GENERIC
PERFORMANCE METRICS
The
ASRock Vision 3D 252B is basically a notebook solution. It wouldn't make sense
to compare it with full blown desktop Sandy Bridge solutions (or for that
matter, any system with a power consumption of more than 100W). In the
comparative benchmarks provided in the rest of this review, we will provide the
scores obtained by the Vision 3D 252B and other similar SFF HTPC solutions.
Windows
Experience Index
This
metric is often considered meaningless, but we feel it serves as an indicator
of what could be the bottleneck in a system for pre-built HTPCs. With such a
premium configuration, the only letdown is the absence of a SSD, and it is duly
reflected in this index with the primary hard disk weighing in at 5.9.
Using
a SSD as the primary disk is the only thing that could have been done in order
to improve this score.
Miscellaneous
Performance Metrics
The
graphs below give an idea of where the ASRock Vision 3D 252B stands with
respect to performance when compared with other SFF HTPCs.
PCMark
Vantage's PCMark score gives a general idea of the system's capability.
We
also ran the 3D Mark Vantage and 3D Mark 06 benchmarks and the graphs below
show how the GT 540M (in conjunction with the Core i5-2520M) fares when
compared to the graphics capabilities of other pre-built SFF HTPCs.
The
Vision 3D 252B is miles ahead of the SFF HTPCs from last year. This goes on to
prove that the bar for the high-end HTPC just keeps getting higher.
In
addition to the above synthetic benchmarks, a couple of common HTPC workloads
were also benchmarked. We have some data on the x264 encoding performance using
the i5-2520M. Note that we are unable to utilize QuickSync for this test
because QuickSync is unable to provide any for of support for accelerating x264
encode. As expected, the results match what was obtained in the CoreHT 252B
review.
An
estimate of how well WinRAR performs, particularly with respect to processing
split archives, wraps up this section. To evaluate this, we take a 4.36 GB MKV
file, compress it in the 'Best' compression mode into a split archive (97.1 MB
each), which results in 44 files on the hard disk. The time taken to decompress
this split archive is then recorded. The performance in this benchmark is
heavily influenced by the hard disk in the system. It looks like both the hard
disk characteristics of the Vision 3D 252B are the same as that of the CoreHT
252B.
We
have deliberately refrained from dealing with gaming benchmarks in this review.
Instead, we will focus on very HTPC-centric benchmarks over the next few
sections. For readers interested in finding out how the GT 540M fares in gaming
bencmarks when coupled with a mobile Sandy Bridge processor, I suggest taking a
look at Dustin's gaming benchmarks prepared as part of a notebook review.
Though Dustin doesn't have kind words for the GT 540M, note that the Vision 3D
252B is definitely a step up from the first generation Vision 3D (for which we
have gaming benchmarks here).
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