Our drive and audio testing differs a bit from the rest of our testing, for several reasons. First of all, when it comes to drive performance comparison, differences between the P55 and P67 chipsets do leave the P55 platform with a distinct disadvantage, such that we have excluded those results from our reporting. And finally, with audio, we do not list any numbers except for those reported by the product we are testing in order to provide the most information possible, as each audio CODEC will behave quite differently, and each board does not employ the same CODEC. As such, there is no standard we can use other than the numbers themselves. You can always check our other motherboard reviews in order to make direct comparisons to audio performance.
We've tested each drive interface separately, in order to provide the most complete numbers possible. Employing HDTune Pro for all of the testing, we tested each drive outside of the OS environment, using a separate OS on a separate drive, although we do use drives with a fair amount of data on them to simulate performance in real-world situations. For audio, we've changed how we report the numbers provided, using screenshots from the textual results that RMAA provides.
HDTune Pro (SATA2)
We noticed a divergence from the rest of the numbers when testing drive performance, with our ZOTAC Z68-ITX WiFi coming in last place; an utter disappointment.
HDTune Pro (SATA 6Gb/s)
SATA 6 Gb/s showed quite decent performance, with the second highest spot again claimed by the Z68-ITX WiFi, along with four other boards with Intel's latest chipsets.
HDTune Pro (USB3.0)
USB 3.0 drive performance proved to put the Z68-ITX WiFi near the bottom of the pile, most likely due to it employing the VLI USB 3.0 controllers, much different from the NEC/Renesas and Etron products on the other boards. As this chip is relatively new on the market, we were not too sure what to expect, but ZOTAC came through here, offering very decent USB 3.0 performance.
RightMark Audio Analyzer
ZOTAC uses the same ALC892 CODEC as we saw in our last few reviews, employed by ASUS on the P8P67 PRO, the ASUS M5A97 EVO, and by ECS on the P67H2-A2. While the audio performance was fairly decent to our ears, Rightmark Audio Analyzer did show audio quality similar to the other ALC892 results, albeit a fair bit lower, a product of the circuit design and other components used in the board's audio loop. These results are very good, considering the lack of supporting components on the PCB, but we did notice a bit of background noise while playing L4D2 with TPU community members.