Aesthetics

Shuttle pioneered the SFF market back in 2001 with their first XPC, and they've continued to refine and improve their design over the years. There were many fans of the G2 series in particular, and more recently, the G5 has turned a lot of heads. The G5 is their smallest design yet, and while it does not include all of the options that some would like, it does work very well as a standard computer. The front is attractive and conservative, and performance - both in speed as well as in noise levels - is very good.

Click on images to enlarge.

Taking a look at their latest P series, Shuttle has departed somewhat from the "smaller is better" philosophy of the G5 and is catering more towards the performance and enthusiast crowd. Externally, the front of the case is a silver/gray/blue finish with fold-down doors obscuring the 3.5" and optical drive bays. The SB81P and SB95P have a similar front panel, although in different colors. Starting at the top, we have the slots for flash memory, then the door for the optical drive; next is the floppy/3.5" door, and at the very bottom is a door for the front ports. The region containing the power and reset buttons is fixed, if you were wondering.

Click on images to enlarge.

For those interested in a minimalist design as far as lighting goes, the SN25P is great. The power button lights up with a faint blue glow, and above it is the HDD activity LED. There are no other lights or indicators to distract you. Some people might like more pizzazz from their computer, but most of us are fans of a more conservative approach. The SN25P is an attractive case that would work very well in a home or office environment.

There are a couple of small items that we would like to see addressed. First is the lack of a cover on the 3.5". If you use it for a hard drive or leave it empty, even though the door obscures it from view, we would like to have a cover in place. (Shuttle may include such a cover once the units start shipping to retail, but one was not present with our review unit.) The second may be a make-or-break deal for potential buyers, and that's the color of the front panel. We like it more than the shiny black of the SB81P, but others might prefer some other color scheme. At present, we are not aware of any alternative panels for the P series, so if you would like something other than the grayish-blue coating, you'll either have to do that on your own or you'll have to wait. These are admittedly very minor points, but for a case such as this, we expect everything to be "perfect".


Click to enlarge.

One last item that we have already hinted at is the size of the SN25P. It's larger than many of the older XPC cases, so if you truly want the smallest case possible, this is not it. You can see in our comparison photo how it measures up to the G5 chassis. It is larger in all three dimensions. You'll see in the features section why Shuttle has increased the size, and we really don't mind, considering all that has been added, but some might prefer a more minimalist approach, and for them, we would have to recommend sticking with the "tried and true" G5 chassis.

Index Features
Comments Locked

30 Comments

View All Comments

  • Iargonaut - Wednesday, May 4, 2005 - link

    One question - not concerning image quality (there are several other reviews on the net with worse pictures!) - how about the stability and the speed of the ethernet port? I read on sfftech.com that there have been some issues with this.
    And finally when and what is the next nforce 4 SFF to be expected?

    Thanks and as always: great review!
  • JarredWalton - Saturday, July 30, 2005 - link

    Soon... very soon! Including some updated SN25P benchmarks (Network as well as overclocking).
  • JarredWalton - Friday, March 11, 2005 - link

    I understand that GIF/PNG would have been smaller. Again, I have deleted the originals, and the Shuttle provided image was already in JPG format. If I were to convert them to GIF/PNG now, the JPEG artifacts make it pointless. The system is disassembled, so I can't just recreate the images at the drop of a hat.

    As far as bandwidth and page loads are concerned, bandwidth is practically free for servers. It's not a major concern. I mean, I contributed to a reduction in bandwidth by creating thumbnails that are 1/9 the size of the larger images, mostly because I don't think a lot of people are really that concerned about looking at *every* image in high detail.

    Personally, I'm more upset about the lousy quality of some of my pictures (not a very good camera) than I am with the size of the CPUZ images. I'm still trying to figure out the best way to get clean images. I'll be trying some brighter lights for the next set of pictures, so we'll see if that helps.

    FWIW, even if the entire content of one of our pages was 60KB - which would stream in about 1 second over any broadband connection - it would take anywhere from 2 to 4 seconds to render the pages due to their complexity. Pentium 3 and low end Athlon systems are substantially slower at page rendering. Also, what about the non-AnandTech ad servers? Sometimes those are a bigger bottleneck than anything else. Anyway, I'm not involved AT ALL in the site design, so the only thing I have sway over is what sits in the middle of the pages. :)
  • cosmotic - Friday, March 11, 2005 - link

    You could cut the filesize of the header on each page down by half if you just stuck it in fireworks, clicked gif, then exact palette. You could go a little further by using an 8bit PNG, and also lose pattent issues. If you touched it up a little bit, you could make it 1/4 the originial size.
  • cosmotic - Friday, March 11, 2005 - link

    As Ed points out, it saves on bandwidth. If you cut the page sizes in half by optimizing images and such, you would save a ton on bandwidth. Plus, even on broadband, page loads are not instant. If you could get it under 40K, then it would load in 1 second (still not instant). but at 170K, it would take 3 more seconds for people with average broadband connections. When people get fiber in their homes, are you going to start using TIFFs? Not only are you waisting your bandwidth, and the bandwidth of your visiters, your also contributing to clogging up large pipes cross-country. It's not a huge deal, but if every one took your aditude, the internet would be slllooooowwww. Why is it so hard to compress the images? Just stick them in Fireworks or whatever and spend 20 seconds makeing them smaller. If you spend 5 min making all the cross-site images half as small, you would save a bundle on bandwidth.
  • GoatHerderEd - Friday, March 11, 2005 - link

    Cosmotic and Jared; As the operator of the site, AT should care because it is using bandwidth. But if they have enough to spare, WTF cares? The users really should not care. Even if they were on dialup, it would still be fast enough. Plus who uses dial up any more? If you read this site, and you use dial up, you’re probably using something to increase page loads that will mutilate the picture anyways. You guys need to give it a rest. Be thankful they aren’t bitmaps! Infact, Jared, you should make them all bitmaps just for fun. See what people say then. We come to AT for the reviews and comments, not for an art gallery.

    On a separate topic, great article. Keep up the good work; keep those AMD based system reviews coming. I love my XPC. One thing I am mad at is the HDD. I used a Raptor thinking it would be faster. It may be, but not by much. There is one big issue with it though, its louder than F*CK. It sounds like a really old AT style pc because of the HDD. AHH! I think I may get it replaced soon because its so loud. Defeats the purpose of all the quiet fans.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link

    Zepper - repairs of which parts? Shuttle gives a 1 year warranty on their SFFs, and they'll even repair items outside of that warranty for a fee. That's not the greatest warranty ever (many motherboards come with a 3 year warranty), but it's not bad either. The only parts that are really likely to fail are the fans, which you can replace relatively easily. The PSU is the only really proprietary part that might need to be replaced, and even then you can purchase a new SilentX from Shuttle for $60 to $80 (guessing on the 350W, as I can't find a price for it yet).

    In the end, it *is* an expensive unit, but it's a well-designed unit. An ATX case and nF4 motherboard would cost about half as much. Shrinking sizes usually increases costs, and the quality of the parts used in this case looks to be better than what would go into a cheap to moderate ATX case. I wouldn't expect much in the way of repairs/failures if you clean it out with compressed air every 3 months. I know quite a few people that have been running XPCs for two years without trouble.
  • Zepper - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link

    Cost of long-term ownership too high with all those proprietary parts...

    .bh.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link

    21 - I can't believe anyone cares! I mean, who even notices that an image is 50K instead of 15K anymore? Dial-up users... but do we really get many of those? I don't know. I'm not in charge of the site layout, however, which as I've mentioned is about 170K all on its own. You might as well start complaining about all the advertisements (which is what runs sites such as this, if you weren't aware). One page out of 12 was 120K larger than it needed to be... and the world moves on. :)

    Anyway, once I update the article with new overclocking tests (in the next week or so), I'll be sure to replace the JPG images with GIF versions.
  • cosmotic - Thursday, March 10, 2005 - link

    I cant believe your defending using poor formats and those huge page sizes. You should be trying to make the page sizes as small as possible.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now