General Benchmarks

We begin with the usual set of general application performance benchmarks. Everyone should be familiar with the three Futuremark applications, and we've also included 3D rendering results from Cinebench and POV-Ray.

Graphics Performance

Graphics Performance

General Performance

For whatever reason, the Foxconn motherboard with a 5000+ comes out slightly behind in 3DMark05 and slightly ahead in PCMark05. The margin of error for both of these is about 2%, which can mostly account for the differences, and 3DMark06 is a tossup.

Rendering Performance

Rendering Performance

Rendering Performance

Flipping over to the 3D rendering tests, both the Foxconn motherboard and the SN27P2 demonstrate a reasonable performance advantage for the 5000+ over the slower clocked 4800+. This is to be expected, as the vast majority of 3D rendering work takes place within the L1 cache and CPU registers. As long as you're comparing within the same processor architecture, CPU speed is generally king for this type of benchmark. Even with slower memory timings, the SN27P2 basically matches the performance of the Foxconn motherboard with the same CPU.

Benchmark Setup Gaming Benchmarks
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  • Calin - Monday, July 3, 2006 - link

    Most any ATX case will be quiter and possibly cooler inside than one of those SFF computers. However, they will be twice as big (or more). If that's ok with you, that's great - ATX all the way. If not, a laptop or a SFF certainly makes sense (even if the price is much better on the full ATX front).
  • JarredWalton - Monday, July 3, 2006 - link

    I don't know - it depends on the ATX case you're talking about and how many fans you want to install. If you install two or three case fans (or more) and they aren't temperature controlled, a lot of the less expensive ATX cases will be louder than many SFF cases. Lower quality power supplies will also make a lot of noise. If you don't want a big case, and you are interested in getting an extremely easy to set up bare-bones system, SFF computers are really very nice.

    I do wish prices were about $100 lower, however. $300 for a SFF I can justify; $400+ is a lot more difficult to stomach. For that much money, you can get a good power supply, motherboard, and pretty much any case that you want. I suppose part of it has to do with economies of scale; I don't know how many SFF cases Shuttle has sold, but I doubt they sell as many SFFs someone like ASUS would sell motherboards. That means all of their R&D costs that go into creating a smaller case have to be passed on as a larger percentage of the price.
  • JarredWalton - Saturday, July 1, 2006 - link

    There was no opinion given on which CPU to choose, was there? I simply stated (and this is the expanded version) that even if you're going to buy AMD anyway and couldn't care less about Core 2 Duo, AMD has price cuts scheduled for July 24th so you can pick up an X2 CPU for a lot less than current prices. Here's my opinion:

    Core 2 Duo will be faster than anything AMD has to offer at least in the short term. AMD X2 will cost less at most (all?) price points, and in some cases (gaming), you're probably GPU limited either way since the current maximum for an SFF is going to be the 7950 GX2. I expect Shuttle will have the SD37P2 out some time after C2D launches, but since they're already 1 month behind the AM2 launch and you still can't purchase the SN27P2, that trend will likely continue and the SD37P2 won't be available until probably early September or so. (I could very well be wrong on that account, but I'm simply going by recent history.)

    Which is the better choice? As you have so clearly demonstrated, that's a matter of personal taste. Some people are only going to buy AMD at present; others will only buy Intel. Most would like to buy whichever offers the best performance at a specific price point. I would guess that AMD will be competitive in the price/performance area even if C2D is faster overall, so in the end they get what they're happy with. I still wouldn't purchase an AM2 chip until those price cuts take affect.
  • VooDooAddict - Saturday, July 1, 2006 - link


    Simply.

    Will the 7950 Fit?
    Does the BIOS support the card?
    Can the powersupply keep it running with 2 gigs of RAM and a AMD 5000+?

    As soon as I saw the 7950 anouncement all I could think about was building a new SFF system around it.
  • JarredWalton - Saturday, July 1, 2006 - link

    I don't have one available, but my understanding is just about any motherboard with an X16 slot will work with the 7950 GX2. Since I managed to install a 7900 GTX in the SN37P2, I'm pretty sure the GX2 is actually a bit smaller overall, so it will certainly fit. Is it compatible? Well, the SN27P2 uses an NVIDIA chipset, so if it's *not* compatible, NVIDIA has a serious problem with support of GX2. In other words, I'm 99% certain that it will work.
  • VooDooAddict - Monday, July 3, 2006 - link

    I didn't think the issue was the chipset ... I thought it was the BIOS.
  • JarredWalton - Monday, July 3, 2006 - link

    Right, the BIOS needs to support non-graphics devices in the X16 slots. My point is that if a board using NVIDIA's chipset doesn't support NVIDIA's top GPU, what's the chance of getting everyone else to support it?

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