MSI P67A-GD55 review

This ATX board from MSI is rather expensive but has every feature a keen upgrader or overclocker could want.
Written By K.G. Orphanides
Published on 27 March 2011
Our rating
Reviewed price £129 inc VAT

At around £130, MSI’s P67A-GD55 costs almost twice as much as most of the LGA1155 motherboards we’ve reviewed, but has plenty of headers and expansion slots and a lot of overclocking options in. Its performance in our tests was fair, with an Overall score of 171.

MSI P67A-GD55 top down
A pair of PCI-E x16 slots can be used for either ATI CrossFireX or Nvidia SLI dual-graphics-card configurations, although the second slot runs at only x8. There are two PCI and two PCI-E x1 slots, too, although one of each would be blocked if you put a large graphics card into both PCI-E x16 slots. If you use only the true x16 slot for your graphics card, you’ll block one PCI-E x1 slot. Four memory slots can take up to 32GB of RAM, running at speeds of up to 2,133MHz. There are six SATA connectors: four SATA2 and three SATA3.
MSI P67A-GD55 ports
We were impressed by the sheer volume and variety of ports on the back panel. There are ten USB ports, two of which are USB3, a Firewire port, PS/2 port, six 3.5mm stereo audio ports, plus coaxial and optical S/PDIF audio outputs. Although the integrated audio processor is a standard Realtek ALC892, the motherboard comes with Creative’s THX TruStudio PRO audio software, which can process virtual surround sound and environmental gaming audio. There’s no integrated graphics support, though, so you’ll have to use a dedicated graphics card. Performance is decent with an Overall score of 171 in our benchmarks, but we’ve seen faster boards for less. If you’re keen on upgrading and overclocking, or if you need to connect a lot of USB devices, this could be the motherboard for you. The three-year warranty is another point in its favour. However, it’s very expensive, making the Asrock H67M-GE microATX board a better choice for most users. An early release version of the P67A-GD55 had a faulty SATA2 controller, like all Sandy Bridge boards. This has now been withdrawn and replaced with a practically identical fixed version. This fixed board is referred to as the B3 stepping version.

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