Final Words

The ASRock Beebox N3000-NUC provided us with the opportunity to evaluate Braswell in a non-mobile form factor. We have already looked at the performance of Intel's Airmont in the Microsoft Surface 3. However, that was in a much more thermally limited configuration. The Beebox is also the first UCFF PC sporting Cherry Trail, and it shows what can be done with power-efficient 14nm SoC in the NUC form factor without active cooling. The fanless aspects make the Beebox suitable for a wide variety of applications including embedded and industrial uses. The surprising aspect is the use of industrial-grade DRAM and SSD modules despite the $220 price point.

ASRock manages to cram in plenty of features in the small chassis - a USB Type-C port in the front panel, two full-sized HDMI ports and one full-sized Display Port outputs in the rear along with the usual NUC ports - three USB 3.0 and one GbE LAN slot. There is also an IR receiver (and a bundled mini-remote) for wireless control of media playback on the PC. The Beebox is also the smallest NUC that we have seen with support for a 2.5" drive. It is also the only NUC we are aware of with three simultaneous display outputs.

The thermal solution might not be the most elegant or efficient passive cooling setup. However, it gets the job done - the system doesn't throttle and temperatures are maintained well below the junction temperature even under stress. If this is what needs to be done to keep the costs of passively cooled systems down, we don't mind. Consumers looking for more powerful passively cooled systems can always go for the Core-series units from vendors such as Logic Supply.

Despite the above positive aspects, there is scope for improvement from both Intel and ASRock's perspective:

  • Intel needs to supply GPU drivers with HD audio bitstreaming (DTS-HD MA and Dolby TrueHD) enabled
  • Intel could have improved CPU performance a bit more when compared to Silvermont (particularly given the huge improvement in GPU performance)
  • ASRock's chassis design could do with some improvement - a metal chassis would probably bring down the idling temperature below 50 C. In the case that plastic is unavoidable due to cost issues, a perforated top similar to the Zotac ZBOX C-series units could help improve aesthetics.
  • ASRock is known for its premium mini-PCs, and it would have been interesting to see what they could have done with the Intel Core-M in a similar chassis.

The Beebox N3000-NUC series starts at $140, and a ready-to-go build without the OS is just $220. This is very good value for the money. In comparison to other fanless mini-PCs, there is almost no pricing premium. However, we get all the performance to power ratio advantages that come along with 14nm silicon. ASRock has also managed to put in plenty of premium features without driving up the price.

Power Consumption and Thermal Performance
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  • amakula77 - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    This review is good but I think it needs an extra section to test this out as a low end gaming machine , with Bluetooth controller, this thing I'm sure could play older emulators and GOG and older steam games.
  • amakula77 - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    I did not see the Dolphin emulator test this is good by more gaming tests are needed to determine if this will be a suitable low end gaming machine
  • nathanddrews - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    Yeah, I'm thinking there is a missing graphic - normally they publish Dota 2 numbers or something. From Performance Metrics - I "GPU performance shows a similar trend to the CPU performance. The difference when compared to Bay Trail is considerable." But all I see is 3D Mark, where it is marginally faster than the LIVAX. Then on Performance Metrixs - II, it is marginally slower than LIVAX for Dolphin. I guess I'm not seeing anything in the way of GPU improvements from these data points. Did I miss something or is something missing?
  • blakehaas - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    I like the power usage, but the available ports are lacking. The CI320 has esata and a plethora of usb3.0.
  • barleyguy - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    eSata especially is a big advantage. (All of my media is stored a 4 TB eSata hard drive.)
  • Kracer - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    Is eSata that common?
    A NAS seems a much more universal solution.
  • Pissedoffyouth - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    I'd like to see an i5 5775c in a box like this especially with the quiet laptop style blowers a lot of newer PC's have.
  • barleyguy - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    Zotac has some pretty powerful boxes similar to this. The EN860 is an i5 4210u with NVidia GTX 860M graphics. They will soon have an EN960 with 970M graphics. The EN860 has a silent cooler (completely silent at idle, and about 35 dB when gaming).

    They are a lot more expensive though. The EN860 is $500 barebones, and the EN960 will be coming in around $700 barebones.
  • owarchild - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    @Ganesh T S, can you try this alpha version of OpenELEC: http://forum.kodi.tv/showthread.php?tid=231955&... Is should work on the Beebox as it has been used in a ASRock N3150 board.
  • savagemike - Tuesday, July 14, 2015 - link

    I don't understand your pricing comment that 128GB is a nice premium over 32GB for only $20. This also entails the loss of an operating system which costs around $100+ if that is the OS you want.
    In the same vain I don't understand the pricing of your system. How did you get 4GB/128GB and Windows 8.1 Pro 64 for $220?

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