Power Consumption and Thermal Performance

The power consumption at the wall was measured with a 1080p display being driven through the HDMI port. In the graphs below, we compare the idle and load power of the GIGABYTE GB-BNi7HG4-950 with other gaming mini-PCs evaluated before. For load power consumption, we ran both our custom stress test and the AIDA64 System Stability Test with various stress components, and noted the maximum sustained power consumption at the wall.

Idle Power Consumption

Load Power Consumption (AIDA64 SST)

The power consumption numbers tally well with the capabilities of the system.

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.

According to the official specifications, the junction temperature of the Core i7-6700HQ is 100C. We see that the temperature of the package is kept well below that number, without any throttling of the clocks. In order to make sure that we weren't overstimating the cooling capabilities of the system, we also processed our custom stress test that proesses a more strenuous workload for the GPU, RAM and the GPU (but, not the other parts of the system).

It is heartening to note that the thermal design is indeed very effective even in our unnatural power-virus test. The cores keep running at higher than the rated base clock (3.1 GHz instead of 2.5 GHz). The other interesting aspect is that the temperatures go down to below 30C for all the components in less than 30 minutes after the load is removed. The drives also maintain very reasonable temperatures in the system. On the whole, the thermal design of the unit is very impressive.

HTPC Credentials Concluding Remarks
Comments Locked

50 Comments

View All Comments

  • hojnikb - Friday, October 28, 2016 - link

    Yes there are. There are a bunch of laptops using kaby lake cpus.
  • wintermute000 - Saturday, October 29, 2016 - link

    none with quad core though - all are dual core U
  • hojnikb - Sunday, October 30, 2016 - link

    Doesn't really matter, fact is kaby lake is out.
  • cosmotic - Friday, October 28, 2016 - link

    If these articles never used the phrase 'business end' again, I would be a happy camper.
  • Klug4Pres - Tuesday, November 1, 2016 - link

    I consider myself to be a linguistic pedant, but can't see much wrong with "business end".

    It's a lot better than "happy camper", that's for sure, but no doubt you were being ironic.
  • Samus - Wednesday, November 2, 2016 - link

    Booya.
  • RaichuPls - Friday, October 28, 2016 - link

    How is a GTX 950 equivalent to a GTX 965m? 768 CUDA vs 1024 CUDA...
  • hojnikb - Friday, October 28, 2016 - link

    maybe they were comparing it to the lower clocked 965m... There is a 540Mhz version, that is definitely slower than 950, despite having more cuda cores
  • alphasquadron - Friday, October 28, 2016 - link

    I know it's annoying to request reviews from a site but please if you have the time when the Zotac Magnus EN1080 comes out, a review of it would be so nice. I am sure other sites will be doing it but it is nice to see the anandtech view. I want a really small pc for living room use so I was going to get a laptop and external gpu dock when at home, but then if this new zotac is just as good as a laptop with external gpu dock, I won't have to do that and it looks small but hard to tell from the marketing pictures.
  • coder111 - Friday, October 28, 2016 - link

    What about a similar build with a Fractal Design 202 case and Radeon RX 480 or RX 470?

    How would it compare in terms of size or performance? Or price?

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now