Featured

Gigabyte H170-HD3 (LGA 1151) Motherboard Review

BIOS and Overclocking


Gigabyte have employed one of the more traditional BIOS interfaces which revolves around keyboard-driven menus and function keys. I’ve always preferred simpler BIOS designs to the more exuberant graphical alternatives as it’s quicker to find the right menu and manually tweak settings. On the first page, the Memory Intelligent Tweaker lists key variables including CPU temperature, BLCK, Vcore and BIOS version.

You can even view memory timings, the CPU ID and temperature per core. Although, this isn’t really that vital on an H170 motherboard.

The next section allows you to manually configure the memory multiplier and basic timing options. Please note, you can only set the RAM to a maximum of 2133MHz and there’s no support for XMP. However, inputting the correct frequency is very easy or you can simply rely on Auto settings.

Similarly, it’s possible to tweak the DRAM Voltage from 1.2V but this is a pretty pointless exercise due to the chipset’s bandwidth restrictions.

In a similar vein to memory alterations, the maximum CPU core ratio is 40, and I would recommend leaving everything on auto for optimal stock results.

Here, you can change the CPU’s Vcore, VCCIO and System Agent Voltage. Once again this might seem like a fruitless task given the locked multiplier. However, it can be beneficial to undervolt your CPU and attain lower temperatures. On the other hand, Skylake’s idle and load stock temperatures are fairly low so this might only be worth it if you enjoying tweaking with hardware.

The System Information tab is useful to find out the BIOS Version, BIOS ID, Model Name and change BIOS permissions.

Moving onto the BIOS Features tab which allows you change the boot priority, enable/disable Fast Boot and make other minor tweaks.

In the peripherals sections, it’s possible to set manually set the primary graphics slot, turn the Audio LED on or off and make a number of other adjustments.

In all honesty, I’d leave the Chipset tab on its default setup as there’s nothing here that really needs altering.

The Power Management screen is useful to alter which peripherals can wake up the system. Once again, I wouldn’t really change anything here unless you have very specific requirements.

The final page allows you load/save profiles, change the boot order and Load Optimized Defaults. Unlike the Z170 motherboards, having multiple profiles isn’t essential due to the lack of variables when using stock settings. Nevertheless, there’s no harm in its inclusion.

Overclocking 

As previously mentioned, Intel’s H170 chipset doesn’t support overclocking so all the tests were conducted using the i7-6700K’s stock frequency.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

John Williamson

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

CORSAIR VIRTUOSO RGB WIRELESS High–Fidelity Gaming Headset

Uncompromising sound quality: a matched pair of precisely tuned 50mm high-density Neodymium speaker drivers deliver…

22 hours ago

Razer Goliathus Extended Chroma 

Powered by Razer Chroma: With a full spectrum of 16.8 million color options Powered by…

22 hours ago

MSI 850W ATX Fully Modular Power Supply

80 PLUS GOLD CERTIFIED – An efficient power supply reduces energy consumption and heat load…

22 hours ago

Razer Kiyo – Streaming Camera with Ring Lighting 

Multi-Step Ring Light With adjustable lighting levels. Ring Light. Camera. Action. Forget setting up several…

23 hours ago

CORSAIR VIRTUOSO PRO Open Back Multiplatform Wired Gaming Headset

Hear What Matters: Open your world to a new audio experience tailor-made for streamers, gamers,…

23 hours ago

TeamGroup T-Force Z44A5 PCIe 4 2TB M.2 SSD Review

TeamGroup is one of the leading names for high-performance storage and memory, and with the…

23 hours ago