• expired

[Refurb] Dell OptiPlex 7070 Micro i5 9500T 16GB RAM 256GB SSD Wi-Fi $308 ($300.30 eBay Plus) Delivered @ Bneacttrader eBay

680
RFRB20RFRB22

Original Coupon Deal

Seems like a great price for the 9th Gen intel micro PC. Only 11 units remaining.

Brand: Dell
Model: Optiplex 7070
Form Factor: Micro
Processor: Intel Core i5 9500t 2.20Ghz
Storage: 256Gb
Storage Type: SSD
Display: Nil
Memory: 16Gb
Max Memory: 32Gb
Graphics: Intel UHD Graphics 630
Optical: Nil
Webcam: Nil
Video OutPut: DisplayPort
Connectivity: WiFi Wireless, Ethernet
I/o Ports: Micro: 6 External USB: 1 x USB Type-C 3.1 Gen 2 (front); 5 x 3.1 Gen 1 (1 front, with PowerShare/4 rear - One with SmartPower On) 1 RJ-45 2-Displayport 1-Serial 2-PS/2 1 Optional 3rd Video Port (VGA/DP/HDMI 2.0b/USB Type-C Alt Mode) 1 Universal Audio Jack 1 Line-Out
Operating System: Windows 11
Dimensions: Height (inches / centimeters) 7.2/18.2 Width (inches / centimeters) 1.4/3.6 Depth (inches / centimeters) 7/17.8
Weight: 1.18 kg

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closed Comments

  • +1

    i bought 7060 Micro i5-8500T from previous deal, it works perfect.

  • -1

    I'm looking for a PC to put in an R9 380 GPU, which needs 500-550w PSU. Would this PC be compatible?

    • +8

      It's a micro. The entire case is probably smaller than the GPU, aside from this, there is unlikely to be a suitable slot (I'm guessing) and certainly not sufficient power.

      • Ok thanks. Still trying to figure out the smallest case i can put this GPU in, but PCB form is ATX, so i think i need a mid tower ATX
        https://www.gigabyte.com/Graphics-Card/GV-R938G1-GAMING-4GD/…

        • +1

          I'd suggest Office PC's from any of the Mutinationals are unlikely to have sufficient headspace in their PSU to power any GPU. Everything is built to a budget, so the included PSU is specced to power the max specification and nothing further.

          Workstations are probably the only devices from Multinationals that would have suitable PSU.

        • +2

          As well as the PSU issue, it most definitely won't fit in any micro/mini/SFF/USF PCs, as it's a so-called "full height" card.
          Its length will determine where it fits best, it might already fit in a mini tower.
          Those can be found on like ebay as well, but by far not as prolific as the really small factor ones, and generally not all that cheap either, probably because with those larger form PCs you have a lot more flexibility (albeit with - generally - higher power consumption and - often enough - more noise).

    • Assuming you're not trolling, no… There's zero chance this has a 550w PSU in it

    • +1

      With a bit of effort, anything is possible.

      You just need an M.2 to PCIE, a riser and an external PSU and you should be good to go.

      • +2

        Open and shut case! :)

        • +3

          shut case!

          Only if you cut a hole in it

          • @ihfree: I am reading you like an open book (or Open case). :)

            But the OP could transfer the tiny pc into a large case I suppose unless he wants to take chance of spilling his coffee on the video card… :)

  • The code doesn't seem to be working for me - anyone else?

    • The code is working for me. You need to use RFRB20 if you don't have eBay plus.

    • The plus 22 one works for me. You should be using the 20 one if not ebay plus

  • +2

    Does the 9th gen Intel have anything over 8th gen? AV1 decoding isn't supported till 11th gen.

    • nope, just a little faster

  • That's an excellent excellent little computer for people who don't play games, can also make a fun little server out of it I suspect.

    • I bought one of the 8500T to make an emulation box. Runs everything up to ps2 pretty well.

      • This is my use case as well. I'm getting a used R9 380 - as its the last GPU to have native analog output - and looking for a computer to put it in so i can plug it into my MAME / JAMMA / JPAC ready cabinet.

        • What is the benefit of native output vs an HDMI to RCA style adapter for example? better quality?

          • @glide: Its because I have an original arcade CRT monitor in the cabinet. the JPAC makes sure it receives a 15hz signal

            • @mgexiled: Which type of RGB socket do those arcade CRT monitors have? Is it the BNC or Scart type?

    • +1

      Using a different USFF(Lenovo M700) as a home server with Ubuntu and Docker. Been pretty good

      • Plex
      • Filebrowser
      • Automated downloading new Linux ISOs as released
      • "Linux ISOs" :)

        • Ubunzto, Hardcora, Lickit Mint, OpenupSUSE

  • None left. Any more?

  • will 4k movies play on this computer?

    • -2

      LOL

      Only if you got a 4K monitor (joke)

    • +2

      That sound optimistic. ECC RAM is the realm of workstation/server motherboards, not ultra SFFs.

      • AMD do ECC

        • AMD dosen't make motherboards.

          ECC requires support at both the CPU and motherboard.

          • @rumblytangara: True but most motherboards do support ECC.

            • @Guybrush57: If by "support" you mean they can accept ECC dimms without making use of the error correction, then sure, some do.

              • @rumblytangara: My launch Gigabyte X370 Gaming K7 makes use of the error correction without being documented.

    • +2

      None of the tiny PCs machines currently support ECC including the Ryzen Lenovo models.

      Believe me I have done the research.

      EDIT: This is the closest you will get. The size is in between USFF and SFF:

      https://support.hp.com/au-en/document/c05338666

  • Is the power consumption between a Micro PC and a Desktop significant enough to buy a mini PC… considering it would be used on a minimal load

    • +2

      10W vs 30+W at Idle

  • +2

    Too late, wouldn't mind to grab one.

    • +1

      It's back again

  • Amazing little home server machine. I have a 7070 with i5-9500 runing proxmox with container running Docker ( all the home media apps) + plus a Ubuntu VM runing Plex with HW transcoding.

  • -4

    Only 6 cores no hyperthread not even that good value

    • What would you consider for value at the $300 price point?

      • -3

        compared to the 4 core version for $90 this is $210 more for 2 extra cores

        • +1

          That's a end of life 6th gen, this is a 9th

          • -2

            @dyziplen: exact same architecture

            • @abctoz: Nope.

              That's a end of life 6th gen, this is a 9th

              • @Nom: both are same skylake architecture, having bigger number doesn’t mean it changed

                • @abctoz: One is officially supported by Windows 11 and the other is not……….

                  • @dyziplen: easy to bypass

                    it’s the same architecture with a higher number

                    • @abctoz: For now. Even though it's unlikely to change there's no guarantee it will continue in the future. A logical point to end it may be the end of windows 10 support - 2 years away.

                      • @ihfree: Software will always be cracked it’s going to cost Microsoft a lot of money to monitor the billions of devices

                        they don’t actually care they want ppl to use their platform

                        • @abctoz: Its not about being able to install it, the last time I tried, it will literally download the installer and install from scratch.

                          The issue is the TPM and security and stability of the system going forward. The lack of TPM may not matter at this point, but it may change in the future and we have no idea what impact that it might have.

                          • @dyziplen: what ever the case you can just use the current version, which will last many years already, at which point you can upgrade again, since you saved $200- you’ve saved enough to upgrade twice in already

                            TPM boogeyman is irrelevant

        • you want AT LEAST 7th gen for computer browsing, especially if you are a fan of video streaming

          6th gen skylake don't have hardware decoding support for VP9 which is used on all youtube videos

          one of the biggest benefits to mini pcs is power efficiency, that goes out the window if you are software decoding video constantly

          • @desync: this is true, but you also have to factor in cost, the other one was $90

            you can argue 4 cores will also lower power consumption. Plus there is a substantial baseline power that is wasted and used by psu, mb, ram, hdd, fans.

            I don’t understand why people have such poor value sense on here, it’s almost like the price is not part of decision making. It’s like ohhh I saved $500 but I wasted thousands on something that was price jacked to the tits in the first place. kinda hilarious really

            • @abctoz: this is a really powerful and power efficient mini pc, power consumption is largely the same regardless of the 2 extra cores, all these mini pc processors have a TDP of 35w, you get around an 80% performance boost for the additional cost plus low power usage thanks to native hardware video decoding

              but it's not all black and white, theres the 7500T (which gets you that hardware video decoding) which would be better value than the skylake and then there is the 8500T which gives you a dramatic performance boost thanks to being the first generation of the 6 core

              personally i think the 8500T is the best value but the 7500T is also a great option if the 8th gen is too expensive, i'd avoid the skylake based on video consumption - good for a server but not the best option for general computing

              btw you can build yourself a hp mini 9500T with 8gb ram for as little as $150 if you don't mind picking up parts from 2 places

              • @desync: if you can get 9500t for 150 id choose that every time

                8500t for 300 vs 6500t for 90, id just get the 6500 wait for prices to come down atrocious pricing discrepancy I feel ripped off every time I look at it lol

    • Do you actually know what a mini PC is?

      They're TINY - they're quiet and they're still quite powerful. That thing is barely bigger than 4 CDs stacked on top of each other.

      • What's a CD?

        • It's an ancient device used to hold music, I believe they were from the Genghis Khan era.

  • Damn, missed it!

    • I can see the deal is still on.

      • You mean the listing is still on, but you can't buy it.

    • Back in stock !

      • Didn't last long.

  • Does this come with a genuine dell power adapter?

    • Got an 7060 last year from the same seller, it came with an after market power adapter.

  • Back in stock

    • But the codes have expired.

  • +2

    Setup for my mum, she’s happy. Also got a bracket to mount the PC on the back of the monitor, like so

    The bracket is currently on sale at Mwave, in case of interest.

    • Which monitor did you end up using? Trying to find a suitable 27 inch 1440p that's not for gaming.

      • kogans are actually pretty decent, they are usually viotek, an IPS panel would be nice

        i'd thinking of their 32" QHD for $259 but hoping a nice 4k option pops up for maybe another $100

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