To
get to the inside of the SN27 its a case of emoving
the satin black lid which is a simple process,
it is held on with 3 thumb screws for easy accessibility.
The insides are to the usual Shuttle standards,
that being exceptionally well laid out ensuring
you can install all necessary components with
ease, it uses a modular system that lets you install
Hard disks, optical drives and floppy disk drives
from outside the system and they simply slot into
place. Without sounding like a sales representative
for Shuttle it really is worth pointing out how
well everything slot into place – you will
not find any issues.
All
of the cables are also supplied at the correct
lengths for a snug fit which also promotes good
airflow. The power supply inside the shuttle has
a 350 watt rating which may seem to many as being
severely underpowered, however these supplies
really are built to the highest standards. Our
editorial director Allan “Zardon”
Campbell ran a shuttle system comprising a Prescott
3.8ghz, DVD burner, 2 gig of DDR2 and a 7800GTX
from a 250 watt Shuttle supply for over a year
so the higher spec 350w model should be able to
handle anything thrown at it for quite some time.
As with most cube style systems the location for
the floppy drive could easily be used to house
another hard disk drive however being that it
already takes two drives a third may be overkill.
It is also worth mentioning. Although these chassis
are exceptionally well designed it is best not
to overpopulate as heat levels will rise.
The
main board itself has the following connectors:
• 3x SATA
• 1x PCI
• 1x PCIe 16x
• 1x IDE
• 1x FDD
Clearly
there are more people installing the option of
windows 64bit and Shuttle supply both sets of
driver disks.
Having
the SATA drivers on a floppy disk is always needed
as XP will not find any SATA hard disks on install
without it. The manual provided is mainly for
the nvidia Raid that is built onboard, this allows
you to build in fault tolerance for your hard
disk by mirroring or striping your disks before
loading an operating system on them.
After
connecting all of the remaining components it
was time to get the system fired up.
The
bios supplied is a standard Phoenix affair allowing
you to change Cool and quiet options, HT speeds
and Dram timings. The BIOS has some CPU clock
change options meaning if you really want to you
can crank it up a notch to get a little more performance
(at the cost of heat), being that the fan inside
is custom built for this shuttle there will very
little you will be able to do to provide extra
cooling. Obviously some people may very well add
an external water cooling kit and then it would
be safe to increase core voltages, however we
feel this is somewhat defeating the purpose of
a shuttle in the first place. Voltages for the
RAM and chipset are also changeable.
Installed
components:
•
AM2 64 3800+
• 2x 1Gb GEIL DDR2 8500
• BFG 7900 GT OC 256MB
• 1x 16x LG DVD R/W
• 1x Mitsumi Black FDD
• 1x Seagate 160Gb SATA HDD
In
the creation of this article showing the Shuttle
system as an general use machine we felt
a "real world" selection of hardware
was more feasible. This is the kind of portable
system you could use at the heart of a media center
as well as being able to play the latest games
at a reasonable resolution. Just as importantly,
it won't break your bank balance either.
The
test system was built from scratch, a format of
the hard drive was performed (NTFS) and then Windows
XP was installed. Following the completion of
the installation, the ATI/Nvidia drivers were
installed. The only updates applied were SP2 and
.NET Framework 2.0 (latest service pack). Next,
the latest builds of the benchmarking tools were
installed and finally, the hard drive was de-fragmented.
For each test, the Nvidia drivers (91.31) were
set to default quality/optimizations.
Good
Benchmarking Practice:
Where possible, each benchmark was performed 3
times and the median result for each resolution/setting
is shown in the tables that will follow. All games/applications
had their latest patches applied.