Zotac H55-ITX WiFi review

A H55 board with a competent feature set, but not the high-performance board it could be

Zotac H55-ITX WiFi
A high performance Mini-ITX board is a nice idea

TechRadar Verdict

A high performance Mini-ITX board is a nice idea. The Gigabyte H55N-USB3 executes it better.

Pros

  • +

    Great feature set includes N-spec WiFi

  • +

    Six SATA ports

Cons

  • -

    Disappointing overclocking results

  • -

    No USB 3.0

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Stuffing Intel's desktop-class H55 chipset into a miniscule Mini-ITX motherboard is hardly a standard procedure.

However, the Zotac H55-ITX WiFi can't hope to get by based on nothing more than novelty. It must beat the likes of Gigabyte's identically proportioned and similarly specified H55N-USB3.

Zotac h55-itx wifi: connections

Weak performance

Given the price premium, however, the lack of USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gbps support is disappointing. But neither is as significant as the H55-ITX WiFi's real weakness, which is performance.

At stock clocks, the gap may be small. We're talking a second here and a frame per second there, but the Gigabyte is consistently ahead. Bring overclocking into the equation and things really go south for Zotac.

Firstly, the BIOS menu is a bit clunky and confusing. Dig around and you will eventually discover that most of the important options are available even if enthusiasts will note the absence of some of their favourite fine tuning parameters.

Anywho, the bottom line for the H55-ITX WiFi is a top baseclock frequency of 180MHz. That's well short of the Gigabyte H55N-USB3's 210MHz maximum frequency and could prove a limiting factor when overclocking.

Moreover, running components at the ragged edge is rarely a good idea. Arguably, therefore, the long term maximum for this motherboard is 160MHz to 170MHz.

It's also worth noting that the H55- ITX WiFi is peculiarly power-hungry when running a Core i7 processor combined with discrete graphics. This may well be an erroneous voltage setting that could be remedied simply by a future BIOS update. For now though it certainly undermines this motherboard's eco-friendly and efficiency credentials.

Contributor

Technology and cars. Increasingly the twain shall meet. Which is handy, because Jeremy (Twitter) is addicted to both. Long-time tech journalist, former editor of iCar magazine and incumbent car guru for T3 magazine, Jeremy reckons in-car technology is about to go thermonuclear. No, not exploding cars. That would be silly. And dangerous. But rather an explosive period of unprecedented innovation. Enjoy the ride.