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Shuttle says that the idea of its tiny XPC P2 4800X gaming PC is to compete with the Falcon Northwest FragBox 2. We suggest that Shuttle head back to the lab. The chief hallmark of this $3,200 configuration is its Intel X48 chipset and its Core 2 Extreme QX9650 processor. And it's true that no other PC with a compact design offers such a high-end motherboard/CPU combination, but this system fails to deliver sufficient performance for its high-end price. It's also missing some key capabilities of the X48 chipset because of its size. If you're a gamer looking for a small, semiportable PC, we'd pick the FragBox 2 over this system in a heartbeat.
Like most of its PCs, Shuttle's XPC P2 4800X is a small form factor (SFF) desktop. The FragBox 2 is also an SFF system, and the two share many of the same benefits and limitations inherent to their size. Each offers a degree of portability and a small footprint, but at the expense of expandability. At 8.5 inches tall by 8.6 inches wide by 13 inches deep, the Shuttle system is smaller than the FragBox 2 (9.3 inches tall by 10.5 inches wide by 15 inches deep.) That smaller case ends up costing the Shuttle some very serious expandability for gamers.
What we mean by that refers chiefly to adding more than one graphics card. Because the FragBox 2 system uses a larger case, it can accommodate a larger power supply (up to 1,000 watts!), and thus can power two 3D cards. Even though the Shuttle's Intel X48 chipset comes with AMD's CrossFireX multicard support, Shuttle stuck with its own 450-watt power supply, with no option to upgrade. That leaves you with enough juice for only a single 3D card, and explains why Shuttle will not sell you an XPC P2 4800X preconfigured with a second graphics card. Falcon Northwest, on the other hand, has several dual 3D cards options on offer for its FragBox 2, giving it much better potential for PC gaming than this Shuttle system.
| Shuttle XPC P2 4800X | Falcon Northwest FragBox 2 | |
| Price | $3,200 | $1,499 |
| CPU | 3.0GHz Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650 | 3.2GHz (overclocked) Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 |
| Motherboard chipset | Intel X48 | Intel Q35 |
| Memory | 2GB 1,600MHz DDR3 | 2GB 800MHz DDR2 SDRAM |
| Graphics | 512MB ATI Radeon HD 4850 | 512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT |
| Hard drives | 250GB 7,200 rpm | 500GB, 7,200 rpm |
| Optical drive | dual-layer DVD burner | dual-layer DVD burner |
| Networking | Gigabit Ethernet, 802.11g WiFi, Bluetooth | Gigabit Ethernet |
| Operating system | Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 (32-bit) | Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 (32-bit) |
Aside from the multi-3D card issues, when we compare the Shuttle XPC P2 4800X with the most recent FragBox 2 we've reviewed (from April), we find a few configuration disparities. First, as configured, this Shuttle is more than twice as expensive as the FragBox 2. That Core 2 Extreme chip accounts for roughly $1,000 of the Shuttle's price. Falcon Northwest also offers non-Extreme CPU upgrades that would raise the FragBox 2's price tag.
You can mix and match various parts to align the prices (and Falcon no longer offers the Core 2 Duo E8400), but we find it suspect that the FragBox 2 has a larger hard drive than the Shuttle system. We're glad that Shuttle includes both Bluetooth and 802.11g wireless networking, but we'd like to think that every specification would be superior, given its $1,700 price differential. Even before we realized the issue that the Shuttle can't support more than one 3D card, that hard-drive disparity was a hint to us that this Shuttle PC might not be the best bargain.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| Rendering Multiple CPUs | Rendering Single CPU |
As expected, the Shuttle did, in fact, outperform the FragBox 2 on almost every one of our application tests. The iTunes results, the lone exception, are tied very closely to processor speed, so we suspect that the overclocked 3.2GHz chip in the FragBox 2 helped it outpace the 3.0GHz Shuttle. But our bigger issue is the Shuttle's performance relative to the $1,799 Velocity Micro Edge Z15. That system features the 64-bit version of Windows Vista, and also 4GB of 800MHz DDR2 RAM. It was also faster than the Shuttle system on every single application test, making it hard to recommend this particular Shuttle configuration for its productivity capabilities.
To its credit, Shuttle offers 64-bit Windows and more memory options (although only 1,600MHz DDR3, which is expensive stuff), and pairing them with a more modest CPU would likely improve its price-performance outlook. It's too bad it didn't send us a more thoughtfully configured PC to test.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| 1,920 x 1,200 | 1,280 x 1,024 |