![]() USB-A #2 (bottom) – USB 3.2 – USB 3.1 SuperSpeedPlus (10 Gbps) – 1,014 MB/s read speed.USB-A #1 (top) – USB 2.0 – USB 2.0 High-Speed (480 Mbps) – 43 MB/s read speed.USB-C – USB 3.2 – USB 3.1 SuperSpeedPlus (10 Gbps) – 1,014 MB/s read speed.USB-A #2 – USB 3.2 – USB 3.1 SuperSpeedPlus (10 Gbps) – 943 MB/s read speed.USB-A #1 – USB 3.2 – USB 3.1 SuperSpeedPlus (10 Gbps) – 944 MB/s read speed.The results of all 5 ports are as follows: USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A front left (the right port has a similar speed) USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C port (front panel) USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A port on the rear panel We’ll be switching to a Seagate USB HDD to test the USB 2.0 port, since the ORICO enclosure is not backward compatible. We will be using an ORICO M234C3-U4 M.2 NVMe SSD enclosure for testing together with HWiNFO64 to check the USB version and speed, and CrystalDiskMark to confirm the speed in a practical manner. Let’s now test all USB ports to confirm the speed of the USB ports on the Maxtang MTN-MP750, especially since none of those are properly marked. Ignore the link speed at this time, since the mini PC was connected to a router with a gigabit Ethernet port for that screenshot. HWiNFO64 helps us confirm the usual RealTel RTL8125 controller is found in the MP750. Since our Maxtang MTN-FP750 did not ship with any wireless module, we’ll only find a 2.5GbE port in the Network adapters section of the Device Manager. We quickly tested our SATA SSD with CrystalDiskMark reporting read speeds of about 233 MB/s and write speeds of around 164 MB/s, as expected for this 3 Gbps SATA drive… Maxtang MTN-FP750’s 512GB Foresee VP1000F512G M.2 SSD can be seen in the Device Manager, along with a 128GB SATA SSD (CHUANG JIU CJ225128TC) that we installed in the first part of the review. The Task Manager also reports two SODIMM memory slots are used for 28.8GB RAM (shared with GPU so we don’t get the full 32GB here?), but the speed is reported to be 4800 MHz. The system comes with 32GB DDR5 via two 16GB SO-DIMM memory sticks from Crucial Technology shown to be clocked at 2800 MHz (DDR5-5600) as we’ve seen during the teardown. So we’ll have to see how it may impact benchmarks when we check out those below. The PL1 and PL2 power limits are both set to 35W, while the AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS processor has a TDP of 45W, so Maxtang played it safe here, and by comparison, Beelink SER6 Pro (7735HS) mini PC had PL1 set to 38W and PL2 to 45W. GPU-Z gives a few more details about the AMD Radeon 680M Graphics. HWiNFO64 provides some details about the AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS 8-core/16-thread processor, the Maxtang FP750 motherboard, and the internal AMD Radeon 680M “Rembrandt” GPU. The System->About window confirms the update and that we have an FP750 PC powered by a 3.2 GHz AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS SoC with 32GB of RAM. The Maxtang MTN-FP750 shipped with Windows 11 Pro 22H2, but we updated it to 23H2 (and somehow entered the Windows Insider program) before starting our test. We’ve now spent more time testing the Maxtang MTN-FP750, also called NUC-7735HS-A16, and we will report our experience with the AMD Ryzen 7 7735H mini PC in Windows 11 Pro with a software overview, features testing, benchmarks, storage and network performance testing, cooling performance, fan noise, power consumption, and more. In the first part of the Maxtang MTN-FP750 mini PC review, we looked at the hardware with an unboxing, a teardown, and a first boot to the pre-installed Windows 11 Pro. ![]()
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