Design Comparison: QBic EQ3000 Vs. SB51G/ SN41G2, Continued
06:00 - Tuesday 18 March 2003 by Frank Völkel
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: battle, of, the, minis
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: battle, of, the, minis
Table of content:
Design Comparison: QBic EQ3000 Vs. SB51G/ SN41G2, Continued
Ad
The larger case also helps considerably to keep temperatures down inside the case when the system is working at peak levels. Sadly, the Soltek is not exactly noiseless in operation. A total of five fans, one each for the processor, chipset, case, power supply and graphics card, combine to generate a noise level of at least 50 dB (A) at a typical distance of one meter. This makes the QBic considerably louder - you would do better to say that it was very loud in operation - louder, in fact, than its direct competitors, the SB51G and SN41G2. It is obvious here that conflicting objectives were faced by the Soltek engineers: either thermally safe and loud, or quiet and less reliable.

The Soltek barebone system without any components.

Accessories included: cables, drivers and installation materials.

View of the Soltek motherboard with Intel 845GE chipset.
- Previous page Design Comparison: QBic EQ3000 Vs....
- Next page Hardware Check: Similar Features
Google Ads
The Desktops Articles and reviews
- Two New Mini-Powerhouses from Shuttle
- The Smallest of Them All: The P4/2400 Micro PC
- OS Comparison: On Which Operating System Do Games Run Best?
- Whoohoo! A Mini PC That Goes To The Max
- Goodbye to Hulking PCs: Athlon Mini-PCs Set The Trend
- Build Your Own Mini-PC For The Office
- The Battle Of The Consoles: From Atari's 2600 To Microsoft's Xbox
- The Tom's Hardware Guide Power Box
- Operating System: Microsoft's Windows Millennium