Make sure this fitsby entering your model number. 7th Generation Intel Core i7-7567U Intel Iris Plus Graphics 650 16 GB Intel Optane memory accelerator preinstalled (DDR4 memory is required and must be purchased separately). Intel Optane memory automatically learns your computing behaviors to accelerate frequently performed tasks M.2 22x42/80 (key M) slot for SATA3 or PCIe X4 Gen3 NVMe or AHCI SSD 2.5" SSD/HDD bay. Thunderbolt 3 (40 Gbps), USB 3.1 Gen2 (10 Gbps) and DisplayPort 1.2 via USB-C
"Intel BOXNUC7I3BNHX1 NUC Kit with 16GB Optane memory preinstalled" I purchased this NUC to replace an Intel Celeron-based NUC that recently went kaputz due to a motherboard issue (its totally dead/bricked). The little NUC is being used as a small Plex Media Server for use inside the home and the occasional internet stream. Added an 8GB RAM module (will add another 8 in the future) and the result is a stable little feller tat is able to "direct play" two streams inside the ome network and transcode / stream to one external viewer at the same time all while only using about 50% CPU. Not too bad. I went ahead and opted for the Intel Optane memory module but have never been able to get it to work. BIOS reports nothing is installed in the M.2 slot while the Windows 10 OS sees the module but states it is Disabled. Have gone through all the usual Intel-suggested / Intel-Requested troubleshooting but to no avail - their support stinks and is primarily just canned responses from an AI system or from persons in a far away call centre using copy/paste from their approved script ... totally 100% useless. At this point Ive given up on the Optane option - a few bucks down the drain but ... meh ... at least I have an awesome little NUC-based Plex server up and running once again. The package includes a VESA mount to attach the unit to the backside of the telly which saves space. It was easy to do - recommended. Several have mentioned the blue LED ring on the front is distracting. This can be controlled from within the BIOS settings along with the power button LED. They can be made to react to power state or even hard drive activity and can be dimmed quite low. Ive set mine to the lowest dim setting with the ring linked to hard drive activity and the power button LED linked to power state. With all room lights off it can not be seen. Although Im connected via ethernet the WiFi is quite strong and stable in my initial tests and the included IR remote receiver works perfectly when pairs with my Harmony remote control set-up. Bluetooth also has worked flawlessly when using bluetooth headphones to watch a movie. Audio output via HDMI seems to support up to 7.1 channels as reported by Plex and my receiver ... no issues. Overall: highly recommended. Skip on the Intel Optane option.
Sandeep
4
Its tiny, its powerful and its all i need. I use this for my home / project pc and its been really good. Was able to add a 256 GB SSD and a 16GB ram and it was alive. Running Ubuntu 18.04 on it and it runs smooth. The only reason i gave 4 stars is because of the fan noise. Its not crazy loud, but definitely noticeable - feels like a white noise machine running. Ubuntu is light, but the fan still runs at around 4k rpm. Attached a video for the sound... I always use headphones when i work, so it does not annoy me. RAM: HyperX Kingston Technology Impact 16GB 2133MHz DDR4 CL13 260-Pin SODIMM Laptop Memory HX421S13IB/16 SSD: SAMSUNG 960 EVO M.2 250GB NVMe PCI-Express 3.0 x4 Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) MZ-V6E250BW
Gabriela Garcia
4
Absolutely love it. One very important thing they dont tell you about the expandable hdd/ssd is the tray rack only accommodates a 2.5 * 7mm. I was lucky enough to buy a seagate 5tb 2.5 * 15mm hdd only to face myself with a good deal of tray rack mortification and the sata connector to the mb not allowing the nuc case to fully close on one side. Though its not noticeable you have to be careful not to over tighten but snug fit the screws to prevent damage to the mb. Over all... id buy it again, but intel needs better spec sheets.
Adam
4
Im going to start with the bad as Id like people to know whats going on up front. At this time there is a problem with this generation i3/i5/i7, 7th gen Intel NUC units. If you are running at 1080P / 4K (typically this happens more with 4k), the display will go black for a few seconds (this also drops the sound), and it will return. This can happen at any time. Once an hour, or once every 10 seconds even. Its random. Currently, Intel has posted on their site that the previous version of graphics display drivers resolves this issue (Version ending in 4664), however it does not resolve the issue. Their forum currently has a dedicated thread regarding these units. I have two, one which is seeing this issue, one which is not. I believe the one which is working fine has the older bios 42, which is unaffected at this time. The only other qualm I have with this unit is that they decided to add a rectangular blue LED to the front of the unit which flashes and lights up when the NUC is turned on and performing tasks. I wish there was a way to disable this (or at least I havent found a way yet). Now onto the good. As always, the Intel NUC line of mini PCs is sleek, quiet, and powerful. This generation holds on to that with a new color scheme which I feel is much nicer looking than the previous white enclosure design. This metal enclosure has a textured gunmetal grey look to it and feels very well designed. The construction itself is simple. It only takes 4 screws to unscrew the bottom of the NUC to get to the 2.5" drive tray, and removing that, you can get to the M.2 mount, and ram slots. Ive owned 4 NUCs at this point. a Celeron 3rd gen, an i5 5th gen, and 2x i5 7th gen and these are the best yet. They are VERY quiet. Paired with an M.2 NVME drive and 16GB of ram, and it will perform beautifully. Ive run these with a Dell 24" 4k display and a 60" LG Plasma @ 1080P and both work very well. Im also glad that Intel moved the power-button from the top of the NUC to the front. It makes the whole look a bit cleaner.
Luke P.
4
My Synology NAS just wasnt strong enough to do transcoding for Plex but this NUC does a great job and the codecs that choked my Synology run smoothly with no hiccups. No issues runing Ubuntu 16.04, all the drivers I needed loaded by default but I dont run a gui desktop so cant speak for the graphics/sound. Running docker on it with a few other containers, it sits in my living room under the TV and I cant hear it at all. Front lights up blue around the black panel, can prob turn it off in the BIOS but I like it, has a Tron feel and isnt any brighter than a digital clock I have next to it. Only put in 8gb RAM at the time, but does fine so I dont think Ill need to upgrade. M2 SSD for the primary OS and 2TB disk for extra storage. This is my third NUC, most expensive one but worth it for the i7 and been running two weeks straight and its barely warm to the touch.