ZOTAC ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480: SFF PC with Intel Core i5, AMD Radeon RX480, USB-C
by Anton Shilov on November 4, 2016 8:00 AM ESTZOTAC has introduced a new small form-factor system that integrates AMD’s Radeon RX 480 graphics as well as an Intel quad-core Core i5-6400T. The compact PC is designed to drive up to four 4K displays at once and can be used both for gaming as well as for productivity applications that demand multiple monitors. In fact, the manufacturer officially positions the system as an entry-level machine for VR gaming.
The ZOTAC ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 PC is powered by Intel’s Core i5-6400T processor (4C/4T, 2.2 GHz/2.8 GHz, 6 MB LLC cache, 35 W TDP) as well as a custom LGA1151 motherboard with two slots for DDR4-2133 SO-DIMM memory. AMD’s Radeon RX480 MXM module, one M.2-2280 slot for a SATA SSD, a SATA connector, two Gigabit Ethernet controllers, a 802.11ac Wi-Fi/BT 4.2 module and a USB 3.1 controller make up the other key features.
When it comes to connectivity, the ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 is an example of reasonable set of I/O ports. The system features two HDMI 2.0, two DisplayPort 1.3, two GbE, two 3.5mm audio, two USB 3.0, two USB 2.0, one USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-A and one USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-C connectors. In addition, the PC has a 3-in-1 card reader (SD/SDHC/SDXC UHS II). Users with 5.1- or 7.1-channel speaker systems will have to use an external USB audio solution however.
From performance point of view, the ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 meets the minimum requirements that Oculus VR set for games compatible with the Oculus Rift VR headset back in the first half of 2015: it has a quad-core CPU along with AMD’s Radeon RX 480 GPU, supports up to 32 GB of DDR4 memory and can be equipped with 2 drives (1x M.2 and 1x 2.5"). If game developers follow recommendations of Oculus VR, the MAGNUS ERX480 should run VR titles for Oculus VR with decent framerate.
ZOTAC ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 Specifications | |||
ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 (barebones) |
ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 PLUS (w/ DRAM+M.2) |
ZBOX MAGNUS ERX480 WINDOWS (w/ DRAM+M.2) |
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CPU | Intel Core i5-6400T (4 cores, 2.2 GHz/2.8 GHz, 6 MB LLC, 35 W) | ||
PCH | unknown 100-series | ||
Graphics | AMD Radeon RX480 at 1050 MHz: 2304 stream processors 144 texture units 32 ROPs 256-bit memory interface 4 GB of GDDR5 7 GT/s memory |
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Memory | Two SO-DIMM slots, up to 32 GB of DDR4-2133 | 8 GB of DDR4-2133 (one module) | |
Storage | M.2 SATA 1x SATA 6 Gbps 2.5" |
120 GB M.2 SATA SSD 1 TB 2.5" HDD |
|
Wi-Fi | 802.11ac + BT 4.2 | ||
Ethernet | Two Gigabit Ethernet with RJ45 connector | ||
Display Outputs | 2 × HDMI 2.0 2 × DisplayPort 1.2 |
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Audio | 3.5 mm audio in and audio out | ||
USB | 2 × USB 2.0 Type-A (480 Mbps) 2 × USB 3.0 Type-A (5 Gbps) 1 × USB 3.1 Type-A (10 Gbps) 1 × USB 3.1 Type-C (10 Gbps) |
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Other I/O | 3-in-1 card reader (SD/SDHC/SDXC UHS II) | ||
Dimensions | 210 mm × 203 mm × 62.2 mm 8.27 × 7.99 × 2.45 inches |
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PSU | External | ||
OS | - | Windows 10 Home |
Speaking of dimensions, it should be noted that like other MAGNUS-series PCs, the ERX480 is not as tiny as Intel’s NUC, but it is not as large as some other models in Zotac's lineup. The relatively small size of the new compact PC from ZOTAC is a result of the company’s decision to use relatively low-power components (the manufacturer claims that the power draw of the ERX480 is 160 W) and air-cooling. We do not know whether the PC gets noisy under high loads, but this is a possibility as the system uses two blowers.
ZOTAC traditionally plans to offer three versions of the MAGNUS ERX480: a barebones with just the CPU and GPU installed; a Plus version with a 8 GB DDR4 memory module, a 120 GB SATA M.2 SSD as well as 1 TB HDD; and a Windows edition with DRAM, storage and Windows 10 Home operating system pre-installed. The manufacturer does not disclose its MSRPs at this time, but claims that all the PCs will be available by the end of November.
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Source: ZOTAC
29 Comments
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jaydee - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
It certainly gives the impression that the product isn't going to be out for awhile, because it makes you think they didn't have an actual product to take pictures of.djsvetljo - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
If Zotac has good reputation - it is fake. Their support is awful. Sent them a passive Zbox that had BIOS clock freezing once in a while, with documentation, videos, etc. They sent it back to me stating no issues found. No one acknowledged the issue even though it was clearly shown in the videos. I continued troubleshooting after that with an "engineer" from Taiwan who noticed BIOS updated versions didn't match or something. Mind you, this was after it was sent to them for repair. That "engineer" eventually stopped replying. So I gave up and tossed on fleabay.nathanddrews - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
Any guess on price? I'm going with $600 barebones...lmcd - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
You're joking, right? This is $1k minimum.lmcd - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
For a reference comparison point, look at the recent BRIX review on this site.Valantar - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
The GTX 1060 variant of this (exact same specs outside of the GPU) is $999. That's with the 6GB 1060, so this would probably cost the same or $50 less. No less than that, I'd wager.TheinsanegamerN - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
Looks sweet. If it doesnt throttle, this would be a sweet set top PC for TV gaming.PsychoPif - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
I can't wait to see the price and the avaibility in Canada.I almost built a system with the exact same spec when the 480 was released.
The_Assimilator - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
Article says 2x DP 1.3, table says 2x DP1.2, which is it?I presume there is an updated model of this with an MXM GTX 1060 6GB in the pipeline - hopefully Zotac will also switch to Kaby Lake parts as soon as they're available.
fanofanand - Friday, November 4, 2016 - link
This has me mildly interested depending on price. It has reasonable, moderate hardware that should be sufficient for my family's needs, but that stupid SFF typically doubles or triples price. I would rather not have the "T" processor in there but I'm not oblivious to the cooling needs in such a small box. I really wish the manufacturers would stop looking at the SFF boxes as their saving grace for margins.