Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd
Founded in 1986, Taiwanese tech company Gigabyte was one of the more prominent motherboard manufacturers for the IBM PC and its compatibles during the DOS era. They are known for their high performance, stability, and depending on CPU era, for decent overclocking options.
GA-306Year: ? |
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GA-386LYear: 1989 The Gigabyte GA-386L was a 386DX motherboard with a maximum memory of 8 MB via up to 72 (!) 1Mx1 Samsung KM41C1000AP-8 80ns (or similar 128 KB) 18-DIP DRAM chips. 8 of these are used for parity (one in each bank of 9), so 64 sockets x 128 KB = 8,192 KB. The board supported 80386 CPUs up to 25 MHz, and had a math coprocessor socket for an Intel 80387 or compatible. This motherboard is similar to the one I used in my 386 Revival Review, with the same chipset and probably the same BIOS. |
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GA-386PSYear: 1989 This 386DX board supports a maximum of 8 MB RAM in its 2 SIMM banks. It also has a fairly unique 32-bit cache slot (believed to be cache, not main memory). |
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GA-486AM/SYear: 1995 A 486 motherboard with a combination of ISA and PCI expansion slots. It supports CPUs from the 486SX/DX up to DX/4 100, including P24T and P24D. It also supports Cyrix, AMD and UMC (U5-S 486) CPUs. Maximum memory is 128 MB. User manual BIOS Flash Utility
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GA-486IMYear: 1994 A 486 motherboard with a great combination of ISA, VLB and PCI expansion slots. It supports CPUs from the 486SX/DX up to DX/4 100. It also supports Cyrix, AMD and UMC CPUs. Maximum memory is 128 MB. User manual BIOS Flash Utility
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GA-486VS / GA-486VFYear: 1994 A 486 motherboard with a combination of ISA and VLB expansion slots. It supports CPUs from the 486SX/DX from 25 MHz up to DX/4 100, Cyrix Cx486SX/SX2/DX/DX2/DX4 and AMD Am486SX/SX2/DX/DX2/DX4. L2 cache can be anywhere from 64 KB up to 512 KB. The VS variant only has 30-pin SIMM slots, the VF variant only has 72-pin SIMMs. Both have a maximum of 128 MB. It also supports Cyrix, AMD and UMC CPUs. |
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GA-5486ALYear: 1995 The GA-5486AL supports the following CPUs:
CPU speeds supported are from 25 MHz up to 133 MHz, with PCI bus speeds from 20 to 33 MHz. It has an onboard L2 cache of 128 KB, 256 KB or 512 KB, with burst mode support. The maximum amount of installed main memory is 64 MB. Tested maximum bus transfer rates with this board:
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GA-5AXYear: 1998 One of the best Super Socket 7 motherboards ever. The GA-5AX was a similar board spec-wise to the Asus P5A, but The GA-5AX didn't suffer from stability problems above 500 MHz that the Asus did. Supported CPUs are Intel Pentium 100-200 MHz, Pentium MMX 166-233 MHz, AMD K5 PR133 and PR166, AMD K6 166-300, AMD K6-2 300, AMD K6-3 400, AMD K6-2+ and K6-3+, Cyrix/IBM 6x86 (CPU date code must be after 605) PR166, Cyrix 6x86 MX PR166-PR266, Cyrix MII PR300, and IDT C6 200-266. CPU voltages range from 2.0V up to 3.5V, although by default the BIOS auto-detects the CPU and sets the correct voltage accordingly. FSB speeds range from 66 MHz up to 100 MHz on a Rev 3.0 board or up to 140 MHz on Rev 4.1 and later. Core multipliers available are 1.5x, 2x, 2.5x, 3x, 3.5x, 4x, 4.5x, 5x and 5.5x on Rev 4.1 and lower, and up to 6.5x on Rev 5.2. Note, however, that the Aladdin V chipset does not permit decoupling the FSB from the other buses so they must all run at the same speed as what you set the FSB to - this can lead to stability problems with some cards when going over 100 MHz. 512 KB L2 cache onboard. The AGP slot on this board is 2x, so supports all AGP 1x and AGP 2x graphics cards. The board has two USB slots on the back panel, PS/2 keyboard and mouse sockets, two 9-pin serial ports and 1 parallel port. The two IDE channels (supporting up to 4 drives) can run hard disks up to ATA/66. Board revisions 4.1 and 5.2 have 5 PCI slots and 2 ISA slots. Older revisions have 4 PCI slots and 3 ISA. The key difference between board revision 4.1 and 5.2 is that v4.1 got the ALi M1541/1543 "A1" revision, while the later v5.2 board got M1451 "B1". Typical period hardware used with this motherboard were: Fast AMD K6-2, K6-2+ and K6-III processors, sticks of double-sided PC133 SDRAM, nVidia TNT2 or GeForce 256, or from ATI their Rage 128GL or Rage 128 Pro (Fury). Going slightly ahead of this era, fitting an nVidia GeForce 2 GTS/Pro/Ultra/Ti is a great stable option. User manual |
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GA-586AL/APYear: 1994 CPU support: Intel Pentium 60 or 66 (P5T). |
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GA-586AMYear: 1995 |
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GA-586ASYear: ? |
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GA-586AT/xYear: ? |
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GA-586ATE/PYear: ? This board supports the Cyrix 6x86 P120+ CPU. BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586ATM/PYear: 1995 This board supports the Cyrix 6x86 P120+, P150+ and P166+ CPUs. BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586ATSYear: ? This board supports the Cyrix 6x86 P120+ up to P166+ CPUs. BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586ATVYear: 1996 This board supports the Cyrix 6x86 P120+ up to P166+ CPUs. BIOS Binary (Unknown Version) BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586AVSYear: ? |
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GA-586HXYear: ? BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586ID/IMYear: ? The ID board came in standard revision 1 and 2, and advanced revision 1 and 2. ID BIOS Revisions:
IM BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586IP/ISYear: ? BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586S2 MMXYear: ? Supports Intel, AMD K6 and Cyrix MII CPUs. The board is able to auto-detect the CPU voltage. |
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GA-586SGYear: ? |
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GA-586STX and STX2Year: 1997 512 KB L2 cache onboard. COAST slot for cache expansion. With a bios update (available on support http://www.gigabyte.com.au/Motherboard/GA-586STX2#support-dl) the motherboard should also support the 400MHz AMD K6-2: 66Mz bus and core multiplier remap 2.0x = 6.0x |
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GA-586SVXYear: ? BIOS Revisions:
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GA-586T2Year: ? |
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GA-586TX3Year: ? |
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GA-586VXYear: ? BIOS Revisions:
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GA-686BXYear: 1998 One of Gigabyte's first Slot 1 mainboards, and its first to use the 440BX chipset, the GA-686BX has a good combination of features, including support for EDO and non-EDO SDRAM, a Creative SB-Link header (designed to link a sound card running on your PCI bus to the mainboard [DMA and IRQ] to allow PCI sound cards to work under DOS "real mode"), and runs a 100 MHz Front Side Bus. It was designed to drive the Pentium II CPU ranging from 233 MHz up to 550 MHz, but later BIOS revisions extended this support to include Intel Pentium III “Katmai” (2.0V) 450 or “Coppermine” up to 600 MHz, and Intel Celeron “Mendocino". Around the time of the Pentium II, overclocking was being reigned in by Intel, with all chips from Katmai and upcoming socketed Celerons having overclock protection built-in to the chip. Multiplier locks were already prevalent, but this new technology would have the CPU check the front side bus, and if it exceeded the limit for that CPU, the CPU would not run. As such, there is little to no overclocking tweaks you can do with this board. There's a selection jumper for 66 or 100 MHz FSB, and four DIP switches to select the clock multiplier, ranging from 3x up to 5.5x. This means it can support CPU speeds from 200 MHz (66 MHz FSB x 3x multiplier) up to 550 MHz (100 MHz FSB x 5.5x multiplier). There is no CPU voltage adjustment in any BIOS revision. The BIOS does have a lot of memory performance tweaks you can make, however. Strangely, I put a Pentium III 800 MHz into this board with BIOS version F2A, and it worked! It just ran it at 600 MHz. Overall, the combination of AGP 2x, PCI and ISA slots mean this board is a nice one to use for retro DOS and Windows 95/98 gaming, and with the latest BIOS version (F2A dated 25th April 2001), gives a performance range equivalent to a Super Socket 7 PC running an AMD K6/233 up to a K6-2/450. |