Gigabyte B550 Aorus Master Review

Gigabyte B550 Aorus Master Preview

Introduction

There are many different takes on the B550 chipset and with the Gigabyte Aorus range we have three different takes, in the form of the Aorus Pro AX ITX, Aorus Pro ATX and this particular review, the B550 Aorus Master.

We’ve always liked the cut down chipsets and they bring a lot of the performance of their bigger siblings to the party, but for a greatly reduced entry fee. In fact the only area you’re usually losing out on is the amount of high bandwidth devices you can install. Let’s be honest though, most of us have one quick M.2 drive, one GPU and after that the regular set of connectivity will suffice. If you want a motherboard into which you can install three PCI Express 4.0 drives to run your Threadripper 3990X then you probably have enough money that you won’t be staring down the barrel of the B550 chipset. But if, like the rest of us, your PC budget is always constrained by the need to have food and shoes, then you might want a more affordable PCB around which to base your system.

In the Gigabyte range the Aorus Master is comfortably the most expensive, with a MSRP of £300, compared to the £195 of the Pro or £185 of the ITX Pro, so you need to make sure that you desire all it can give you. Speaking of which, let’s run over the specifications and imagery before we install our Ryzen 9 3900X and find out whether it is worth its salt.

Technical Specifications and Fan Headers

The B550 might be a theoretically cut down version of the X570 chipset, but looking at the features on this Aorus Master we’re struggling to find an area in which it’s lacking. We have high bandwidth from USB 3.2 Gen2 ports. It still has PCI Express 4.0 on board. Whilst PCI Express 4.0 doesn’t make a lot of difference to your GPU, even an RTX 2080 Ti, it has a profound effect upon the transfer rates of a suitable M.2 drive, and fast transfer rates make your whole system feel much more responsive. Like a water boatman instead of a slug. Networking finds both the Intel WiFi 6 802.11AX that dominated the X570 releases, with 2.5G LAN for your home networking needs, or just the needs of those of you with jealousy-inducing internet connections.

That’s the basics out of the way. We know you’re keen to see it in the flesh so let’s see how many fan headers you get and then we’ll move on.

Gigabyte B550 Aorus Master Preview  

Keeping your system cool is vital to getting smooth and consistent performance, especially as we move into the summer months. Well, OC3D is British so the summer month. But we’re sure those of you in California or Australia will appreciate the amount of fan headers available on the Aorus Master.

Gigabyte B550 Aorus Master PreviewÂ