Gigabyte GA-7ZXR (Rev. 2.2) Socket-A KT133A ATX
by Mike Andrawes on June 7, 2001 2:34 AM EST- Posted in
- Motherboards
Final Words
Gigabyte probably could have done themselves a favor by giving this board a different name to help distinguish it from their KT133 solution more clearly. Nevertheless, the name certainly doesn’t hurt what this board is capable of doing. The GA-7ZXR (2.2) is not the best KT133A board we have looked at, but it’s definitely among the top. Performance is definitely something Gigabyte should work on to make sure it performs up to par with other KT133A boards out there, but the biggest problem with the GA-7ZXR (2.2) is the time of release. Released in March, the GA-7ZXR is two months late compared to some of the best KT133A motherboards, and it might just be too little too late after all, especially with AMD 760 and KT266 boards hitting the streets already.
Nevertheless, if we let the board stand on its own merits, it’s clear that Gigabyte has put a lot of effort into the GA-7ZXR (2.2) and indeed has made the board very competitive thanks to excellent features and stability. The addition of the multiplier ratio settings is certainly curcial, but it’s the ability for 1MHz increments for FSB speed that truly make this board a good choice for overclockers. Gigabyte also provides reasonable ranges for voltage tweaking of the CPU, I/O, and AGP. Of course the added flexibility provided by the onboard Promise IDE RAID controller is more than welcome.
All in all, the GA-7ZXR (2.2) is a very nice KT133A motherboard, that could have captured much more of the market had it been released earlier.
How it Rates
AnandTech Motherboard Rating |
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Rating
(x/10)
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Performance
|
4.5
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Price
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5.0
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Stability
|
8.0
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Features
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8.5
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Layout
|
7.5
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Availability
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6.5
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Documentation & Software Bundle
|
7.0
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Overall Rating - not an average Click here to find out why |
8.0
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