Final Words

The ECS LIVA Z provided us with the opportunity to take a first look at the performance of a passively-cooled
mini-PC based on the Intel Apollo Lake platform. Compared to the previous LIVA units, the Z family (they also have a Kaby Lake-based LIVA Z Plus in the pipeline) has moved on from providing systems with extremely small footprints. The boards are slightly larger than the traditional NUCs (115 x 111mm, as compared to 101.6 x 101.6mm). Fortunately, the larger footprint has enabled ECS to put in dual LAN ports in all the models. Dual LAN ports usually lend themselves to network appliances (x86 routers, firewalls, and the like). However, both ports in the LIVA Z are backed by Realtek controllers. Intel controllers deliver better performance and are more widely supported in the x86-based networking appliance OS market. Therefore, we wouldn't advise the usage of the LIVA Z solely as a network appliance (where performance might be important). That said, the availability of three high-performance network interfaces (2x GbE LAN and 1x 1x1 802.11ac WLAN) can lend itself to some specific use-cases.

The fanless nature makes the system suitable for certain HTPC workloads. The LIVA Z fulfills all the basic necessities - 4K output (with 4Kp60 supported on the mini-DP port) and full hardware decode for 4Kp60 content in a variety of codecs. That said, it is not a 4K OTT box because it lacks the necessary DRM capabilities as well as a HDCP 2.2-capable HDMI 2.0 port necessary for Netflix 4K (currently available only on select Kaby Lake systems).

On the price front, the ECS LIVA Z is a winner. $180 delivers a system ready for OS installation, while $220 fetches a ready-to-go system with Windows 10 Home x64 pre-installed. The overall performance benefits are a step up from similarly priced Bay Trail and Braswell systems.

The I/O and industrial design are pleasing to the eye. On the motherboard front, we would like to have support for the installation of a M.2 2280 SSD (currently, the choices for M.2 2242 SSDs supported by the LIVA Z are limited). Based on our market research, the ADATA SP600 presents the best balance of cost (128GB at $70) and flash quality (2D MLC). The JMicron controller is not going to create benchmark records, but, the performance is a good match for the typical LIVA Z use-cases.

A 6W TDP SoC doesn't stress the thermal design aspect too much. Therefore, the usage of an all-plastic chassis is excusable in this fanless PC. However, we believe the chassis design could be altered for better airflow and convective cooling. In terms of storage, I have always been critical of 32GB drives as primary OS drives. The unit also ships with only a single DDR3L SODIMM slot occupied. It would be an interesting exercise to determine if operation in dual-channel mode delivers any tangible performance benefits. Thankfully, ECS has provided the option to use a SSD for the boot drive. Users can also install a second SODIMM - however, it is recommended that sticks from a dual SODIMM kit be used for this purpose.

One of the issues I encountered while performing the OS installation was that the UEFI BIOS would not allow for booting from a USB installation drive with a MBR partition. Setting the BIOS to legacy mode allowed MBR keys to boot, but, wouldn't allow installation to the eMMC partition. We resolved the issue by using a Windows installation USB key formatted with the GPT option.

Coming to the business end of the review, we can say that, taken standalone, the ECS LIVA ZN33 more than delivers $180 worth of computing performance. It also manages to keep thermals under limit for consumer workloads. Features such as the Type-C USB 3.0 port and 802.11ac Wi-Fi are welcome changes compared to the first-generation Bay Trail-based LIVA units. The idle and load power consumption profiles of the LIVA Z are excellent and continue the tradition of the LIVA PCs being one of the most power-efficient lineups in the market. The LIVA Z has no show-stopping drawbacks. Based on the workloads, it is definitely an option to consider.

Power Consumption and Thermal Performance
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  • Namisecond - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link

    It probably started life in design as one, but things probably didn't work out... :)
  • Meteor2 - Friday, March 31, 2017 - link

    Why doesn't Anandtech use a common benchmark suite across all classes of computer? Couldn't you at least run Geekbench 4 and Jetstream (via Chrome) on everything​? I know there are arguements for and against all benchmarks -- I wish you'd run a straight Handbrake x264 to x265 transcode of 1080p material on everything you can -- but I think GB4 and Jetstream minimise inter-platform differences and have strong real-world relevance.
  • Teknobug - Friday, March 31, 2017 - link

    Really... are we still using 2C/2T systems in 2017?
  • rocky12345 - Friday, March 31, 2017 - link

    Nice review looks like a nice little media station hooked to a TV. ECS I did not even know they were still around. Do they still make Mother boards? If I remember right they used to make lower end mother boards back in the day.
  • Arbie - Friday, March 31, 2017 - link

    Yeah, ECS motherboards were the ones stacked to the ceiling on Frys Electronics "Returns" bench.
  • Death666Angel - Saturday, April 1, 2017 - link

    I had the legendary ECS K7S5A which had SD RAM and DDR RAM simultaneously. It had a SiS 735 chipset, which was finicky, but cheap. Oh the days of competing chipsets.
  • DocNo - Friday, March 31, 2017 - link

    Ugh - why do vendors put two NICs in these things that are based on anything other than Intel chipsets? Realtek may be OK for desktop use but suck for heavy network loads. I could use a boatload of these with pfSense. And they may work fine, but so many issues with crappy Realtek and Broadcom NICs have me to the point where I don't even want to bother trying :p
  • Itselectric - Saturday, April 1, 2017 - link

    They've gotten better; not intel; but still better.
  • CharonPDX - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link

    Seems like an odd choice to not include even ONE USB port on the back. I mean, replace the mini DisplayPort with a USB type C port, at least. Then the user can choose between using it as a display or for peripherals. (Since 99% of people wanting to use it for display would need to use an adapter anyway.) Heck, then it would go great with a USB-C-equipped DisplayPort-protocol monitor, like the LG UltraFine 4K Display.
  • indianajames - Monday, April 3, 2017 - link

    Man.... I was really into this as a replacement for my circa 2012 Foxconn NT-A3500 HTPC setup now that I upgraded to a 4k/HDR TV..... until I noticed it doesn't have a HDCP 2.2 capable HDMI 2.0 port.... kinda kills it...

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