Gigabyte
Modell: G593-ZD2-AAX1
Elevate your data center's capabilities with the GIGABYTE G593-ZD2-AAX1, a powerhouse designed for AI and HPC workloads. The AMD-host, build-your-own path to a new H200 node: Gigabyte's G593-ZD2-AAX1 barebone carries the NVIDIA HGX H200 8-GPU baseboard, eight SXM GPUs at 141GB each, 1.1TB per node behind 900 GB/s NVSwitch, on a dual AMD EPYC 9004 host with 12-channel DDR5 and PCIe Gen5. A barebone configured to your CPUs, memory, and storage. Configured and shipped worldwide DDP by MillionMiner.
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This is the H200 build of the G593-ZD2 platform offered here as an H100 barebone, same Gigabyte chassis, same AMD host engineering, the higher-memory Hopper GPU. The honest way to position it is on two axes: why H200 over H100, and why this AMD barebone over the fixed H200 systems. Why H200 over the H100 twin. The platform is identical; the GPU is not. The NVIDIA HGX H200 baseboard carries eight SXM GPUs at 141GB of HBM3e each, 1,128GB per node against the H100 build's 640GB, with aggregate bandwidth approaching 38 TB/s, a full NVSwitch mesh at 900 GB/s per GPU, FP8 beyond 30 petaFLOPS, and MIG to as many as 56 instances. That 76 percent memory increase is the entire case: it pays for 70B-class full-precision fine-tuning within one node, long-context serving where KV cache eats memory, large-batch training, and any workload memory-bound on H100. Workloads that fit comfortably in 640GB do not need it and should take the H100 twin's economics; workloads that strain 640GB should step up here. Why the AMD barebone over the fixed H200 systems. A barebone ships with the platform-defining parts fixed, the HGX H200 baseboard, the chassis, power and cooling, and leaves the host open: you choose the EPYC SKUs, the memory population, and the storage rather than accepting a vendor bundle. Dual AMD EPYC 9004 on Zen 4 brings high core density and 12-channel DDR5 per socket, the widest memory bandwidth in its class, both of which matter for feeding eight GPUs. The rule this catalog applies everywhere holds, system memory at or above the 1.1TB GPU pool, and the barebone model means that memory is sized to the workload at quote rather than fixed. Against the fixed H200 systems here, the Lenovo estate node, the ASRock density node, the ASUS cluster-first node, and the Quanta serviceability barebone, this is the AMD-host, configure-your-own answer with EPYC bandwidth. The H200 decision, stated honestly. Choose this when you want a new H200 node on an AMD host built to your spec. Choose the Lenovo SR680a V3 for tier-one estate fit, the ASRock 6U8X for 6U density and economics, the ASUS N8-E11 for cluster-first one-NIC-per-GPU fabric, or the Quanta S7PH H200 for ODM in-rack serviceability. Step down to the G593-ZD2 H100 barebone when 640GB suffices, or up to the Blackwell systems when FP4 and the doubled fabric lead. MillionMiner models all of them and configures the open components on quote. Ordering and deployment. Hopper-class accelerators are subject to US export controls, and destination eligibility is confirmed in every quote alongside the configured CPUs, memory, storage, fabric plan, and warranty terms. Each system is tested before shipment and shipped worldwide DDP with duties handled, with hosting in MillionMiner's own data centers available as the deployment alternative.
New H200 capacity comes in several shapes in this catalog, and this is the one for buyers who want to specify the host rather than take a fixed bundle. The G593-ZD2-AAX1 is a barebone: it ships with the GPU complex and chassis decided, and leaves the CPUs, memory, and storage for you to configure. It is the H200 version of the same platform offered here as an H100 barebone, the higher-memory GPU on identical host engineering. The GPU complex is the Hopper memory flagship. The NVIDIA HGX H200 baseboard carries eight SXM GPUs at 141GB of HBM3e each, 1,128GB per node, every GPU joined at 900 GB/s through NVSwitch, with FP8 throughput beyond 30 petaFLOPS and MIG to as many as 56 instances. The extra memory over H100 is the reason to buy it: 70B-class full-precision fine-tuning in one node, long-context serving with real KV cache headroom, and memory-bound work. The host is the differentiator against the fixed H200 systems. Dual AMD EPYC 9004 processors on the Zen 4 generation bring high core counts and 12-channel DDR5 per socket, the wide memory bandwidth that keeps eight GPUs fed during preprocessing and data loading, with PCIe Gen5 throughout for fabric and storage. Because the platform ships as a barebone, MillionMiner configures the EPYC SKUs, memory population, and storage to your workload rather than to a catalog default. Configured and shipped worldwide DDP.
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This is the H200 twin of the G593-ZD2 H100 barebone, same AMD-host platform, the bigger-memory GPU. It carries the NVIDIA HGX H200 baseboard, eight SXM GPUs at 141GB of HBM3e each, 1.1TB per node behind 900 GB/s NVSwitch, with FP8 throughput beyond 30 petaFLOPS. The host is dual AMD EPYC 9004, 12-channel DDR5 and high core density on the Zen 4 generation, with PCIe Gen5 throughout. Because it ships as a barebone, you specify the CPUs, memory, and storage rather than accepting a fixed bundle. Configured and shipped worldwide DDP by MillionMiner.
Eight H200 SXM GPUs at 141GB each on NVSwitch at 900 GB/s, 30+ petaFLOPS of FP8, on a dual EPYC 9004 host. The Hopper memory flagship, configured your way.
GPU complex and chassis fixed, CPUs, memory, and storage open. The AMD, build-your-own answer among the catalog's fixed H200 systems.
1.1TB per node against the H100 twin's 640GB, a 76% increase. For 70B-class fine-tuning, long-context serving, and memory-bound work.
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Same platform, bigger GPU. Both are the same Gigabyte G593-ZD2 AMD-host barebone; this one carries the HGX H200 baseboard at 141GB per GPU and 1.1TB per node, where the H100 build holds 640GB. Identical host engineering and the same configure-your-own model; the H200 is the memory step up. Choose this when your workload strains 640GB, and the H100 twin when it fits, for the better economics.
The NVIDIA HGX H200: eight SXM GPUs at 141GB of HBM3e each, 1,128GB per node with aggregate bandwidth approaching 38 TB/s, a full NVSwitch mesh at 900 GB/s per GPU, FP8 throughput beyond 30 petaFLOPS, and MIG to as many as 56 instances. In workload terms: 70B-class full-precision fine-tuning within one node, long-context serving with real KV cache headroom, and memory-bound training and inference.
The GPU complex and chassis ship fixed, the HGX H200 baseboard, the chassis, power and cooling, and the host components are yours to specify: the EPYC CPUs, the memory population, and the storage. For teams with particular core-count, capacity, or storage needs, the node arrives matched to the workload rather than to a fixed bundle, and MillionMiner configures the open parts on quote.
Core density and memory bandwidth, the two things a GPU host must bring. Eight GPUs need many cores for parallel data loading and preprocessing, and a memory subsystem that does not starve them. EPYC 9004 on Zen 4 delivers high core counts and 12-channel DDR5 per socket, the widest memory bandwidth in its class, which is why it is a strong host for a feeding-intensive 8-GPU node.
They differ on host and configuration model. The Lenovo SR680a V3 brings tier-one estate fit; the ASRock 6U8X leads on 6U density and economics; the ASUS N8-E11 is built cluster-first around one-NIC-per-GPU fabric; the Quanta S7PH H200 leads on ODM in-rack serviceability. This Gigabyte is the AMD-host barebone you configure yourself, with EPYC 12-channel bandwidth. MillionMiner routes the decision on your estate, density, fabric, and configurability priorities.
When your workload fits comfortably in 640GB. The H100 build of this exact platform costs less and delivers the same host engineering and barebone control; the H200's 1.1TB earns its premium only for memory-bound work, 70B-class full-precision fine-tuning, and long-context serving. The quote models the crossover on your actual workload rather than guessing.
The platform runs 12-channel DDR5 per socket across 24 DIMM slots, and because it is a barebone, the memory population is yours to specify. The rule this catalog applies everywhere holds, system memory at or above the 1.1TB GPU pool, and MillionMiner sizes it to your workload at quote rather than to a fixed default.
Through the PCIe Gen5 expansion carrying fabric adapters for GPUDirect RDMA, the topology that moves gradients between nodes without touching CPUs, on InfiniBand or high-speed Ethernet specified per deployment. As a barebone, the fabric fit-out is configured to your cluster plan, and MillionMiner advises on switch architecture as deployments grow past one node.
Eight 2.5-inch Gen5 hot-swap bays across NVMe, SATA, or SAS-4, redundant 3000W Titanium power, and PCIe Gen5 expansion for fabric and additional storage. As a barebone the drive population is configured to your workload, and the exact PSU draw of a full eight-GPU H200 build is confirmed on quote.
Submit your workload and deployment details through the quote form. A MillionMiner specialist configures the EPYC CPUs, memory, and storage, confirms the warranty terms, destination eligibility under the US export controls that apply to Hopper-class accelerators, and delivery. Every system is tested before shipment and shipped worldwide DDP with duties handled, with hosting in MillionMiner's own data centers available.