Build, Noise, Heat, and Power Consumption

When I requested the AVADirect Compact Gaming PC with the pair of AMD Radeon HD 6990s, I promised Misha (the AVADirect CEO) I wouldn't ding AVADirect for noise on this build.  It gets loud under load, sure, but what do you expect from four GPUs in a micro-ATX chassis? For what it's worth, the engineers really did the best they could with the build and it shows: for such a small case, the Compact Gaming PC is a remarkably clean and well thought out assembly. That's what I really want to see when I review these custom systems, that focus on detail and order that most of us home builders (or at least myself) may not spend as much time with.

AVADirect's assembly for the Compact Gaming PC is clean, orderly, and fairly intelligent. Processor cooling is channeled smartly by converting the rear exhaust into an intake, blowing air directly through the Prolimatech Megahalems which exhausts that air out of the top of the enclosure. Cabling is organized as best it can be given the sheer number of power leads required for the two Radeons. AVADirect opts to set the top front fan as an intake and the bottom as an exhaust. There's no side intake to feed the Radeons or even a good place to mod one in, so AVADirect seems to be making the best of a bad situation. For this build, a pair of single-GPU cards with blower style coolers would probably make a lot more sense, but it's impressive that this combination of parts at this level of performance even fits into an enclosure this small.

AVADirect further mitigates the cooling situation by placing rubber spacers between the two Radeons, allowing air to flow between the two cards. This is one area where NVIDIA's cooling solutions have consistently made more sense and I am still perplexed by AMD's stock cooling choices for the 6000 series: NVIDIA gears their coolers to still be reasonably functional in dual-GPU situations by recessing the shroud over the fan just enough to allow two cards bunched together to still get air. AMD's cooling shrouds for the 5000 series were at least contoured enough to allow air to get in, but the big boxy shrouds of the 6000 series seem like a real step backwards.

The temperature HWMonitor shows is only for the hottest 6990 core in the setup, but it's cause for alarm. AVADirect includes fan controllers in the build to allow you to fine tune cooling (by the way, check out the awesome thermals on the 990X, fantastic performance for such a small space!), but the 6990s just run too hot. It's no surprise AVADirect left the performance switches on the 6990 cards alone. The bottom 6990 really runs a lot better, but we're basically pushing the limits of what a machine this small can handle thermally here.

And finally, the other major drawback of going for Gulftown instead of Sandy Bridge: substantially higher power consumption. Idle consumption is particularly dire, while load consumption is at least better than a pair of GTX 590s in SLI. But you don't really spend this much money on a system because you're worried about a high power bill, do you? The GPU temperatures are a far greater concern, and outside of getting a different case and motherboard (which AVADirect will happily do sell you), this is a system that we would be hesitant to run long-term.

Gaming Performance Conclusion: Great Engineering, Change the Configuration
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  • Alroys - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    The I7-990X has 6 cores, not 4 as stated in the specs.
  • Taft12 - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    For added confusion, AMD has a chipset called 990X (that you would probably pair with a 6-core CPU, natch!)
  • dragonsqrrl - Thursday, October 6, 2011 - link

    ...it's 990FX
  • Dustin Sklavos - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    You'd think I'd've caught that since I actually have a 990X. Fixed!
  • Menty - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    "AVADirect opts to set the top front fan as an intake and the bottom as an exhaust."

    Really, I don't understand why they did this. Surely this just creates a circular air pattern that cools, at most, the HDD cage? At the very least the bottom fan should have been the intake to try to force some air between the 6990s, and I can't help but feel this may have been a factor in the high GPU temps.

    Nice review though, and a scary amount of hardware crammed into such a small case o.O.
  • marc1000 - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    i agree. in such a small case, it could be better to put as much cool air in as possible. with the bottom fan as intake too, it would force more cool air to the gpus, and the gpus would be the exhaust of the case.

    that is what i believe makes the 990x so cool: direct cold air intake over the cpu heatsink. this is a great idea.
  • livingplasma - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    The 6990 has it's fan in the center and exhausts hot air from both ends, with the front bottom fan as intake there would be no direct path for it to exit and the GPU's would probably heat up even more than it did since it'd just be recirculating the hot air back to the GPU and PSU. The front top fan as intake was probably to cool at least the HDD and balance intake/exhaust airflow since a side intake fan could not be added, though maybe if you're handy enough a case bottom intake could be cut.
  • marvdmartian - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    VERY pink, isn't it? Of course, this being "Breast Cancer Awareness Month", I guess that's appropriate (though not nearly as much fun as volunteering to squish a boob!).

    Oh, and the price point. I guess I just don't understand the passion of gamers to spend whatever's necessary for "the best system". $5000?? What is this, the early 90's again, when a ho-hum system would run you $1500+???
  • TinyRK - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    "AVADirect's engineers were able to put together a smart, clean design..."

    So they can assemble a computer, but that doesn't make them engineers. OR are they actual engineers? You know, with a college-diploma and stuff? And if yes, in what?
  • ggathagan - Tuesday, October 4, 2011 - link

    If you're older than 12, you are surely aware of the fact that the use of the term engineer has not been limited to those with genuine engineering degrees for quite some time.
    Blame the PC movement, the artifical self esteem movement or any number of marketing/management fads, but it is what it is.
    Garbagemen have been "Sanitation Engineers" for quite some time now.

    Why this is germane to the review escapes me, but at least you got to demonstrate your superior intellect, right?

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