PC Pro

Asus Mini PC PN50

Based on AMD’s new mobile processors, this compact barebones system is staggering­ly versatile

- TIM DANTON

PRICE Ryzen 4800U, £ 399 (£479 inc VAT) from scan.co.uk

Unless your limbs are of giant proportion­s, it isn’t possible to fit the Asus Mini PC PN50 into the palm of your hand – but this barebones PC comes phenomenal­ly close. Its 11.5cm2 footprint takes up a fraction more space than a drinks coaster, and yet it packs more power than the towering desktop it could easily replace.

That power comes thanks to yet another brilliant AMD processor: the Ryzen 7 4800U. This mobile chip doesn’t act like one, with eight cores that can peak at 4.3GHz and run consistent­ly at 3GHz under load. It can’t quite match the Ryzen 4800H inside the Huawei MateBook 14 ( see p53), but it chewed through our tough video-editing benchmark at a speed that embarrasse­s Intel’s equivalent: here, the Mini PC took 8mins 27secs compared to 18mins 10secs for the i7-10510Upowe­red Portégé X50 ( see p52).

It’s a similar story in other benchmarks. In Cinebench R20, the PN50 scored 3,346, the MateBook 14 3,744 and the Dynabook 1,295. In Geekbench 5, the Asus returned a multicore result of 6,421 – that’s twice as fast as the Dynabook and only a fraction slower than the MateBook. What’s more, most of the time its fans are barely noticeable: it’s only when pushed to the maximum that these go above a gentle hum, while its power consumptio­n peaks at around 45W and generally hovers at 15W.

The only area where the PN50 fa falls short is graphics, relying on an integrated Radeon GPU. It can run reasonably demanding games at 720p – F1 2020 averaged 63fps at High settings, Metro: Last Light returned 61fps – but 1080p will prove a challenge. That said, dropping the settings to Low in F1 2020 saw a playable 49fps, and, sticking to Low, it managed 32.7fps in the demanding Metro Exodus. So there’s gaming power here, as long as you’re willing to sacrifice detail.

All these results were with the addition of 32GB of Corsair Vengeance RAM, which Corsair kindly supplied to take advantage of the PN50’s 3,200MHz memory support. The Mini PC would have provided fractional­ly faster scores if I had an M.2 PCIe SSD to hand, but instead I opted for a slower SATA 2.5in SSD.

You will have to budget for these extras – and Windows, although note that you can buy a Windows 10 Pro licence for

£40 by heading to store.pcpro. co.uk – as Asus doesn’t supply RAM or storage. Fortunatel­y, it’s easy to add your own, with four crosshead screws securing the base and the SODIMM sockets and storage slots arranged for easy access.

Asus provides four versions of the PN50 in the UK, with the cheapest being a Ryzen 3 4300U for £280 inc VAT (from scan.co.uk). Prices rise steadily as you head up the range, with this 4800U model at the top, and all include Wi-Fi 6 courtesy of an

“Provided you don’t mind fitting your own RAM and storage, this is an excellent choice for anyone seeking a quiet, fast and compact PC”

add-in Intel AX200NGW card.

If you prefer a physical network connection then you’ll be cheered by the rear panel of the PN50, which includes a Gigabit Ethernet port along with three video outputs: HDMI, USB-C and a DisplayPor­t. You can even run four displays at 4K.

The USB-C port can also be used to connect external storage devices, but for power you’ll need the external adapter. A necessary annoyance, its 74 x 79mm footprint could only be considered large when compared to the PC it’s powering.

Most people will use the two USB-A ports at the rear for a keyboard and mouse, but Asus provides further USB-A and USB-C ports on the front. There’s also a 3.5mm combo audio jack and a microSD slot, as well as an infrared sensor if you decide to use the PN50 as a media centre. Look very closely and you’ll even see two microphone­s – perfect for all those endless online meetings.

It’s also good to see a VESA mounting kit in the box, as this is one of the most logical uses of a compact PC. But we shouldn’t pigeonhole this flexible barebones system. Its brushed metal looks mean it would fit equally well in an office, a meeting room and in the home. It also has flexibilit­y when it comes to potential uses, with only gamers likely to be disappoint­ed by its turn of pace.

Provided you don’t mind fitting your own RAM and storage, the Asus Mini PC PN50 is an excellent choice for anyone seeking a quiet, fast and compact PC. And if you’re looking to save money, the 4300U option for £280 looks particular­ly excellent value.

SPECIFICAT­IONS

8-core 1.8GHz/4.3GHz AMD Ryzen 7 4800U processor Asus motherboar­d 2 x SODIMM sockets (up to 64GB 3,200MHz DDR4 RAM) integrated Radeon Vega 7 graphics

M.2 slot (up to 512GB) SATA 3 connector (up to 1TB) Wi-Fi 6 Bluetooth 5 Gigabit Ethernet microSD card reader 2 x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 3 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 HDMI DisplayPor­t 3.5mm audio jack

90W external power adapter no OS supplied 115 x 115 x 49mm (WDH) approx 500g (without SSD and memory) 1yr warranty

 ??  ?? BELOW Asus has managed to squeeze a healthy selection of ports on the rear
BELOW Asus has managed to squeeze a healthy selection of ports on the rear
 ??  ?? LEFT You’ll be able to add RAM and storage without breaking a sweat or swearword
LEFT You’ll be able to add RAM and storage without breaking a sweat or swearword
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 ??  ?? ABOVE The tiny Mini PC PN50 comes with a business-like brushed metal finish
ABOVE The tiny Mini PC PN50 comes with a business-like brushed metal finish
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