fan speeds, CPU temperatures, memory and processor speeds, as well as voltages.
Users can also configure other settings for CPU, chipset, storage and NVMe, as well as onboard devices such as USB, TPM, onboard devices and more.
In the Advanced Mode, there are a lot of options available for tweaking your processor, memory speeds and more. Voltages for memory and processor can also be adjusted here.
During our tests, we left everything on AUTO/Default. Although the motherboard was able to support both EXPO and XMPO memory modules, at the time of testing we didn’t have any EXPO memory on hand, so we decided to use XMP memory for our tests. We set the ram at DDR5-7200 speeds. Check out Gigabyte’s QVL/download page here for more information.
3 comments
Sry i cant agree on this review because only 2 NVME SSDs are usable when you want to use the PCI-Express 5×16 Slot for the graphic card.
If all NVME SSDs are used then the graphic cards runs with 8x instead of 16x speed…
True … this board uses the X870 chipset which has less useable PCIE lanes. If you want more PCIE lanes, then go for the X870E boards.
but still a KO critria für AM5 others like Asrock at least 3 NVME are usable or like the Asrock X870€ Phantom Gaming WIFI even 5 NVME are useable(1 though PCI-E 3.0×2) .
I