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[Used, eBay Plus] Dell OptiPlex 7070 SFF i7 9700 16GB RAM 256GB SSD Win11 $459 Delivered @MetroCom eBay

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PLUSAUGSNS

Hi all, a few i7 PCs this week.

Dell OptiPlex 7070 SFF i7 9700 16GB RAM 256GB SSD Win11 $459 Delivered

Specs
Processor
1x 9th Generation Intel Core™ i7-9700 Processor
Memory
16GB DDR4
Operating System
Windows 11 Home 64(EN:English)
Storage
1x 256GB SSD
Network
Ethernet; Dual band USB and Bluetooth Dongle
Ports
1xUSB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-C port with PowerShare (front), 1xUSB 3.1 Gen 1 port with PowerShare (front), 2xUSB 3.1 Gen 1 ports (one supports Smart Power On) (rear), 2xUSB 3.1 Gen 2 ports (rear), 2xDisplayPorts 1.2 (rear), 1xRJ-45 (10/100/1000) connector
Graphics
Intel UHD 630

HP ELITEDESK 800 G5 DM i7-9700T 16GB 256GB SSD Win11 Mini PC $499 Delivered
HP ELITEDESK 800 G5 DM i7-9700T 16GB 1TB SSD Win11 Mini PC WiFi $549 Delivered
HP ELITEDESK 800 G3 SFF i7 6700 16GB 256GB Win10 Pro $180 Delivered
HP ELITEDESK 800 G3 SFF i7 7700 16GB 512GB Win10 Pro $279 Delivered
HP ELITEDESK 800 G3 Tower i7 6700 16GB 512GB Win10 Pro $229 Delivered
Dell OptiPlex 7050 SFF i7-7700 16GB RAM 512 SSD PC Win10 Pro $279 Delivered

Have a good weekend!
Cheers,
Jun

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closed Comments

  • Would this be suitable for a home office set-up with 2 monitors, to be used for fairly basic stuff, office, excel, photoshop, youtube etc.

    Also does it come with a Wifi dongle or does the desktop connect via Wifi?

    Thanks

    • yes it would be fine for that use case. normally these boxes don't have any wifi, but the eBay page lists "Connectivity: Ethernet; USB Dual band WiFi". So there's a possibility it comes with a USB wifi stick, but I think that's rather unlikely.

      • +1

        Network
        Ethernet; Dual band USB and Bluetooth Dongle

    • +1
      1. Yes
      2. Wifi via dongle included
      • Thanks Dashcam and Harro, think I'll bite the bullet.

  • Q1. What RAM speed does the motherboard support (i.e. 3200MHz or 2666Mhz)?
    Q2. Can you replace the original RAM with say UDIMM RAMs with 3200MHz?
    Q3. How many RAM slots does the motherboard have?

    • Hi there cpu supports up to DDR4-2666. It will come with DDR4-2666 and it has 4 ram slots.

  • Is this a good bang for buck for home server use (ie., plex, home assistant, truenas, etc)?

    • +1

      Nah i think the 8th gen refurb will be the best bang for buck. Cheaper, same cores , same ram slots, etc.. just cheaper price 😂

      • How about longevity? Will the 9th gen technically outlast the 8th gen if systems eventually require more resources?

        • +1

          You're comparing 8th and 9th, 1 gen with 200% difference in price. ( ~230-250 for 8th gen). If you really need to upgrade, put those $200 difference in newer CPU.

  • Am I right in thinking this one https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/256084487300 comes with Wifi in the desktop and does not need a dongle?

    • Note that 9700T is the low power version of 9700 (2.0GHz vs 3.0GHz), so it is a bit slower. Also it is a different form factor (mini vs SFF; HP is smaller), and more expensive.

  • If you're planning on using this as a HTPC beware as it doesn't seem to have an HDMI port, just Display Ports.

    • That just means you will use a Display Port to HDMI - it's a total none issue.

  • Can this fit and have relevant PSU cabling for SATA 2x3.5" HDD's? Including the SSD in there right now?

  • +4

    FYI, for anyone who wants proper built-in Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth with these as if it came pre-configured from Dell, get yourselves an Intel Wi-Fi kit. From at least the 7060 onwards, they have an m.2 slot and antenna knock-outs on the chassis for Wi-Fi. Intel kit comes with everything you need… except maybe the little screw (m2.5?) to hold in the m.2 wi-fi card. $32 from Umart at the moment: https://www.umart.com.au/product/intel-wi-fi-6-ax200-m-2-223…

    If I was selling these, I'd add Wi-Fi as an option and charge like $40 instead of providing a dodgy USB stick.

    • why is USB wifi dodgy?

      Many have used it without issue.

      • Some of the adapters themselves, especially the cheaper ones can be dodgy, but the solution as a whole is also a little dodgy in my opinion. USB Wi-Fi should only be used as a temporary solution unless it's the only solution. The main downsides are (generally speaking): poorer reception, less reliability, and easier to damage. You're also consuming a USB port which may be needed for other peripherals.

        When there's a dedicated slot on the motherboard and punch outs in the chassis specifically to accomodate Wi-Fi, then not taking advantage of that does make for what I'd consider a dodgy solution, especially when an equivilant performance USB stick would be about the same price.

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