Part of our coverage ofMini PCshere at Tom’s Hardware often includes fanless PCs— but rarely ones as custom as this build fromReddit user TheJiral, which features a suitably beefy heatsink and an external SSD enclosure running over two USB 4 ports. The heart of this build is theASRock Industrial Box-7640UMini PC, which previously used a fanless cooler with a much smaller heatsink. The replacement heatsink, which can be seen as the tallest point of the new build, is the Wakefield-Vette PADLED-13080, which TheJiral acquired fromDigiKey.

The build saw the original case being replaced with a 3D printed case, one with vents to the side and lovely use of threaded inserts instead of self tapping screws. We’re not sure what 3D printer was used, but it looks like an FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling) printer was used, perhaps one of thebest 3D printersfrom our list.

A custom, fanless Mini PC with a USB4 RAID 1 SSD bank made by Reddit user TheJiral.

As for performance, fortunately, most of the performance characteristics for this build can be determined with some accuracy at just a glance. Based on the specification of the original mini PC and even its name, we can tell this Mini PC is using the low-power Ryzen 5 7640U. This is a CPU aimed at laptops and is somewhat cut down from its big brother Ryzen 7 7840U, but it’s still in the upper echelon of iGPU performance thanks to those RDNA3 Compute Units. Unlike 7840U’s 12 RDNA3 CUs with theRadeon780M iGPU, though, theRyzen 5 7640Uonly has a Radeon 760M iGPU with 8 RDNA3 CUs.

According to TheJiral, their cooler of choice can handle the Ryzen 5 7640U operating at 28 Watts (near-full utilization) “pretty well”.

Christopher Harper

TheJiral even toggled an overclock option on the ASRock motherboard that enabled a 45 Watt TDP “performance” mode, though this did result in the setup eventually overheating when stress testing CPU cores— thus, overclocking is definitely not happening with this mini PC build. However, the existing results do suggest that just adding a fan or two to this setup might be all it needs to be overclockable, though it’s likely not worth sacrificing the aesthetic for a slight performance bump.

Theoriginal Reddit threadhas some more detailed build information posted by TheJiral, but there unfortunately they doesn’t share how the custom shell was made and what inspired it. However, considering their recentSettlers of Catan-themed3D printingproject, it stands to reason that this reportedly-unintentional “retro-futuristic” mini PC components were made the same way.

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Christopher Harper has been a successful freelance tech writer specializing in PC hardware and gaming since 2015, and ghostwrote for various B2B clients in High School before that. Outside of work, Christopher is best known to friends and rivals as an active competitive player in various eSports (particularly fighting games and arena shooters) and a purveyor of music ranging from Jimi Hendrix to Killer Mike to the Sonic Adventure 2 soundtrack.