Power Consumption and Thermal Performance

The power consumption at the wall was measured with a 4K display being driven through the HDMI port of the discrete GPU. In the graphs below, we compare the idle and load power of the Intel NUC9i9QNX (Ghost Canyon) with other SFF PCs evaluated before. For load power consumption, we ran the AIDA64 System Stability Test with various stress components, as well as a combination of Prime95 and Furmark, and noted the maximum sustained power consumption at the wall.

Idle Power Consumption

The power consumption numbers are along expected lines, matching what we had observed for a similar mobile CPU / desktop GPU combination in the Kaby Lake / Pascal generation (Zotac ZBOX MAGNUS EK71080). The additional factors leading to the slightly higher numbers (295W vs 272W) include a dedicated secondary drive, a power-hungry 905p series Optane SSD, and a relaxation in the permissible sustained package power consumption that we analyze further down.

Our thermal stress routine starts with the system at idle, followed by four stages of different system loading profiles using the AIDA64 System Stability Test (each of 30 minutes duration). In the first stage, we stress the CPU, caches and RAM. In the second stage, we add the GPU to the above list. In the third stage, we stress the GPU standalone. In the final stage, we stress all the system components (including the disks). Beyond this, we leave the unit idle in order to determine how quickly the various temperatures in the system can come back to normal idling range. The various clocks, temperatures and power consumption numbers for the system during the above routine are presented in the graphs below.

Intel NUC9i9QNX (Ghost Canyon) System Loading with the AIDA64 System Stability Test

The AIDA64 system stability test does not have many surprises in store. The core frequencies stay well above the advertised base speeds of 2.4 GHz throughout the loading period. The package and core temperature stay around 90C for the most part, though they do momentarily reach the junction temperature (100C) as the transition from a full-stress to a standalone GPU stress scenario takes place. Things do get to a stable state quite soon. Meanwhile the RTX 2070 never crosses 70C, pointing to a well-designed thermal solution by ASUS.

On the power consumption side, we have the first surprise - the CPU package is allowed its PL2 limits for a short duration (close to 100W) in the beginning. In the steady loading stage, the number drops down to 65W (compared to the 45W we saw for the Core i7-7700HQ in the Zotac ZBOX MAGNUS EK71080). This accounts for the additional load power consumption identified in the beginning of this section. The GPU power consumption tops out around 165W in the AIDA64 stress test. The at-wall numbers show spikes of up to 325W, but the steady loading state numbers are around 280W with all stress components enabled.

Intel NUC9i9QNX (Ghost Canyon) System Loading with Prime95 and Furmark

The frequency-related observations made in the AIDA64 system stability test hold true for our artificial power virus test involving Prime95 and Furmark also. The clocks stay well above the advertised base numbers. The temperature numbers tell a similar story too, though the absolute numbers are a bit lower, coming in around 80C instead of 90C for the package. The GPU temperature stays south of 70C throughout. On the power consumption side, we again see the CPU package allowed to dissipate up to 65W in the steady state. The at-wall numbers are slightly north of 290W in the steady state, as graphed in the beginning of this section.

Overall, our power consumption and thermal solution testing revealed a few surprises - the CPU package power budget is 65W (instead of the 45W we saw with mobile CPUs used in SFF PCs in the previous generation). The system as a whole is able to handle this without any undue cause for alarm with respect to the temperatures. ASUS does deserve plaudits for a well-designed thermal solution that doesn't allow the GPU to go beyond 70C even in high-stress scenarios. The system as a whole is surprisingly quiet at idle given the dimensions of the chassis and the number of fans in the system.

HTPC Credentials - Local Media Playback and Video Processing Miscellaneous Aspects: Storage Performance
Comments Locked

109 Comments

View All Comments

  • timecop1818 - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    Really bad selection of pictures. Did you not actually have a unit with you when reviewing? There's no external shots, there's no pics of the board/GPU connected together, there's no pics of rear backplane with ports/whatever, basically no useful info. I clicked through the gallery and I have no idea how big this thing is, or how the GPU fits into the picture, or anything else. Even "setup notes" page shows nothing useful.
  • DanNeely - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    The chassis gallery on the 1st page shows the fully assembled system with the rear IO ports visible and gives a decent visual idea of how big the system is.
  • timecop1818 - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    Oh hey, I see the stuff now. There's separate galleries throughout the article, for some reason I thought there was only one per page, and the 1st page only showed disassembled cpu module so I thought that was it. Thanks for pointing it out.
  • FireSnake - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    Based on this:
    https://www.notebookcheck.net/AnandTech-editor-rep...
    they are not getting any money from me!
    For a loooong looong time (those includd too).
  • bug77 - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    It's a good thing you don't get hung up on details like proof and stuff. Guilty until proven innocent, eh? (And yes, I know history doesn't work in their favor.)
  • DigitalFreak - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    Ian doesn't seem like the person to throw around baseless accusations.
  • ganeshts - Thursday, April 16, 2020 - link

    The tweet has been misinterpreted and now taken a completely unintended shape of its own. Ian plans to clarify the usage of the word 'incentive' in the context in an upcoming video / post.

    FWIW, if anyone believe AMD doesn't offer incentives to its partners (of a type similar to what Intel does, and what is completely legal), then the person has no idea of how the technology industry / silicon vendors operate.

    If anyone thinks the reason for lack of high-performance AMD-based (read, Renoir) 'NUC's is Intel, then I have a bridge to sell. No one is preventing AMD from creating a reference design for a Renoir-based 4x4 board or innovate with Compute Element-like products. OEMs can take the plunge only if the silicon vendors offer them a proof of concept. If a Renoir NUC reference design exists, but OEMs still don't pick it up to offer them in the market, that would be worthy of deeper investigation (that could still throw up legitimate reasons).
  • Namisecond - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    Even when reference designs exist, availability of parts can come into play, or even OEM disinterest.
  • quadrivial - Friday, April 17, 2020 - link

    AMD has reference designs and an entire set of embedded Zen 1 chips made explicitly for that purpose. Udoo Bolt was kickstarted by a fairly small company. If they could do it, why not bigger companies?
  • arashi - Saturday, April 18, 2020 - link

    You must understand that Intel PR and legal has been in touch.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now