Power, Temperature, and Noise

Some may not be too worried about power and noise, especially students who may be aren't paying a power bill at their dorm or their parents’ house. Still, the more power a computer draws the more heat it has to deal with and the more cooling required, and that in turn makes it harder to keep noise levels low. This problem is made worse in smaller builds where there isn't room for a large cooler with plenty of surface area. So in the end one way or the other all three of the areas covered here will have an impact on one's experience.

One quick note here: for the Mighty Milo I’m using the silent fan profile for the stock performance – with the aftermarket cooler even silent is plenty – and when overclocked I’m using the higher speed performance fan profile.

Idle Power Consumption

Out of the gate, we find a surprising difference in idle power consumption between the two systems. SilverStone’s build idles with much less power consumption than the Crucial build. Since we’re looking at complete systems it’s not immediately clear what the difference is, but as the Thermaltake PSU in the Crucial build is a larger 600W unit that is not 80Plus rated, it’s likely that the PSU is greatest factor here.

Load Power Consumption

Shifting over to load power consumption the story hasn’t changed much. The Crucial system draws more power at every stage, this despite the fact that it’s the SilverStone system with the more power-hungry video card. Even overclocked, Mighty Milo still draws less power than the Ballistix Bantam, though I suspect in practice Milo is actively using more power. This once more points to the PSU and energy conversion losses being the biggest contributor here.

CPU Temperatures

Moving on to temperatures, it’s the Mighty Milo that has the edge with CPU temperatures. With its larger, non-reference cooler and lower rated wattage of the Pentium CPU, this was its metric to win, even with the silent fan profile. Otherwise I suspect that the cases are playing a role here as well, though certainly not as much as the coolers.

GPU Temperatures

With GPU temperatures on the other hand it’s the Ballistix Bantam in the top spot. The GTX 950 is innately a cooler running video card, and that makes everything easier when it comes to keeping down temperatures. Though it’s interesting that at idle this build is quite a bit warmer than the Mighty Milo, which may be the cooler on the card or it may be the case.

System Noise - 1 Meter

Finally, with system noise, both systems produce similar results. The Mighty Milo has the overall edge, particularly when stressing just the CPU or GPU. Otherwise when both processors are under full load, the gap between the two systems is just 0.8dB. I have to say a number I loved seeing during testing was the OCCT (CPU) load noise for the Mighty Milo at stock speeds on the silent profile. With a measurement of less than one decibel above idle, the volume under load is indiscernible from the volume at idle. In day to day life in anything less than a very quiet environment, it wouldn't be hard for a machine such as this to be rendered inaudible except when the GPU really kicks in.

Gaming Performance Build-A-Rig Round 2: The Conclusion
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  • Morawka - Friday, November 20, 2015 - link

    When you spend more of your budget on the Case, than the CPU, it's a crap build.
  • Jhatfie - Friday, November 20, 2015 - link

    Funny to see this as I am actually in the process of finishing up a very similar build to the Bantum for my daughter. Being patient and finding deals has saved me a good amount of $$.
    Thermaltake core v1 $39.99
    AsRock H97M-ITX/ac $59.99 (After $20 rebate)
    Corsair CS450M Gold - $33.99 (After $20 rebate)
    Win 7 Pro - (Already owned and will upgrade to 10 for free)
    EVGA GTX950 2GB - $111.99
    Intel i3-4170 - $101
    G.Skill Sniper 2x4GB DDR3-2166 - $34.99
    OCZ ARC 100 240GB - $59.99
    Seagate 1TB - $44.99
    Total: $486.93
  • doc_man - Sunday, November 29, 2015 - link

    What if you start with something this add a graphics card, SSD? I guess you'll have to replace psu to.. (it has 350 watt)

    http://www.adorama.com/ASM32ADR16.html?hotlink=t&a...

    Asus M32AD-R16 - $409.99
    • Intel Core Core i5-4460S Processor
    • 12GB System Memory (DDR3)
    • 1TB 7200RPM
    (windows, case, etc.)

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