Hello everyone,
A friend of mine, Jason, wishes to build a HTPC from a quad core Pico ITX motherboard, the VIA EPIA-P910. Since he is having USB saturation issues on the RPi, what with a DTV and wifi dongle hooked up (as well as running that pesky ethernet off it too), hes willing to jump back to a embedded x86 platform, simply because its faster, has more on chip USB ports, and is much more widely supported.
My gig is, how long can I power it off a 12VDC LiFePO4 battery, and get away with it. Maximum current draw with a mechanical hard drive (at 700mA) and 100% CPU load is 3.15Amps. I'm pretty certain I won't need 100% CPU load on four cores, nor will I have a mechanical hard drive, due to the fact its going to be out in the bush running a PMR radio network. Someone bumps it or drops it with a 500GB mechanical hard drive, and I'll cry.
Anyway, my question, now I have motivation out of the way, is cases! I can't find anything really good. Jason wants a nice clear case, he likes to show off the guts of his computers, and I don't blame him. Also, since he wont be using any of the USB or serial port expansion cards, it has to be as small as he can get it, hes going to use a SSD inside the unit for OS and applications, and an external USB3 HDD for recording shows off DTV. So does anyone have the ability to make up a nice acrylic clear case for me? I can get you the I/O stack design so you can cut out the ports, as well as the dimensions of the mobo (and just a 2.5 inch Samsung SSD).
The system takes in a 12VDC power supply on a two pole connector, I'm pretty certain we could power it from a 240VAC brick in the case of Jason, or a straight off a 12VDC battery in my case. So I dont need to mount any of those pico-ATX DC-DC power supplies into it like you'd need to do with a Mini ITX mobo.
Additionally, since I had so many problems with RPi not being able to support app_rpt/ chan_voter on Asterisk (that was an uphill battle, and not even finished yet, Digium are supposed to be fixing Zaptel/ DAHDI driver issues in ARM 3.x Linux kernels - note this don't happen on x86 kernels), I'd like to go back to x86 myself, just for this. This is rather attractive, now the problem is, before I go broke paying someone elses mortgage (my lovely stepfathers gift to me, how thoughtful of him), I'd like to get one more embedded board, and the more I write this, I think it'll be the VIA, and not the Exynos5 Cortex-A15 like I was planning.
So yeah, does anyone reckon they could help with some cases? =)
Many thanks everyone!
Shane.