Concluding Remarks

The ASRock DeskMini 110 gave us the opportunity to check out what is possible with the mini-STX form factor and a high-TDP Skylake CPU. It is quite clear that Intel's current marketing angle with the mini-STX form factor is affordability. Otherwise, it is difficult to explain why almost all vendors have gone in for a H110 chipset-based design for their mini-STX offerings. That said, ASRock has put in a couple of good differentiating aspects in the DeskMini 110: support for 65W TDP CPUs and a M.2 PCIe slot for SSDs directly connected to the CPU's PCIe lanes. This works around the issue of the H110 chipset having only PCIe 2.0 lanes

The pricing is very competitive - $130 for the all-metal chassis, 120W power adapter and cord, and the H110 motherboard. While the assembly is not as easy as that of a NUC, it is acceptable for the DIY market.

In terms of scope for improvement, a bundled WLAN adapter would be very welcome. Sourcing one that can fit in with the chassis design will be a challenge, as most M.2 PCIe WLAN modules are either meant for NUCs, or for notebooks. The DeskMini's all-metal chassis makes it difficult to get a suitable placement for the flat antennae that come with such WLAN adapters. I think it would be better for ASRock to bundle / pre-install a WLAN module and antennas for a slight increase in the price of the product. The DeskMini could also do with some additional I/O (say, a SD card reader).

It is great to see the mini-STX form factor getting broad vendor support. We would like it more if vendors were able to differentiate their offerings. ASRock has tried out a few things differently in the storage subsystem and chassis design with the DeskMini 110. We look forward to seeing what other differentiation aspects come out in the future iterations in this product line.

Power Consumption and Thermal Performance
Comments Locked

85 Comments

View All Comments

  • Screwville512 - Monday, December 5, 2016 - link

    Do you own it? I am interested in purchasing one and was wondering if you think its possible to modify the case to accept 15mm drives. Seagate now has 5TB 2.5" 15mm HDD's and I think those in RAID 1 would make the Deskmini a great portable NAS. Otherwise, I will go with 2tb SSHD in RAID 0 with an external backup drive.
  • rgs84 - Wednesday, September 21, 2016 - link

    Can someone confirm that I can use it for example with i5-6685R, same 1151 socket, but better video onboard (Iris Pro 588)?
  • chrismart1234 - Thursday, September 22, 2016 - link

    Nah; it supports full desktop processors only not mobile processors.
  • wstkwon - Tuesday, January 3, 2017 - link

    Hey, I tried to make this pc, but my monitor is blank. WTF? ANy hel please?
  • n13L5 - Sunday, August 5, 2018 - link

    Out of all the other systems, this particular system needs an AMD version the most - to put a 2400G APU in it...

    For my purposes of making a sub-$500 play computer for my daughter - the ASRock DeskMini 110 is over-speced in the wrong place and under-speced in the wrong place. With an Intel i5, it simply lacks an interesting niche. Any and every other box has a CPU+RAM+SSD, including much smaller things like NUCs etc - at this size, it should have an APU to be worth the bother.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now