TheOverclocker Issue 36 | Page 33

warrant its presence and associated cost implication. More about PCI-Express, the Gaming G1 has metal reenforcements on either side of the slots which supposedly prevent any damage that may arise due to installing heavy and/or large graphics card. Moreover, this re-enforcement ensures that upon removal of any graphics card, there’s reduced risk of damaging the slot. How often that happens is anybody’s guess, but it is a feature that is there and at the very least works well aesthetically. Moving on to more substantive features, you’ll find that there are two M.2 connectors, each supporting M.2 drives of up to 80mm in length. Both of these will have at their disposal the full 32Gbps as offered by a PCIExpress 3.0 x4 solution. These are naturally wired to the PCH which has copious amounts of PCI-E segments as per Z170 standard. Not only can you use these drives simultaneously, they may be used in a RAID configuration as well offering insanely high throughput figures and performance for storage. Then finally as purely a tick-box feature we have SATA-Express support for at least three hard drives. As I’ve stated in previous reviews, I’ve yet to see a SATA-Express SSD and having spoken to some storage vendors. It doesn’t look as if this standard will go anywhere at all. That aside, you may connect up to 10 SATA 6Gbps drives to the motherboard, which in total should be more than enough for any usage scenario. When it comes to storage connectivity, the G1 has you covered. For those looking at the 2.5” INTEL 750 drive for instance. GIGABYTE includes an adapter which will turn either one of your M.2 ports into a U.2 (SFF-8639) Issue 36 | 2015 The OverClocker 33