Benchmarking - Thermal

To test the case's ability to keep temperatures of key components in check, we installed our standard micro ATX test bed, using the included power supply, along with an additional hard drive and a DVD burner into the top 5.25" bay.

HTPC Micro ATX Test Bed

DFI K8M800 MLV
AMD Athlon 64 3200+
OCZ PC3200 512MB DDR x 2
Zalman CNPS7000 Copper
Seagate Barracuda 120GB SATA
Sapphire 9800XT AGP8x


Due to the nature of the small design and the triple-side-covering cover, it was both difficult and somewhat pointless to do an inch-by-inch analysis of ambient air temperatures. After leaving the system running for a while and waiting for our thermometers to settle, we did record the exhaust air at 28.3 degrees Celsius from the 120mm fan, and 33.3 degrees from the power supply exhaust. Considering the case was in a room with an ambient temperature of 23.0 degrees, these temperatures are well within acceptable limits. Keep in mind that the figure coming from the 120mm fan exhaust is the one to use when considering the ambient air temperature inside the case, as the extra heat generated by the power supply is not a factor. Here's a look at how the X-QPack did at keeping the components cool:

Component Temperatures

CPU

32 / 44 C

GPU

49 / 64 C

HDD

30 C

Northbridge

34 C

Power Supply

32 C


All in all this is a very impressive showing given the case's size. The 120mm is most certainly the reason behind these good temperatures - one can feel it's moving an awful lot of air. But is it making a lot of noise too? Let's take a look at the case's total sound output.

Installation Cont’d Benchmarking - Sound
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  • R3MF - Tuesday, July 5, 2005 - link

    #52 -
    "I second (or third or fourth or whatever) the call for some words of comparison to the Antec Aria (it's the only other mATX standard cube case, right?); I can see this offers more bays and a bigger power supply, but what else?"

    add the Silverstone SG01 to that comparison too.

    and have a part two article looking at high-end mATX motherboards.

    that would be ace!
  • Noriaki - Tuesday, July 5, 2005 - link

    Hey is the 420W PSU that comes with this case 20pin or 24pin main connector? And I know it matters less, but does it have the 6pin PCIe connector?
  • sprockkets - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    FSP or Fortron Source Power and it's varients are one of the best.
  • johnsonx - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    I second (or third or fourth or whatever) the call for some words of comparison to the Antec Aria (it's the only other mATX standard cube case, right?); I can see this offers more bays and a bigger power supply, but what else?

    Also, for everyone talking about the power supply not being standard, I don't think anything prevents you from installing a normal depth ATX power supply, as long as your optical drives are not overly long; most of the newer optical drives are pretty short.

    Finally, I do agree about the window. Couldn't they offer a windowsless variant? Cases with windows are just toys to me.
  • IronChefMoto - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    I'm not real happy that it has a non-standard PSU -- one of the things that worries me about long-term ownership of my Shuttle SN85G4V3 XPC. The advantage with a DIY mATX box like this SHOULD BE the replaceability of parts. Of course, Antec screwed themselves in the ass with their proprietary Aria PSU in the same way.

    I'm also not keen on the windows. Windows are nice on a large tower where you can clean up your case (when you have the room too). Windows on something like this is akin to showing off a really unkempt closet full of pack rat stuff.

    Nice review, by the way. Would love to see a comparison if and when the Antec Aria II comes out.
  • Pannenkoek - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    [OT] Thanks Kristopher, I missed those comments. Odd that that would be possible, but I appreciate the protection of their sources by editors in any case.
  • R3MF - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    [edit]

    with the price difference i could even afford to stick the SST VFD panel in the spare 5.25" bay for use in a HTPC!

    [/edit]
  • R3MF - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    @ 44 (re: SST SG01) -

    i agree that SST cases are overpriced, but it is very affordable compared to a shuttle.

    my SN25P cost me £285

    by comparison:
    SG01 = £100 (or thereabouts)
    NF4 mATX M/B = £60 (tho i would pay more for a better baord)
    400W Akasa ATX2.01 PSU = £40 (yeah, sure i need more, not)
    Via ENVY PCI soundcard = £25
    TOTAL = £225

    looks pretty affordable to me.:)

    i only wish there were some high-end mATX motherboards to put in it. i repeat; come on MSI/Abit/DFI/Asus, show us what you can do.......
  • Tujan - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

    Dont know if that was a positive on a different full size power supply. Or the same positive for a full size DVD player.

    Too Im not fully convinced of the carrying copacity used from the handle of this m-ATX case.

    I think that this case however has been the best looking m-atx alternative out there for a few months running. Everytime I look at Newegg.com they are sold out of them.

    If used one of those ATX 2.0 w detachable wiring would be a super setup.

    Surprising other m-atx manufacturers don't have something like this on a melt already. There are several M-ATX Intel that can run dual-core with this case.Hard to find on the web though. Certainly the m-atx AMDs would go well with it.

    Would get one to carry it around.Looks really good,. Nothing beats its value cost. I would trade out the power supply for one I listed,if it fit.

    All sorts of colors too.


  • Tujan - Monday, July 4, 2005 - link

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