Heat Generation
Although the board only requires passive cooling, it still needs a certain amount of airflow. Intel’s documentation also strongly suggests blowing air over the two heatsinks. An 80 mm chassis fan running at 5V is easily up to the task, providing adequate cooling with a low noise level.

With the processor cooled by an 80 mm fan, the CPU temperature reaches 32° C when idle; under load the temperature rises to 68° C.
Without a fan providing airflow, the idle temperature increases to 45° C, reaching 95° C under load and, in our experience, resulting in instability. Providing adequate cooling to the system is essential.
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Good article... But dollars... Really?
Think I'll just follow most readers and just concentrate reading the US site of Tom's from now on.
I agree. This is a good article............but............
I cannot source this board in the UK (all are saying out of stock). Also, why bother to have a UK site when most articles relate to USA, ie dollars.
It is much better to just log in to the USA site
Wouldn't the Intel Little Falls (M-ITX) board with the Atom processor be a better choice? Same price (if not even lower?) and uses less power?
Ditch the serial & parallel ports, give me a gbit network card and I'm sold! Oh and like other people say, prices in £ ffs
I'm forever being asked to build fast computers, and this proves once again that unless you actually use that power (and wisely), you're not going to see a huge difference. Intel..AMD..doesn't matter; you just don't need to spend a fortune these days and both platforms offer great power thermal envelopes.
..if only AMD would market these features more.
One thing does stand out: no 'C1E Speedstep' support..you'd have thought with a system like this, that such a feature would be standard. Guess it's just an easy way of getting rid of old S-479 gear.