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July 02, 2004
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VIA EPIA PX10000 Pico-ITX Review
Posted on June 2, 2007 Go to:

Heat, Power and Noise

We measured the power consumption of the PX through a household energy meter using a very efficient DC converter and AC adapter combination, both with and without our hard drive attached. Our meter has no decimal places, and we have to allow for some loss from the PSU as heat - nevertheless this method has proven accurate to within a couple of Watts when compared against published figures.

When idle the PX drew around 14W. Even after extreme CPU load (running Prime95 for an hour) we couldn't get this figure above 16W. The temperature of the board throughout was surpisingly cool - barely warm to the touch under normal operation and only slightly warm under stress.

Heartened by this, we unplugged the fan and booted up Windows. The heatsink got warm pretty quickly without the fan. Five minutes later we bottled it and plugged it back in. It looks like that fan is doing something useful inside the heatsink after all.

The fan itself is a 5V 0.13A Everflow T054010BL, which translates as a 5V 40mm diameter 10mm tall "Low Speed" two ball fan in a trianglar frame. We have no idea how fast this spins - there is no reference in the BIOS and SpeedFan didn't recognise it. Probably about 3 or 4000 RPM at a guess. But it does run very quietly - making about the same amount of noise as our 3.5in hard drive, and barely noticable from a metre away.

Final Thoughts -->

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