$250 $399
Amazon has the Gigabyte Ultra Compact Mini PC Barebones Components GB-BXi7-5775 Intel i7-5775R Processor for $250 with free shipping.

Sells for $370+ elsewhere.

  • Intel Core i7-5775R 3.3GHz, Intel Iris Pro graphics 6200, 2 x SODIMM slots
  • 1 x mSATA slot, 1 x Half-size mini-PCIe slot, 1 x SATA slot, 2 x USB 3.0
  • $250 retail: $399
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    Comments & Reviews (12)

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    sh10453
    Ben's cred: 86
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 10:21 AM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 10:21 AM PT
    That's a good price for an i7 machine.
    Add 16GB or even 8GB RAM and an SSD, along with Windows 10 Pro 64 and you'd have a heck of nice machine.
    JCSCHAM1
    Ben's cred: 38
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 01:18 PM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 01:18 PM PT
    Be sure to use a site like PCpartsPicker to make sure everything you're adding to this system is compatible.
    Optimus73
    Ben's cred: 1
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 01:27 PM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 01:27 PM PT
    Wow. Amazing price deal for real! Would love to play with one of those.
    z31fanatic
    Ben's cred: 140
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 01:44 PM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 01:44 PM PT
    That is a quad core processor that benchmarks extremely close to the i7-6700k processor.
    Great deal.
    mkchu
    Ben's cred: 7
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 05:30 PM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 05:30 PM PT
    Could someone explain something to me? The Intel Core i7-5775C (presumably a cousin) is around $400. How is it this unit with the motherboard, the case and the power supply could be less than the prices of the cousin?
    nicksee
    Ben's cred: 32
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 06:35 PM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 06:35 PM PT
    Could someone explain something to me? The Intel Core i7-5775C (presumably a cousin) is around $400. How is it this unit with the motherboard, the case and the power supply could be less than the prices of the cousin?


    Looks like the 'C' variant is unlocked, and can be overclocked...not much else different. Maybe the price is high because item is no longer made, but some people want them for upgrades? To be fair, the i7 7700 (non K) isn't a huge improvement over the 5000 series, so if you had an 5000 series i3 processor and wanted a big upgrade, going to a 5775 wouldn't be a bad choice, even today...plus you'd avoid having to upgrade your ram to DDR4, which is crazy expensive right now.

    This doesn't seem like a bad price, regardless! Guess you could sell it for parts. I think the i5775R isn't sold retail, so may only go to bulk customers like OEMs?

    Last thing, with the 8000 series out and the "as good as" single core performance plus with more cores, lots of people may think a 5000 series build is a little dated and not be willing to shell out much for it. Oh, no room for bigger graphics and the IRIS Pro isn't bad, but can't compete with modern discrete, even low-end...

    Just a bunch of guesses.
    Could someone explain something to me? The Intel Core i7-5775C (presumably a cousin) is around $400. How is it this unit with the motherboard, the case and the power supply could be less than the prices of the cousin?

    Looks like the 'C' variant is unlocked, and can be overclocked...not much else different. Maybe the price is high because item is no longer made, but some people want them for upgrades? To be fair, the i7 7700 (non K) isn't a huge improvement over the 5000 series, so if you had an 5000 series i3 processor and wanted a big upgrade, going to a 5775 wouldn't be a bad choice, even today...plus you'd avoid having to upgrade your ram to DDR4, which is crazy expensive right now.

    This doesn't seem like a bad price, regardless! Guess you could sell it for parts. I think the i5775R isn't sold retail, so may only go to bulk customers like OEMs?

    Last thing, with the 8000 series out and the "as good as" single core performance plus with more cores, lots of people may think a 5000 series build is a little dated and not be willing to shell out much for it. Oh, no room for bigger graphics and the IRIS Pro isn't bad, but can't compete with modern discrete, even low-end...

    Just a bunch of guesses."/>
    btc909
    Ben's cred: 616
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 09:21 PM PT
    Posted 11/19/2017 at 09:21 PM PT
    Broadwell chipset for $250. An ancient mSATA, no M.2, DDR3 memory, this came out Feb. '16. Look at the Intel 7th Gen NUC's instead.
    spots
    Ben's cred: 26
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 05:47 AM PT
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 05:47 AM PT
    Cutting edge costs too much.
    contraaben
    Ben's cred: 1
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 07:16 AM PT
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 07:16 AM PT
    good deal to start building your own machine...
    Crazy123
    Ben's cred: 1
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 11:54 AM PT
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 11:54 AM PT
    Bam that's would be a fast box
    commandoinaction
    Ben's cred: 59
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 07:53 PM PT
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 07:53 PM PT
    Hows the air circulation in these? Overheating?
    lazertec
    Ben's cred: 1
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 09:15 PM PT
    Posted 11/20/2017 at 09:15 PM PT
    great for compact and neat freaks but the processor is a bit outdated

    Price & Comment History

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