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Gigabyte really went the extra mile in terms of their passive chipset cooling on the board. They
introduced their patented Silent Pipe technology a few years ago which used a copper thermal pipe
to cool the chipset and power MOSFET down. The GA-P35-DQ6 has a new edition of the SilentPipe
technology. As we'll see in the Setup page of the review, the board shows an excellent thermal
temperature even while under load. The SilentPipe surrounds the CPU Socket on three sides, with
solid state transistors on the top and right side of the socket. No issues with installing the
CPU with either a normal stock cooler or a after-market cooler. One issue with the cooling on the
board is there is a heatsink on the back of the board, meaning that the use of an after-market
cooling solution that requires a special back plate to be mounted may not be possible on this
board.
The 24-pin power connector is on the bottom right corner of the board meaning that there is an
easy time routing the power cable to the connector. The 8-pin power connector is on the top of the
board on top of the SilentPipe cooling system. A 4-pin Molex connector is on the board next to
the 24-pin power connector. The headers are located on the left side of the board next to the
blue SATA ports. One small issue I have with most motherboard manufacturers is the placement of
the memory DIMM slots near to the first PCI Express slot, meaning that removing memory may require
removing the video card first. Gigabyte's board has the same issue with a long video card such as
the NVIDIA GeForce 8800 Ultra blocking all four DIMM slots when inserted. |