That didn’t prevent the Beelink SER from being moderately noisy under load with fans kicking in as soon as we hit something chunky like Sisoft Sandra or Maxon’s Cinebench. It is roughly equivalent to the Core i5-10200H, an Intel part with a slightly higher TDP (45W vs 35W) and a slightly higher base clock speed. The 3750H is a Ryzen 7 part but one that has a low TDP - as it targets the mobile vertical - and therefore a low base clock speed. Here’s how the Beelink SER Ryzen 7 3750H performed in our suite of benchmark tests:ĬPU-Z: 388 (single-thread) 2013 (multi-thread)
Accessories that came with the Beelink PC include a 57W power supply unit, two HDMI ports and a wall mounted bracket. There’s also a free 2.5-inch bay to host either a SATA SSD or HDD. That’s a disappointment and fortunately one hardware upgrade that’s easy to perform. We’d expect Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2 for a product in this price bracket.
Next to it are two 8GB memory modules (DDR4), one 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD and a Wireless-AC7265 card, courtesy of Intel which does Wi-Fi 5 as well as Bluetooth 4.0. It has a 6MB cache and can run at up to 4GHz without breaking a sweat, in part because it has a relatively low heat dissipation (at least for a desktop PC (opens in new tab)). This is a quad-core mobile processor with eight threads and a Radeon RX Vega 10 graphics cluster. Inside the Beelink SER is an AMD Ryzen 7 3750H. Ports: 4 x USB 3.0, 1x USB-C, audio jack, 2 x HDMI, 1 x Gigabit EthernetĬonnectivity: Intel AC7265, 802.11ac, Wi-Fi 5, Bluetooth 4.0 Here are the full specs of the Beelink SER Ryzen 7 3750H configuration sent to TechRadar Pro for review: