Gigabyte
Modell: G893-SD1-AAX5 HGX™ B200
Experience the future of AI computing with the GIGABYTE G893-SD1-AAX5 HGX™ B200 8-GPU server. Gigabyte's Intel-host build of the NVIDIA HGX B200: eight B200 SXM GPUs at 180GB each, 1.4TB per node, fifth-generation NVLink at 1.8 TB/s per GPU, behind dual Intel Xeon Scalable processors with 32 DDR5 slots. The same Blackwell complex as its AMD-host sibling, decided by your fleet, AMX, the capacity-first memory layout, and Intel estate standardization. Configured and shipped worldwide DDP by MillionMiner.
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Gigabyte ships its G893 Blackwell platform in two builds that differ in exactly one place, and buying between them means understanding that place. The GPU complex, chassis, power, cooling, and expansion are common. The host is the fork: the ZD1 carries dual AMD EPYC, this SD1 carries dual Intel Xeon Scalable, and the choice is a fleet question with three technical dimensions, not a brand preference. The shared mathematics, stated once. Eight NVIDIA B200 SXM GPUs, each a dual-die package with 180GB of HBM3e at roughly 8 TB/s, pool 1,440GB per node with 64 TB/s of aggregate bandwidth. Fifth-generation NVLink joins every GPU at 1.8 TB/s through NVSwitch, and the second-generation Transformer Engine's FP4 precision delivers 144 petaFLOPS per node, with NVIDIA's published comparisons, up to 15x real-time trillion-parameter inference and roughly 3x training against the H100 generation, attributed as the vendor figures they are. None of this changes with the host. The first Intel dimension, AMX. Intel's Advanced Matrix Extensions run across every 4th and 5th Gen Xeon Scalable core, accelerating the tensor math behind tokenization, embedding generation, augmentation, and CPU-resident inference stages. On a node whose eight GPUs consume preprocessed data as fast as the host can make it, matrix-accelerated preprocessing is not a footnote, and pipelines built to exploit it get a host that participates in the AI work rather than merely feeding it. The second dimension, memory philosophy. This build carries 32 DDR5 slots, eight channels per socket with two modules per channel, where the AMD sibling carries 24 at twelve channels and one per channel. The trade is classic: one module per channel holds peak speed, two per channel trades some speed for slot count and capacity ceiling. Fleets planning very large host memory, staged expansion, or reuse of module inventories get more room in the 32-slot layout, and the rule stays the rule, system memory at or above the 1.4TB GPU pool, sized on quote. The third dimension, the estate. Organizations standardized on Intel carry Xeon-tuned tooling, per-core licensing positions, and validated images measured in years. For them, this is the Blackwell node that joins the fleet without certifying a parallel platform, the same logic that decided the Lenovo-versus-ASUS pairing at H200 and the Supermicro-versus-ASUS pairing at B300. AMD fleets, and teams wanting EPYC core density up to 192 cores per socket, take the ZD1; Intel estates and AMX-aware pipelines take this. MillionMiner quotes both and routes on infrastructure, not preference. The rest, shared and complete. Eight single-slot PCIe 5.0 positions take one 400 Gb/s adapter per GPU on Quantum-2 InfiniBand or Spectrum-X Ethernet, the GPUDirect RDMA topology, with four dual-slot positions for storage and management. Eight Gen5 hot-swap bays carry datasets, two M.2 slots keep the boot path separate, dual 10GbE handles base networking, and twelve 3000W Titanium supplies in 6+6 power it, on air in 8U. Blackwell-class accelerators are subject to US export controls; destination eligibility, configuration, and facility power are confirmed in every quote. Each system is tested before shipment and shipped worldwide DDP with duties handled, with hosting in MillionMiner's own data centers as the alternative.
The NVIDIA HGX B200 inside this machine needs no re-introduction: eight dual-die B200 SXM GPUs pooling 1.4TB of HBM3e, 64 TB/s of aggregate bandwidth, 144 petaFLOPS of FP4, and NVSwitch joining every GPU at 1.8 TB/s, double the Hopper fabric. NVIDIA builds that complex once; Gigabyte mounts it in the same 8U chassis with a choice of host, and this is the Intel build. The Intel case rests on three things. AMX, the matrix extensions across 4th and 5th Gen Xeon cores, accelerates the host-side work an 8-GPU node generates, tokenization, preprocessing, embeddings. The memory layout: 32 DDR5 slots in an eight-channel, two-per-channel arrangement, capacity-first, against the AMD sibling's 24 slots at one per channel. And the estate: organizations standardized on Intel keep their tooling, licensing, and validated images, adding Blackwell without certifying a second platform. Everything else matches its sibling because the chassis is shared: eight single-slot PCIe 5.0 positions for one 400 Gb/s adapter per GPU, four dual-slot for storage and management, eight Gen5 hot-swap bays plus two M.2 boot slots, dual 10GbE onboard, and twelve 3000W Titanium supplies in 6+6 redundancy, on air. Configured to your build and shipped worldwide DDP by MillionMiner.
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Gigabyte builds its 8U Blackwell machine with two brains, and this is the Intel one. The NVIDIA HGX B200 complex is identical either way: eight B200 SXM GPUs at 180GB each, 1.4TB of HBM3e per node, 64 TB/s of aggregate bandwidth, fifth-generation NVLink at 1.8 TB/s per GPU. The host is where this build differs: dual Intel Xeon Scalable with AMX for CPU-side AI work, 32 DDR5 slots in the capacity-first layout, dual 10GbE onboard, and the same twelve 3000W Titanium supplies and eight single-slot fabric positions as its AMD sibling. Configured and shipped worldwide DDP by MillionMiner.
Eight B200 SXM GPUs, 64 TB/s aggregate bandwidth, NVLink 5 at 1.8 TB/s per GPU. Identical by construction across both Gigabyte hosts.
Matrix-accelerated host-side AI work, a capacity-first 32-DIMM layout, and the node that joins an Intel estate without a second platform.
SD1 for Intel fleets, ZD1 for AMD core density. Same power, fabric, and chassis. MillionMiner routes the pair on your infrastructure.
NVIDIA
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Supermicro
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Dell
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ASUS
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The NVIDIA HGX B200: eight B200 SXM GPUs at 180GB of HBM3e each, 1,440GB pooled per node, 64 TB/s of aggregate bandwidth, and fifth-generation NVLink at 1.8 TB/s per GPU through NVSwitch, the 1.8 TB/s figure on the spec sheet is that per-GPU fabric rate. FP4 compute through the second-generation Transformer Engine reaches 144 petaFLOPS per node.
In one place, the host. This SD1 build runs dual Intel Xeon Scalable with AMX and 32 DDR5 slots in a capacity-first layout; the ZD1 runs dual AMD EPYC with up to 192 cores per socket and 24 slots in a bandwidth-first layout. Chassis, GPU complex, power, expansion, and cooling are shared. Intel estates and AMX-aware pipelines land here; AMD fleets and core-density-hungry preprocessing land on the ZD1, and MillionMiner quotes both.
Three things. AMX matrix extensions across every core accelerate the host-side AI work an 8-GPU node generates, tokenization, embeddings, preprocessing. The 32-slot memory layout gives capacity-planning room that 24-slot designs cannot. And fleet standardization: Intel estates keep their tooling, licensing, and validated images, adding Blackwell without certifying a second platform.
Per GPU: 180GB of HBM3e against the H200's 141GB, roughly 8 TB/s of bandwidth against 4.8, and NVLink doubled to 1.8 TB/s. Per node: 1.4TB against 1.1TB, plus FP4 precision that NVIDIA rates at up to 15x real-time trillion-parameter inference against the H100 generation, a vendor figure resting on physical changes. Teams inside the Hopper envelope still buy Hopper economics; teams pressing its ceilings step here.
n three situations: inference fleets at frontier scale where FP4 roughly doubles tokens per watt, training programs where the doubled fabric and bandwidth compress timelines with business value, and workloads already pressing the H200's per-GPU memory. Below those thresholds, the Lenovo and ASUS H200 systems remain the rational buy, and the quote models both paths.
Base networking ships onboard, dual 10GbE through the Intel X710 controller. The compute fabric is specified per deployment: eight single-slot PCIe 5.0 positions take one 400 Gb/s adapter per GPU on Quantum-2 InfiniBand or Spectrum-X Ethernet, the GPUDirect RDMA topology that moves gradients across nodes without touching CPUs. Four dual-slot positions remain for storage and management networking.
Thirty-two DDR5 RDIMM slots, eight channels per socket with two modules per channel. The trade: one module per channel holds peak speed, two per channel trades some speed for slot count and capacity ceiling. This build takes the capacity side, which suits very large host memory and staged expansion. The rule is unchanged, system memory at or above the 1.4TB GPU pool, and the validated maximum and your fit-out are confirmed on quote.
Eight 2.5-inch Gen5 hot-swap bays, NVMe or SATA, for the local dataset tier, plus two M.2 slots that keep the boot environment off the data path, the separation this catalog recommends on every training node. Exact drive fit-outs are specified with your quote, and MillionMiner ships units pre-populated when the storage plan is known.
Twelve 3000W 80 PLUS Titanium supplies in 6+6 redundancy define the envelope, with the GPU complex alone capable of drawing eight kilowatts under sustained load before the host counts. The 8U design cools it on air, keeping deployment inside ordinary data centers. MillionMiner confirms the exact draw of your configuration during the quote, with hosting in its own facilities as the alternative.
Submit your workload, host preference, and deployment details through the quote form. A MillionMiner specialist confirms configuration, the SD1-versus-ZD1 routing if still open, destination eligibility under the US export controls that apply to Blackwell-class accelerators, and delivery. Every system is tested before shipment and shipped worldwide DDP with duties handled.