KINGDEL Powerful Mini Desktop Computer, Fanless Industrial PC, Core i5 Dual Core CPU, 8GB RAM, 512GB SSD, 2xNICs, 4xUSB 3.0, 4xCOM RS232, HD Port, Metal Case
$329.99
Price: $329.99
(as of Jan 04, 2025 21:44:08 UTC – Details)
From the brand
KINGDEL Mini PC
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KINGDEL owned the first mini pc in 2013, and has been focused on high-tech mini computer ever since.
KINGDEL Mini PCs have high-performance professional features and high quality perfect for offices and home use, business, education, gaming and many other industry applications.
KINGDEL Industrial Mini PC
KINGDEL Fanless Mini PC
KINGDEL Mini Desktop Computer
KINGDEL Mini PC
KINGDEL Fanless Computer
KINGDEL Mini Gaming PC
KINGDEL 13th Mini PC
KINGDEL Powerful Mini PC
Industrial CNC
Office Working
Business
Gaming
Design
Education
Home Theater
Processor of the Mini Desktop Computer: i5-3317U, Dual Core, Quad Thread; Base Frequency: 1.7GHz, Max. Turbo Frequency: 2.6GHz, 3MB Smart Cache
RAM & Drive of the Mini PC: 8GB DDR3L RAM, 512GB mSATA SSD(Solid State Disk), Fanless, Full Metal Case
Graphics of the Industrial PC: HD Graphics 4000: Base Frequency: 350 MHz; Max Dynamic Frequency: 1.05 GHz
Interfaces of the Industrial Computer: 2xNICs 82574L Gigabyte LAN Port, 4xCOM RS232, HD Port, VGA, 4xUSB 3.0, 4xUSB2.0
What in Box: Mini Computer, Power Adapter, Power Cable with US plug, HD Cable, Antennas, Screws, Power and Data Cables for SATA drive.
Customers say
Customers find the computer functional and small. It works well for their purposes and is suitable for hiding behind TVs. They appreciate its good value, build quality, and reliability. The speed, port capacity, and heat dissipation are also praised. However, some customers have mixed opinions on software compatibility.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
5 reviews for KINGDEL Powerful Mini Desktop Computer, Fanless Industrial PC, Core i5 Dual Core CPU, 8GB RAM, 512GB SSD, 2xNICs, 4xUSB 3.0, 4xCOM RS232, HD Port, Metal Case
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$329.99
Bill M. –
Mini, But No Compromises
Yes this is a mini PC, but donât let itâs diminutive size fool you, this thing packs a powerful punch. It’s a full-fledged computer with an i5 processor, and while itâs startlingly small, itâs also surprisingly competent and nimble. Itâs an impressive, thoughtfully designed and nicely built little unit that includes a very generous amount of USB and COM ports.This mini PC comes with a good quality HDMI cable to connect it to your monitor, and after taking everything out of the box I literally had this computer up and running in less than three minutes. It comes with Windows 10 Pro already installed, and when you first turn it on it boots directly to the Windows home screen.I am using this mini PC with a Planar Helium PCT2235 touchscreen monitor, and it works exceptionally well. Booting takes less than 20 seconds, and all of my programs, high definition videos and apps run smoothly. Thereâs no lagging issues and the computer has never frozen or sent me to the dreaded Blue Screen of Death, so I have been quite happy with this mini PCâs performance. Itâs very smooth and speedy.I am of course pleased by the small footprint of this mini PC, but my favorite thing about it is that itâs silent. DEAD SILENT. If youâve ever had to put up with a noisy computer, you know how incredibly annoying it is to have listen to the constant noise from the whirring fans.Another thing I really like about this mini PC is that it isnât vented. The case is sealed, which means you will not be required to routinely get a screwdriver and take the case apart so you can blow all the dust off of everything inside. Nice!For medium-demand use, I really donât think you can go wrong with this mini PC. Especially given the relatively affordable price. And at its price point, I really donât have anything negative to say about it. It has exceeded my expectations. I like it a lot. And I recommend it highly.If you have any questions about this mini PC, please feel free to ask, and I’ll try my best to answer. I hope you found this review helpful.
Customer 101 –
Great for Running PFSense Firewall
Bought to run PFSense firewall so I can get rid of the bulky desktop and free up space. This is very quiet, fast and compact. Support is excellent and very responsive. The only drawback and its only an issue in my case is that it doesnt have an internal speaker which is useful when running a headless system so you can tell if there is an issue upon bootup by the sequence of beeps. I have never run a fanless pc before so getting used to the temp of the case takes a little time but it has been running flawlessly since put in operation a month ago. Thus far very happy with the price, support and performance of this little pc.
Transformation –
These are great little computers but make sure to check the Windows activation
I have ordered at least 6 of these computers over the last few years and have been happy with the hardware however, there have been a couple of times where the Windows OS software was either not activated or deactivated after a period of time. Not happy about that however, the Kingdel company has always been responsive to the problem and gotten me the active keys quickly. Buying as much as our company does from Amazon, one thing I remember is whether or not the seller stands behind their product. In this case, Kingdel does.
Medictrode –
Oddly awesome
I didnât expect much out of it, but it truly is an awesome desktop computer. I didnât spec it heavy, but for what it has itâs a great machine for general purpose/server style work, and it makes zero noise and didnât get that hot. Also, it has plenty of USB ports, and serial ports which I need. It really is a great deal.
Sean –
Nice little PC
I got the model with 8 GB of RAM, a 128 GB SSD, and a Dual Core i5 CPU. It has a 1.8 GHz clock speed (instead of the 1.7 GHz advertised – BONUS!), with a maximum turbo boost of 2.6 GHz.THE GOOD:There is so much to like about this little guy, it’s hard to know where to start. I guess I’ll start with the speed, it’s got some pep to it. I have other tiny PCs that are… OK. In the interest of making them cheap and low power, they have a Celeron or Atom CPU, 4 GB of RAM, and 64 GB SSDs in them. For the uses I put them to, they are fine, but they are slow to start up and they feel like 15-year old machines when setting them up – quite sluggish by today’s standards. Not so with this thing! Out of the box, its boot time (pressing the power button to ready to use) was under 19 seconds. Office applications (word processing, spreadsheets, etc.) run fast, web browsing and media playback are smooth.The next thing I like is the passive cooling. This is, as advertised, a fanless computer. In fact, the factory configuration has no moving parts at all, so it’s dead silent – literally no sound from it at all. This makes it ideal for use as a media center PC. The fact that it draws no air through it with a fan also makes it a great computer to put in industrial settings where dust can cause real problems for computers. Other tiny PCs I have makes this boast, but being in a smooth plastic case, they tends to overheat and shut down in self preservation, which is really annoying. This Kingdel computer is awesome as a fanless PC because of its rather unique, and very efficient case design. Instead of flat plastic (which I grant does look nice), it has an aluminum case with fins across the top and the 2 smaller sides. The CPU (at the very least) is attached to the inside of this, making the case a large heat sink that passively cools the computer by radiating heat to the air around it. Unlike the ineffective design of my other fanless PCs, this works extremely well – my home stereo gets hotter to the touch than this computer does. I ran a stress test on it for over 12 hours , yet the temperature of the warmest point on the case only reached 95 degrees Fahrenheit. My test environment had an ambient temperature of about 74-75 degrees. The computer does have a rather industrial look because of the heat sink case, but I don’t find it unattractive by any means. It reminds me of a car stereo amplifier, like you’d see mounted in your trunk with the sub-woofer.The next thing I like about this is connectivity. This computer has the port count of computers costing way more and of far bigger physical size. The rear of the unit has 2 video outputs (1 HDMI, 1 VGA – it’s able to send a 4k signal), 4 USB 3.0 ports, dual WiFi antenna jacks (which appears to support both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz), 2 Ethernet jacks, 4 RS232 COM ports (still quite common in industrial settings) and the 12-volt power input. The front panel has 4 USB 2.0 ports and the power button / LED. I haven’t looked to see if it has Blutooth or not.The computer comes with the cables and mounting screws to add an additional hard drive or SSD for storage. It has space inside for a laptop drive of either type. The documentation says it supports drives up to 2 TB. Access to install another drive is via 4 screws on the bottom of the PC (you do have to break a manufacture date label to get to one of them). It also came with a decent HDMI cable – I’d estimate 6 feet long and flat. It supports 4k and Ethernet.Lastly, is power usage. I put a Watt meter inline with the power supply, and while running the stress test, it was using under 20 Watts. In fairness, I tested the PC in its out-of-the-box configuration, with no added drives, internal or external. The power supply is rated for a maximum of 60 Watts, so adding an internal drive and loading the USB ports with bus-powered devices shouldn’t be a problem.THE BAD:There really isn’t a lot to say here. The power supply is external – it looks identical to many laptop power supplies. I don’t find this particularly bad, but some people might. I see it as a good thing from the perspective that it helps the PC run cooler. Having a degree and background in electronics, I know that power supplies generate heat, so this design helps reduce heat inside the computer.I do wish that the distribution of the USB ports was different. It would be nice to have a couple of USB 3.0 ports on the front and a couple of USB 2.0 ports in the back, instead of each clumped together on one side or the other, but the thing is so small that it’s really not hard to reach them either way. This is a very minor inconvenience.The computer came with a “Kingdel” user already set up, without a password, and a customized set of icons already on the desktop. I don’t like this for a number of reasons. I don’t like Windows 10’s default settings that send Microsoft WAY more information than is any of their business. I don’t like not having a password securing the computer. It means that I don’t know what else is loaded that I don’t want / need. This is all fixable since I am an IT professional, but it’s annoying. I also dislike that it doesn’t come with a way to make media to completely wipe and reinstall Windows and required drivers. I suspect that all the drivers needed are standard drivers that come in Windows, judging by the list of hardware I’ve looked at (Intel networking and video, etc.), but I don’t know that for sure. I’m going to take an image of the hard drive before I move on to testing with other OSes. I recommend that this be done as a backup in any case so you can reinstall Windows if (when) the SSD dies – all things electronic eventually do.This is not a “gaming” computer. Oh, sure, it’ll play Minecraft and other games that don’t need lots of “umph”, but don’t expect to play any serious, high-end games on it. This is intended to be used as a controller for industrial machinery, a media center computer to watch Netflix, Amazon Prime, Hulu, etc. on, an office PC, that sort of thing. It would be great for a point-of-sale system in a store / shop. You won’t be producing professional sound, editing a feature film, or hosting a multi-player Minecraft server with it (you’d be shocked at how much computing power that needs!). In terms that non-tech people can understand, this is the Honda of computers. It’s economical, runs well, and does a good job for many things, but it’s no Ferrari.BOTTOM LINE:If you need a physically small, quiet computer for Office, Industrial, or Media playback use, this is a great machine that I highly recommend as an IT professional.EDIT:After testing the computer out with everything I listed back in May in this review, I put an external storage system on it and have been using it as a file server on my home network. It is now November, and the computer is performing beautifully in this capacity.EDIT #2:I’ve been recommending this little guy to clients for the uses I mention above. The most recent one had a default user of Admin instead of Kingdel, but the same pre-set shortcuts. It also came with a more recent version of Windows 10. I’ve scanned all of them I’ve installed for clients (10 as of Dec. 18, 2020) and none had the malware issue another reviewer mentions. However, I do still clean off any software I don’t want, create a new administrative user, and delete the pre-installed user.