Shuttle DH370 review: A small and useful barebones system

An amazingly compact barebones, this is a great system for those who don’t need passive cooling
Published on 23 May 2019
Our rating
Reviewed price £240 inc VAT
Pros
  • Performed well in benchmark tests
  • Dual-fan integrated heatsink
Cons
  • Cramped layout
  • Twin fans can get loud
  • Large power draw

At first glance, it’s easy to get the Shuttle DH370 mixed up with its industrial cousin, the DS77U7. They’re both extremely compact black boxes, with the DH370 coming in slightly smaller but the DS77U7 weighing a fraction less.

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While the DS77U7’s processor is fixed and unchangeable, though, the DH370 is a full barebones system – and one that ditches passive cooling in favour of a dual-fan integrated heatsink.

This pulls fresh air in at the top and pushes hot air out of the sides. Once we added, as with other barebones systems sharing its 65W thermal design profile CPU limit, an Intel Core i5-8400 and 16GB of DDR4 RAM, it was no surprise to see the DH370 doing well in the benchmarks.

Shuttle XPC slim DH370 - Barebone - Slim-PC - Socket LGA1151 - Intel H370 - pas de processeur - RAM 0 Go - GigE

Shuttle XPC slim DH370 – Barebone – Slim-PC – Socket LGA1151 – Intel H370 – pas de processeur – RAM 0 Go – GigE

While it could barely better its passive equivalent in the Superposition gaming benchmark, it trounced it in our image editing, video editing and multitasking benchmarks.

That performance comes at dual cost, however. Under load, the twin fans can get loud, and the presence of ventilation points at both sides means the chassis lacks a vertical mounting option.

A bigger problem is in power draw: with the active cooling keeping the 65W CPU from hitting thermal throttle and an evidently not-terrifically-efficient power supply, the DH370 hit a huge 98.7W under load. Contrast that to its idle draw of 10.2W.

The exterior design includes an interesting blend of new and old connectivity options: an RS232 and combined RS232/RS422/RS485 serial port can be found around the back, rubbing shoulders with two high-speed USB-A 3.1 Gen 2 and two USB-A 3.1 Gen 1 ports – with another two of each located at the front.

Shuttle XPC slim DH370 - Barebone - Slim-PC - Socket LGA1151 - Intel H370 - pas de processeur - RAM 0 Go - GigE

Shuttle XPC slim DH370 – Barebone – Slim-PC – Socket LGA1151 – Intel H370 – pas de processeur – RAM 0 Go – GigE

There’s also room for a 2.5in SATA drive, which is a welcome change from smaller systems. The design, though, loses a point for its cramped layout. Installation of its components is annoying, requiring that the heatsink is unscrewed and removed to access the RAM and M.2 SSD, as well as the CPU – an awkward setup for later upgrades.

On balance, however, the DH370 is an effortlessly efficient mini PC that performs as well as you’d hope. It can get a little noisy, and it isn’t the simplest thing to modify, but Shuttle has nonetheless produced a machine compact enough for just about any conceivable use case.

Shuttle DH370 specifications
Processor Intel Core i5-8400
Ram 16GB DDR4-2400 SODIMM
USB Ports 2 x USB-A 3.1 Gen 2,2 x USB-A 3.1 Gen 1
Graphics card Intel UHD Graphics 630
Storage 250GB, 2.5in SATA 3, SD card
Operating systems Windows 10 Pro
Warranty 1yr RTB

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