Friday, November 10th 2017

Intel NUC Based on Intel+Vega MCM Leaked

The first product based on Intel's ambitious "Kaby Lake-G" multi-chip module, which combines a quad-core "Kaby Lake-H" die with a graphics die based on AMD "Vega" architecture, will be a NUC (next unit of computing), and likely the spiritual successor to Intel's "Skull Canyon" NUC. The first picture of the motherboard of this NUC was leaked to the web, revealing a board that's only slightly smaller than the mini-ITX form-factor.

The board draws power from an external power brick, and appears to feature two distinct VRM areas for the CPU and GPU components of the "Kaby Lake-G" MCM SoC. The board feature two DDR4 SO-DIMM slots which are populated with dual-channel memory, and an M.2 NVMe slot, holding an SSD. There are two additional SATA 6 Gb/s ports, besides a plethora of other connectivity options.
Source: ChipHell
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27 Comments on Intel NUC Based on Intel+Vega MCM Leaked

#26
lexluthermiester
silentbogoDunno... maybe a big blower will get the job done.
If it is indeed the future ZBox Magnus, the PC case is going to be tall enough for a decent 95W low-profile heatsink.
You might be right. Still think it would need about 5-6mm more space in the z-axis at minimum.
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#27
Valantar
lexluthermiesterAll of that is going to need cooling. I don't see this and the cooling solution fitting into a "NUC" form factor case. It'll likely be some variation of mini-ITX.
That doesn't make sense - if this was a test board and not a prototype/pre-production of a planned product, it wouldn't be that densely packed. If you're just validating parts, there's no reason to spend time and money engineering a dense board like this - and this board is clearly not as large as a mini-ITX motherboard. Not to mention that for it to be ITX, it would need a 24-pin ATX power connector, 4- or 8-pin EPS power, and it would likely include some sort of PCIe slot. It could be adapted into thin ITX (which can run on external power), but I don't see how that would make sense with this TDP.
silentbogoDunno... maybe a big blower will get the job done.
If it is indeed the future ZBox Magnus, the PC case is going to be tall enough for a decent 95W low-profile heatsink.
Yep. Microsoft cools the APU+VRAM+VRM for the Xbox One X (which runs around 150-160W under gaming loads (170-180W at the wall) with a large blower fan (~100mm) and a mid-sized aluminium fin stack on a vapor chamber. Judging from reviews, it does so very, very quietly to boot. For this, they could just stick on a mid-sized purpose-built heatsink with some heatpipes, with a 120mm fan blowing down - and the whole thing would be cooled relatively efficiently. It wouldn't be thin, though.
lexluthermiesterYou might be right. Still think it would need about 5-6mm more space in the z-axis at minimum.
There's little reason to suspect this will be low-profile like the mainstream NUCs. Zotac and Gigabyte doesn't have the Z-height aversion that Intel seems to have, illustrated by the vertical RAM slots on this board. You couldn't cool a 100W heat source in one of the smallest NUC sizes without duct taping a Delta fan to it anyhow.
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