MSI Z77A-GD65 Gaming In The Box

Products aimed at the gaming crowd are draped in PR and have to be visually striking.  Along with this should be a sense that the gamer is being looked after, and that they are getting more for their money, in terms of features and support.  So when you offer access to specific forums and support admins when something goes wrong, that is great – but also there is an element of camaraderie for competitions between other brands.  Part of the way to gain this mindset is to give more stuff to the user, either free or with what they purchase.  As part of a gaming product, I would want extras themed in the overall style, but not too cheesy. 

In the Z77A-GD65 Gaming, we have:

User Guide
Installation Guide
Driver CD
MSI Gaming Door Sign
Four SATA Cables
Rear IO Shield
Flexi-SLI Connector
Voltage Read-point attachments
M-Connectors

Even though we are dealing with a sub $200 motherboard, the kit in the GD65 Gaming is incredibly light. By virtue of not having an extra USB 3.0 port on board we do not get an extra USB 3.0 panel included, like on the Gigabyte Z77X-UD5H.  Back in the review of the UD5H I criticized it for not having a rigid SLI connector, and I could say the same for the MSI here, but various MSI GPUs have heatpipes that block rigid connectors, so a flexi-connector makes sense.

MSI Z77A-GD65 Gaming Overclocking

Note: Ivy Bridge does not overclock like Sandy Bridge.  For a detailed report on the effect of voltage on Ivy Bridge (and thus temperatures and power draw), please read Undervolting and Overclocking on Ivy Bridge.

Experience with MSI Z77A-GD65 Gaming

The MSI overclocking experience is always a little odd.  As a general rule they have one automatic setting (which either does or does not work) and the manual settings are either a gamble in the OS or a mire in the BIOS.  The GD65-Gaming fits into this rule, and I have a feeling that all MSI motherboards will fit into this rule until the BIOS is organized or more automatic overclocking options are offered.  ASUS offers 3-4, Gigabyte offer 3-4, ASRock offers 6-10, MSI offers one – that is a big discrepancy.

Our overclocking experience with the Gaming was a little crazy.  For various reasons we are using a new i7-3770K CPU, and the performance of this CPU seems to be very poor, failing to hit even 4.5 GHz on the Z77A-GD65 Gaming.  This could be either CPU or BIOS issues. Nevertheless, our overclocking experiences are detailed below.

Methodology:

Our standard overclocking methodology is as follows.  We select the automatic overclock options and test for stability with PovRay and OCCT to simulate high-end workloads.  These stability tests aim to catch any immediate causes for memory or CPU errors.

For manual overclocks, based on the information gathered from previous testing, starts off at a nominal voltage and CPU multiplier, and the multiplier is increased until the stability tests are failed.  The CPU voltage is increased gradually until the stability tests are passed, and the process repeated until the motherboard reduces the multiplier automatically (due to safety protocol) or the CPU temperature reaches a stupidly high level (100ºC+). Our test bed is not in a case, which should push overclocks higher with fresher (cooler) air.

Automatic Overclock:

Automatic overclock options come from OC Genie, which is enabled either via the Control Center (in OS), in the BIOS (OC Genie mode), or phyiscally with the button.  Unfortunately each one provides different results.

The OC Genie via Control Center method applied a 4.2 GHz overclock on all cores as well as jumping the memory to XMP but back a strap (2133 instead of 2400).  In this mode we recorded a load voltage of 1.256 volts in the OS, a peak temperature of 81C during OCCT and a score of 1530.96 in PovRay.

The OC Genie Mode via the BIOS was fairly basic, applying only MultiCore Turbo (39x on all cores), and did not touch the memory.  This gave a load voltage of 1.256 volts, a peak temperature of 75C during OCCT and a score of 1421.96 in PovRay.

The last method, physically depressing the button, reacted similarly to the Control Center method, giving a 4.2 GHz overclock on all cores and a memory bump.  Load voltage was registered as 1.248 volts, giving a peak temperature of 83C and a score of 1535.10 in PovRay.

Manual Overclock:

Here's where things get a little interesting.  For various reasons, we are using an untested, different 3770K CPU to previous reviews.  Normally I would start this testing at 4.4 GHz and 1.1 volts, something the three 3770K CPUs that have crossed my path (only one for reviewing) over the past 12 months have all done.  In a real world situation explaining how varied CPUs are, this CPU, in the GD65 Gaming, behaved very different.  In fact, we had to start at 4.0 GHz at 1.1 volts, then perform our normal testing.  The results are as follows.

For 4.0 GHz (40x100), we needed 1.100 volts in the BIOS which gave 1.088 volts at load.  OCCT gave 62C and PovRay scored 1465.55.

For 4.1 GHz (41x100), we needed 1.125 volts in the BIOS which gave 1.112 volts at load.  OCCT gave 66C and PovRay scored 1497.88.

For 4.2 GHz (42x100), we needed 1.175 volts in the BIOS which gave 1.160 volts at load.  OCCT gave 68C and PovRay scored 1527.51.

For 4.3 GHz (43x100), we needed 1.225 volts in the BIOS which gave 1.216 volts at load.  OCCT gave 70C and PovRay scored 1575.73.

For 4.4 GHz (44x100), we needed 1.300 volts in the BIOS which gave 1.288 volts at load.  OCCT gave 81C and PovRay scored 1603.28.

4.5 GHz was not stable - at 1.325 volts the CPU was reaching 95C during PovRay, getting very hot very quickly. I was unwilling to push it any further.

MSI Z77A-GD65 Gaming Software Test Setup, Power Consumption, POST Time
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  • IanCutress - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    The x8/x8 + x4 vs. x8/x4/x4 difference will only showcase for those that need the PCIe slots, and I hope I have pointed this out in every review I have written. The x8 requirement for SLI will definitely feature in my future reviews, and I will be testing it on Haswell for you.

    After speaking with MSI, they *will* (because I'll hunt them down) be updating their website to make it more obvious to users. A lot of reviews will just go to the back end and copy/paste of the specifications rather than going through them like we try to do, to see where reality meets purpose. In recent months I have found a few glaring errors with both websites and manuals (!).

    Ian
  • Sunstorm - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    Many thanks Ian. The quality of the reviews here, as well as interactions like this between commentators and the authors are what really make you guys stand out as pretty much the best tech site out there, in my opinion. I'm glad that I have potentially flagged up this SLI issue that has not come up before.
  • WeaselITB - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    Wow, kudos on this. I'm not really in the market for a new motherboard (and I'm more of a ROG fan, anyway), but this sort of interaction is exactly why I keep reading Anandtech. Awesome.

    -Weasel
  • just4U - Thursday, April 18, 2013 - link

    Realtek Sound?

    I noticed the SoundBlaster Cinema Sticker there yet it says Onboard sound is Realtek. Is it software emulation like what you see out of Asus? Or like Gigabyte's Killer series where it really is a SoundBlaster chip?
  • IanCutress - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    Software Emulation; the Soundblaster Cinema software package is part of software stack, and enabled it by default. We had to disable it to run our RMAA audio tests properly as it interfered and raised an interchannel leakage error.

    Ian
  • just4U - Wednesday, April 24, 2013 - link

    Such a shame.. MSI, use the real thing ok? That goes double for you Asus. Doesn't have to be SoundBlaster either but come on these are supposed to be a step above.
  • benbenkr - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    Why did you guys not test DPC latency on this board?
    Seriously, DPC latency is like one of the -->MOST<-- important thing to test given how much BS software which comes with all the motherboards these days.
  • IanCutress - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    DPC Latency is on page 6, under System Benchmarks (http://anandtech.com/show/6902/6). It's a quick test and there are people who want the info, so we are happy to provide the extra data point. Some boards fail this test spectacularly, so it's good to get onto the manufacturers to fix it.
  • tech6 - Friday, April 19, 2013 - link

    Just another cynical marketing attempt to extract more money from the gaming community. Raise the price, make it black, put some cool graphics on it a loud contrasting color and call it a day.
  • Lucian2244 - Saturday, April 20, 2013 - link

    Isn't that how every business work?

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