Shuttle's SH67Hiii is a Socket LGA1155 bare bones, so will accept any of Intel's new era of Sandy Bridge processors. It is nearly perfect the similar size and form as other barebones systems in Shuttle's XPC rate, but packs in a comprehensive spec and room for promotes.
The SH67Hiii is a smart brushed black metal box, with a slightly dissimilar plan from Shuttle boxes planned for Intel's last-era Core processors such as the SH55J2.
There is no flap extending either the optical drive or the slots at the down of the unit, which are just recessed somewhat, potentialy to create them without vulnerable to spills when the box is sitting on your desk.When constructing the barebones, we choose not having a flap over the optical drive - it created adjusting a DVD writer much simpler.
The barebones itself is so simple to construct. The heatsink screws in over the processor, and heatpipes link the chip's cooling block to a fan on the rear of the case.
The optical drive and up to two hard disks screw into a cage which you slide into the high of the chassis, and 2 SATA cables route around the top of the chassis so are out of the path. There is just room for these 2 cables in the devoted cable tidy channel, though, so if you have 3 drives you will have to make confirm the previous cable does not block your airflow.
The barebones has 2 SATA iii and two SATA ii slots and supports RAID 0, 1, 5 and 10, so if you set multiple hard disks you are free to select among velocity, information redundancy or a compromise among the two.
You are too spoil for option for quick outer memory, with two USB3 slots on the front and the rear - one of the USB ii slots on the front and rear too doubles as an eSATA port. To set up RAID you will have to utilize the former-school BIOS, though – there is no fancy UEFI-based setup here.




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