These are great machines! Bought 7 of these 2 and 1/2 years ago for my business. 16GB with 512GB. All my employees have been working very well without problems.
Just picked one of these up from the Goodwill online store. Will be sticking an Intel Wifi card in one of the slots since i got the full tower variety.
It seems a bit weird that Dell only put a 180W power supply in its newer SFF models. I bought a 9020 SFF for my father a while ago which came with a 240W power supply and it handles a GTX 1650 just fine. It's a really neat little machine and besides the PCIe slot situation (wide slot being at the bottom) the only significant drawback seems to be that the platform only supports CPUs with up to 4 cores.
Its because intel 4th gen CPUs consumes much power than intel 6/7gen cpu's (85w vs 65w tdp for i7 models) And there is no point at having powerful PSU for GPUs on these machines, because GPUs on them are constrained by powering from PCIe, which is equal (75w max) despite of optiplex generation
@@Office-Clerk I get your point. But if I'm not mistaken, the newer Optiplex with a 180W PSU, 65W CPU and a 75W GPU would only have 40W remaining for the rest of the system, while the older model with the 240W PSU, 85W CPU and 75W GPU would have 80W remaining. I assume Dell took the max. wattage of the GPU into account when designing both systems, but the older model would theoretically have more overhead for things like custom fans, etc.
It’s pretty depressing the amount of people who buy these expecting to throw in a full size graphics card and run off playing fancy games. That being said, most small form factor desktops like the one in this video only accept low profile cards that meet the power requirements. For the full sized tower users they’re in for a nasty surprise when their machines shut off using an RTX 2070
@@RealElementProductions I swapped out the power supply of a 9020 Tower and run a RTX 2060 all day long with no hiccups ever. Just bought a 5070 SFF for a streaming pc/ video encoder/ media server.
I've had a 7050 sff sitting in the corner for about a year that was given to me for free. I finally opened it up and started messing around with it. Might use it as a replacement for the old HP Compaq at work or find some other use for it. It has 16gb of RAM, no hdd, a low profile 1gb RAM AMD card. It's also TPM 1.2. I added another 16gb of RAM (32gb total) and a 1TB M.2 drive. I'd like to add a 4gb low profile videocard but I think that the PSU would need to be upgraded. I'd like to put Win11 on it but it needs TPM 2.0 but I've read that the 7050 can run Win 11 if manually loaded from a USB drive. I'll have to check into it.
Oh yeah, big time. Download Rufus and when loading the official Microsoft Windows 11 iso (available on their website for free) it will prompt you to disable the TPM 2.0 requirement and skip privacy requirements among a whole bunch of other tweaks
Amd rx6400 may work with default psu. Its just 53w. Some of these dells were supplied with nvida/amd APUs that consume more, and there are many of them on sale with some old weak GPUs, which consumed more as well.
My unit ramps up when doing practically anything. I cleaned up any potential dust inside, perhaps it needed new thermal paste but more likely it requires a lot of cooling for such a thin machine
grabbed one of these as a cheap emulator box to use with the tv. looks easy enough to add a few cheap upgrades for some small QoL improvements. decent machine for the price, got it for $75AU
@@tenagnanegagrie Definitely the 3060. Despite having a couple ports missing compared to the 7050 the 3060 has a newer Intel CPU compatible with Windows 11 and should overall be faster
@@hugomartinezgalicia8084 I don’t think so and the difference would be negligible because there’s no heat or light reaching the inside of the case. Other temperature sensitive components like the CPU are concealed underneath a heatsink with thermal paste. I don’t see why anyone would paint the interior of their PC black unless you were making a clear side panel but I imagine the smell would be unappealing for at least a week
@@nabadis If yours is PC compatible, yes. If you want to play racing games, you’ll need a graphics card, and quite honestly a better PC purpose built for gaming
@@nabadis No, most racing games on high graphics would need at least an 8th gen i5/i7 and a GTX 1050ti 4GB to run well and support newer games in the future.
@@nabadis A good PC for less than $200 would be an HP Pavilion Gaming desktop with a Ryzen 2400G and AMD RX 580 graphics. I’ve seen them for as little as $130 with corrupted software and other little things you can easily fix. If you learn how to fix and upgrade your own machines you’ll save so much money! I’ll make a video one day about my repair and Windows setup processes!
So i have a 7050 with 180w psu (hd530) i have a spare quadro p620 (maybe k), can i put it or it will suffer? I dont play, just use freecad, coding and 3d printing. No games
I’m contemplating buying this model but idk how well it can run games would this still be suitable if I want to play cod or escape from tarkov or any other larger games?
It would be awful for gaming. If you got a CMT (Mini Tower) version you could slap a 1050ti and get respectable performance, but believe it or not gaming LAPTOPS are probably the best deal you can get. Nobody wants them, seriously. I got an RTX 3060 Asus ROG, 11th gen Intel Core i7 toting monster for $375 at a Pawn shop the other day. Look carefully and you'll find exactly what you're looking for
@@RealElementProductions thank you for response , i want to tell u no there is no button on ot and tgis is optiplex 3050 ,and if there is no lacure on it then how to burn cd
Impressive lingo, "small form factor.". Next time I get groceries, I'll ask if they have any SFF tomatoes. And why can't Detroit make a good, small form factor car? On a happy note, I just got a Dell 7050 and deleted every nasty SFF bit of Windows OS, of course, and installed Ubuntu Pro Studio. It screams! I love it. 16 GB of RAM easily handles large 4K video and all of the max quality audio editing I can imagine. A great machine like the 7050 deserve a great OS.
Haha! Back in the 90s-early 2000s “small form factor” would have been equivalent to today’s towers; Big heavy metallic monsters. You can find SFF tomatoes around the cherry or grape tomato section, and the last good “SFF” car from Detroit was the Geo Metro, which was kinda built in Japan but oh well. I love disabling the telemetry in Windows as well. There’s a reason new versions are free, and your data is the culprit. Ubuntu is an excellent alternative. You’re doing everything right! I still see these in use everywhere and I’m sending my regards towards your video editing prowess. Good luck :)
Not from the factory, although you can buy a USB wireless dongle that allows you to connect to WiFi. They’re pretty cheap but most business users will be connected via a LAN cable for the quickest and most secure internet
Check the back of the machine before buying, see if you can get a picture and if it has a graphics card definitely. Dell had some great AMD Radeon low-profile cards. You'll know it has one if one of the 2 expansion slots on the back has video outputs
I just got an optiplex 5070 mt, i’m considering if i could run an rtx 2060 super with my current 360 watt psu. If my cpu only draws 65w, gpu max draws 200 wats, and the rest of the system draws around 35 watts do you think it could handle that?
@@capxlotquin Wouldn’t recommend. The recommended PSU is 550w for a 2060 super and also it requires an 8 pin power connector whereas I believe the PSU in your Dell has a 6 pin. I think a GTX 1660 Ti would be perfectly adequate for running most games. When you stride into RTX territory your 9th gen CPU will become the biggest bottleneck going into the future
I was going to look for a 6-8 pin adapter. I’ve heard some say on forums that a 3070 would be a perfect pair for the 9th get i7 as long as the resolution is above 1080p (I have a 4k tv) but i thought a 2060s would’ve been better. I guess i’ll go the cheaper and more reasonable route and get the 1660 super/ti
@@TheworstAltaccount It can run Windows 11 with a workaround pretty well, but I would recommend getting an Optiplex 7070 or 7080 for not much more and you’ll be able to run it natively with a lot more security. As for using your HP all in one, you’ll need to ensure there’s an HDMI input in the back of the computer and that it’ll work as a standalone monitor
@@TheworstAltaccount Only if the label on the back of the all in one says “HDMI in”. It’s not a very common feature but it is possible. Look up on google if your particular model supports HDMI input
Not a good idea. The integrated graphics on a newer version (7060, 7070) are better than the K620, and since posting this video you can find those machines for roughly the same price. Also, you get an 8th or 9th generation Intel CPU!
Love the video bro have a question would be huge if u could give sum advice. I was gonna pick this up and try pop in a rtx 3050 low profile u think that’s a good idea. It’s the msi one btw if that helps
@RealElementProductions thanks bro the one I was going to get doesn’t take any extra power it only takes power from the pcie will this still not work ? Again thanks for the reply and advice it’s very much appreciated man 😊
Not worth it, get an HP Pavilion Gaming desktop with a Ryzen CPU and AMD RX graphics. They’re about $270-350 total and will blow the Optiplex 7050 out of the water
No, and even if it did you should have a nice separate microphone to move between computers, a Blue Snowball completely blows any integrated microphone out of the water and other people on Zoom or Webex calls will notice a huge difference
It IS, but the two major constraints are power and card size. It is very hard to find a decent low profile, dual slot GTX 1650, let alone an RTX 2060. The 180w power supply cannot handle anything faster than a GT 1030, which is slower than integrated graphics. You technically could pull a 460w PSU out of an Optiplex 7071 and it will fit and hook up. It is infinitely easier to find a GTX 750 low profile card, and you might even be able to get away with using the normal power supply, but the more I think about it upgrading the power supply and throwing in a nice 1650, IF you can find one, sounds like the ultimate sleeper project. I would do extensive research into the project, including matching part numbers. Forums are your friend and from the multitude I've looked at while writing this comment it's entirely possible. Good luck and let me know how it goes! Edit: I would like to add that it would be a better idea to buy a CMT (Mini Tower) to fit a far cheaper, full size, and potentially more reliable graphics card in a chassis with a larger 240w power supply to start with. The newer Optiplex models are falling in price, and you can land yourself a nice 8th or 9th generation Intel processor in the process for around the same price! Again, the project of replacing the power supply and using a low profile card in the machine you already have sounds like a lot of fun! But you will be spending a lot more money in the process using parts that may or may not work.
No, at Office Depot you can get a TP link USB drive that gives your computer Bluetooth and WiFi. It's the same size as a Logitech mouse USB receiver. Tiny!
Nice walkthrough of internals of the machine. I don't know why Dell decided to put only one PCIEx16 slot in Optiplex SFFs ever since 4th gen Intel era, and also put it under under the x4 slot. If you need both expansion slots, you would naturally go with a single slot option for a GPU upgrade. By placing the x4 slot up top, Dell essentially limits the machine to a GT1030, RX550 or some LP Quadro cards for discrete GPUS. RX6400 gets pretty huge performance hits without PCIE 4.0 support, since it only has 4 PCIE lanes
Nice, it won’t have a graphics card unless specified, the GPU most people optioned for when new was the AMD Radeon R7 350X, which is so-so but still better than integrated graphics. If the desktop is a small form factor then that limits you wildly on the different GPUs you can option because it only accepts low profile cards and the power supply is too weak to handle most of them. Also, I wouldn’t recommend buying a refurbished PC from Walmart. They aren’t done by Walmart themselves, but any one of thousands of companies that pay Walmart to advertise their PCs. I would shoot towards eBay where you’ll save a hundred or more bucks for the same thing, just check for good feedback from the seller in question, you can have a bad experience with either platform
2 monitors via DisplayPort built in. I don’t think you can cross HDMI or VGA alongside them but I may be wrong. I know for sure you can’t use a graphics card and the onboard video at the same time
Put a low profile 1650 in there and you can game pretty well because since it’s not going to use as much power as a normal 1650 and if you remove the vents next to it you can actually get some decent ventilation on a low profile but the big ones heck no
Not natively, but using certain applications you can find on the internet you can create a USB with Windows 11 that will bypass the TPM 2.0 requirement that’s only on 8th generation Intel Core I-series CPUs. Hope this helps, I don’t want to mention programs that bypass security requirements set by Microsoft
Honestly? The best internal upgrade for this computer is a newer optiplex. Now, before you say "That's not what I was asking", a 7060 or 7070 offers support for newer, more efficient Intel CPUs in their respective newer motherboards, faster memory is installed, quicker M.2 SSD support is present, and Windows 11 becomes natively supported. You'll get more USB-C ports on the front/back for your modern devices, and they're barely any more expensive than the 7050 in this video. The best upgrade to this Dell Optiplex, is another Dell Optiplex
It's nuts but at the same time a lot of businesses are still upgrading from their Windows 2000/XP dinosaurs that never needed an internet connection. That's how you use a computer!
Nice, I’ll make sure to include similar specs in future videos. Now that even newer versions are widely accessible on the used market I’ve been dabbling less with hard drives and now I’m using 2.5” SSDs or nVme
180 watts is less than the 230 watts on the 9020, I got the i7 9020 for the same price as a i5 7040 and the extra cores do make a difference. (NOTE the half PCI slot can take a 1050ti, the power output is less but you will never push it to the level it will need the extra power, probably a good thing given the watt output on the PSU)
Nice! You can never go wrong with a Haswell. There was a security flaw that led Intel to discontinue DirectX 12 support, but I'm not completely sure if that's only for the integrated GPU or any graphics card period. The 4770 still is a legendary processor, and 230 watts is a nice improvement over these newer models!
Not natively, Windows 11 requires an 8th gen Intel CPU, this one has a 6th gen. You would need to make a custom ISO using Rufus, when you click start it will prompt you to bypass TPM 2.0 security then you can install Windows 11 from a USB drive
@@RealElementProductions I'm looking for a pc within my budget and came across this on amazon. I wnat to buy it but i was worried about windows 11. I won't pretend i'm fully comprehensive on it but if i install windows 11 using rufus, there wont be any software errors and it runs smoothly?
element productions. im getting one of these this year i am gonna work hard and try my best to get 300 bucks but i still will need a gpu for it. do you know any good cheap ones or does this come with a gpu amazon said ti didnt
I feel bad, these are old now and I should make an update video. At this point they’re only good for running a Plex server off of. Grab an HP Pavilion Gaming desktop with an AMD Ryzen and RX graphics. They’re $250-$300 and will blow this Optiplex out of the water!
@@RealElementProductions i got it but now i just need a gpu bro. i have Dell Optiplex 7050 SFF Desktop PC Intel i7-7700 4-Cores 3.60GHz 32GB DDR4 1TB SSD WiFi BT HDMI Duel Monitor Support Windows 10 Pro Excellent Condition(Renewed) thats what i bought and i just need a gpu now. but im kinda broke still pls do more pc building vids. it makes me want to sub like do opening pc and looking and stuff like that installing stuff or just looking or gaming it would be so cool
You got it man, I’m very good at fixing broken machines and putting them together. I’ve come across dozens of rare and content worthy things like the very first Dell XPS laptop and a PlayStation 3 TV, but in my lifelong quest to avoid hoarding I quickly get rid of them. Creating content takes a lot of time, but it’s the times when I don’t have much to do I wish I’d kept some of these items. But hey, I’ve got some cool stuff. Let me enjoy my birthday today and I’ll get right on it tomorrow for ya :) - The big Optiplex 7050 has a 240w power supply, and the small form factor has a 180w power supply. Both of these are poor candidates for graphics cards. I’ve had an AMD R7 350 low profile card that came from the factory in one of these and got respectable gaming performance, but to elaborate on my previous comment these machines are not built for gaming and these days another unit would give you fewer problems down the line. I would honestly take it to the forums since it’s been a long time since I’ve had one of these and I don’t want to give you the wrong information
@@RealElementProductions would you happen to still have this pc that was in the video. i love videos like this. your very creative. pls do more pc vids if you can. but i wanted to know if you still had the pc if you could add me somewhere help me put a gpu in mine and like upgrade it?
Sadly the fastest GPU you can add to these PC's is the 1650 by Nvidia, which is a bit on the limit of performance. Hopefully Nvidia or AMD release a new "good" 75 watts GPU! That is what I am waiting.
Oh no. Not unless you have a low profile graphics card like the R7 350 these were available with. Because the power supply is only 180w that's a stretch. I would recommend getting the tower (CMT) version and fitting a normal graphics card
@@darlingfranxx0264 The best option is to call colleges around your area and ask for the IT department. See if they have any decommissioned engineering computers for sale. The bigger the college, the more often they tend to cycle out older machines. You'd be surprised what you can find! My next favorite place is eBay, followed by FaceBook Marketplace
That’s too much. The most valuable part of that setup would be the 2TB SSD, but it’s also likely they installed 2 separate 1TB SSDs. I had paid $100 for the one in my video and that was 2 years ago. Now they’re beginning to show their age; I’d try to find a newer model with an 8th or 9th generation processor, they should still be around or even less than the $309 you were going to pay for this older one
Just ordered a Dell Optiplex 7050 SFF, i7-7700 3.6ghz, 16gb ram, 512gb m.2, no BT or WiFi(I think), powercord+Keyboard+mouse(apparently) all for $59 through Wal-Mart which you know what that means. I just took this scam of a chance because it said I could return it to Wal-Mart within 90 days(apparently) haha 😂. Wish me luck.
Roblox for sure, Genshin impact may have slight frame stutters with integrated graphics. I recommend a low profile GTX 1050 then you can play practically anything
Half card slot will take a 1650 thats runs of PCI power alone, but you would be safe to stick with a 1030gt as well, go for a thin card if you want to use the full sized slot.
Okay, so there's 2 of these models you'd be looking at. The ones with integrated graphics, and the ones that came with an AMD R7 350. There's about a $50 price difference between the 2 and one of the PCI slots on the back will be filled with display adapters. The integrated model is out of the question, but the AMD R7 will certainly push 45fps on medium settings @1080p. That makes it a solid value given the sheer number of these on every site you go to, along with their subsequent low prices. BUT... Gaming PCs are coming down in price with the introduction of 12th gen Intel processors and how ridiculously inefficient mining coins has become. I would look for a nice HP Pavilion gaming desktop, HP has had an interesting reputation throughout their Pavilion line and prices are pretty solid on them.
@@georgeramirez3120I paid $80 for the 7050 in this video and that was 2 years ago. 7th gen Intel CPUs are out of date and you’d be much better off getting a newer model with a 9th or 10th gen CPU. DDR4 memory ain’t that expensive anymore and you can get 32GB for $40 or so. Boom, $120 for the same machine. Call up your local university and ask to speak to the technology department. They will have recent computers for pennies on the dollar. Best of luck, save $120
Depends. The power supply should be able to handle booting with the RX6400. If there aren't enough/the right connectors for the card it won't boot. If you see a flashing orange light the power supply is overloaded. The recommended PSU is 350w, runs flawlessly on 450w-750w. This one is likely too low, yes. I would recommend a CMT (convertible mini-tower) Dell Optiplex 7090 with a 10th gen Intel processor. They have more power, are falling in price, and allow you greater expendability with the excellent driver support that comes with Dell
I use 7050 as a broad term since the small form factors are by far the most common model. The CMT models are too large for most people and the USFF models are too limited by their expansion. I’m banking on the fact the majority of my audience will know the difference, but for the beginner computer enthusiast I will try to fit that information into the title or description of my future videos.
Depends on the game and if it has a graphics card inside. The AMD Radeons that some people configured with these machines make a huge difference, like going from ~15fps to ~55fps on GTA 5. I know because I've owned both of these models. You should be able to find one of these machines with a graphics card in it for the same price as a standard model, you'll just have to look a little harder
@@RealElementProductionsevery four hours it freezes and says “hard drive not found” or “no bootable devices found” then I have to keep rebooting the pc just because that’s the only way it works
@@Animboyexe sounds like a failing hard drive or solid state drive. Believe it or not ssds have a shorter lifespan on average than hard drives but either way I would try purchasing a new 240GB SSD from Best Buy, they have them for $15. Pop it in, install Windows, and see if that fixes the issue. If it doesn’t then you have 2 working storage drives you can install in a newer PC
Not anymore, and they weren’t really capable at the time either. I would suggest an HP Pavilion gaming laptop or desktop. I’ve had a lot of great luck with those types of machines dedicated to gaming
@@TamaragreenwayIf you’re really set on a Dell Optiplex for gaming get a Dell Optiplex 7070 CMT with an 8th or 9th generation Intel Core i7. The CMT is the largest tower they offer which generally comes with a larger power supply good enough for a GTX 1060 graphics card. The reason I didn’t recommend an Optiplex for gaming is the price of purchasing the computer and graphics card would outweigh getting a used purpose built gaming machine. I don’t recommend Dells gaming desktops like the G series due to poor quality and even some reports of fires due to shoddy wiring and power supply failures
These are great machines! Bought 7 of these 2 and 1/2 years ago for my business. 16GB with 512GB.
All my employees have been working very well without problems.
@@freedonx Great to hear. Dell makes a solid business desktop
nice review, I got an Optiplex 7050 SSF desktop i5-6500 3.20GHZ quad core 8 GB RAM 250SSD usb-c win pro for $440 AUD just recently , I like it a lot
Can do video editing in this cpu
I got the mini tower version for $220USD 5 minutes ago. Can't wait to use it.
You got scammed i found a better one for 240
@@Jeezyycomethru usd or AUD
@@thebat2785 new
Just picked one of these up from the Goodwill online store.
Will be sticking an Intel Wifi card in one of the slots since i got the full tower variety.
It seems a bit weird that Dell only put a 180W power supply in its newer SFF models. I bought a 9020 SFF for my father a while ago which came with a 240W power supply and it handles a GTX 1650 just fine. It's a really neat little machine and besides the PCIe slot situation (wide slot being at the bottom) the only significant drawback seems to be that the platform only supports CPUs with up to 4 cores.
Its because intel 4th gen CPUs consumes much power than intel 6/7gen cpu's (85w vs 65w tdp for i7 models)
And there is no point at having powerful PSU for GPUs on these machines, because GPUs on them are constrained by powering from PCIe, which is equal (75w max) despite of optiplex generation
@@Office-Clerk I get your point. But if I'm not mistaken, the newer Optiplex with a 180W PSU, 65W CPU and a 75W GPU would only have 40W remaining for the rest of the system, while the older model with the 240W PSU, 85W CPU and 75W GPU would have 80W remaining.
I assume Dell took the max. wattage of the GPU into account when designing both systems, but the older model would theoretically have more overhead for things like custom fans, etc.
It’s pretty depressing the amount of people who buy these expecting to throw in a full size graphics card and run off playing fancy games. That being said, most small form factor desktops like the one in this video only accept low profile cards that meet the power requirements. For the full sized tower users they’re in for a nasty surprise when their machines shut off using an RTX 2070
@@RealElementProductions I swapped out the power supply of a 9020 Tower and run a RTX 2060 all day long with no hiccups ever. Just bought a 5070 SFF for a streaming pc/ video encoder/ media server.
@@wesbtrm Nice, what a sleeper!
I've had a 7050 sff sitting in the corner for about a year that was given to me for free. I finally opened it up and started messing around with it. Might use it as a replacement for the old HP Compaq at work or find some other use for it. It has 16gb of RAM, no hdd, a low profile 1gb RAM AMD card. It's also TPM 1.2.
I added another 16gb of RAM (32gb total) and a 1TB M.2 drive. I'd like to add a 4gb low profile videocard but I think that the PSU would need to be upgraded. I'd like to put Win11 on it but it needs TPM 2.0 but I've read that the 7050 can run Win 11 if manually loaded from a USB drive. I'll have to check into it.
Oh yeah, big time. Download Rufus and when loading the official Microsoft Windows 11 iso (available on their website for free) it will prompt you to disable the TPM 2.0 requirement and skip privacy requirements among a whole bunch of other tweaks
Amd rx6400 may work with default psu. Its just 53w.
Some of these dells were supplied with nvida/amd APUs that consume more, and there are many of them on sale with some old weak GPUs, which consumed more as well.
How loud is the fan/computer in general when running?
My unit ramps up when doing practically anything. I cleaned up any potential dust inside, perhaps it needed new thermal paste but more likely it requires a lot of cooling for such a thin machine
@@RealElementProductions oh that’s interesting - I have issues with noise so I don’t know what desktop computer is appropriate for me
@@spikeyroberto an HP EliteBook 840 G4 or G5 gives you a better value and a much quieter experience
@@spikeyroberto Brother the MT (Mini Tower) version of this PC is silent, I have it, it is wonderful.
grabbed one of these as a cheap emulator box to use with the tv. looks easy enough to add a few cheap upgrades for some small QoL improvements. decent machine for the price, got it for $75AU
@@BasicStealthcamping Excellent! Good price and make sure you’re on the latest BIOS update for the best security
Which is good for video editing dell 7050 vs dell 3060?❤❤❤❤
@@tenagnanegagrie Definitely the 3060. Despite having a couple ports missing compared to the 7050 the 3060 has a newer Intel CPU compatible with Windows 11 and should overall be faster
@RealElementProductions ok thanks 3050 vs 7050 Which is good
What is the name of the second part after the power and what is its benefit?
You’ll need to be a bit more specific than that, I’m guessing you mean the rectangular blank that goes in place of a DVD drive
@@RealElementProductions For two days it has been constantly lit
I think you’re talking about the hard drive indicator. That means that you have a lot of programs or things going on your computer
Has anyone painted the interior of this model black and noticed if the temperatures rise? Thnks
@@hugomartinezgalicia8084 I don’t think so and the difference would be negligible because there’s no heat or light reaching the inside of the case. Other temperature sensitive components like the CPU are concealed underneath a heatsink with thermal paste. I don’t see why anyone would paint the interior of their PC black unless you were making a clear side panel but I imagine the smell would be unappealing for at least a week
Is it possible to connect a pxn steering wheel to this pc?
@@nabadis If yours is PC compatible, yes. If you want to play racing games, you’ll need a graphics card, and quite honestly a better PC purpose built for gaming
@RealElementProductions oh OK would a optiplex 9020 with gtx 710 card cut it
@RealElementProductions and if not what's a good pc for less than 200 bucks?
@@nabadis No, most racing games on high graphics would need at least an 8th gen i5/i7 and a GTX 1050ti 4GB to run well and support newer games in the future.
@@nabadis A good PC for less than $200 would be an HP Pavilion Gaming desktop with a Ryzen 2400G and AMD RX 580 graphics. I’ve seen them for as little as $130 with corrupted software and other little things you can easily fix. If you learn how to fix and upgrade your own machines you’ll save so much money! I’ll make a video one day about my repair and Windows setup processes!
So i have a 7050 with 180w psu (hd530) i have a spare quadro p620 (maybe k), can i put it or it will suffer? I dont play, just use freecad, coding and 3d printing. No games
It should be fine, most of these run at 20-40w idle depending on i5 or i7
I think if you reviewed the MT version it might have come better equipped.
For sure, they’re both nearly 10 years old at this point so I’m in the 11th-13th generation of Intel CPUs
I’m contemplating buying this model but idk how well it can run games would this still be suitable if I want to play cod or escape from tarkov or any other larger games?
idk but probably not.
edit: i think you would need to upgrade the graphics card and possibly the ram too
@@willreed9433 got it so save for something better, thanks bro
It would be awful for gaming. If you got a CMT (Mini Tower) version you could slap a 1050ti and get respectable performance, but believe it or not gaming LAPTOPS are probably the best deal you can get. Nobody wants them, seriously. I got an RTX 3060 Asus ROG, 11th gen Intel Core i7 toting monster for $375 at a Pawn shop the other day. Look carefully and you'll find exactly what you're looking for
@@RealElementProductions good advice I appreciate you
Please sir , how to open lacture cd ?
Press button on DVD drive. If it’s not there you don’t have one
@@RealElementProductions thank you for response , i want to tell u no there is no button on ot and tgis is optiplex 3050 ,and if there is no lacure on it then how to burn cd
@@rachidbmma9788 You will need a USB external CD/DVD burner. They aren’t that expensive anymore and you can find one on eBay/Amazon for around $15-$20
@@RealElementProductions thank you so much for your support i really appreciate it ❤️
How to open the cd 💿 eject
@@chosenbyGod.. Some units (like the one in this video) don’t have an optical drive. If it does you push the button on the tray.
Impressive lingo, "small form factor.". Next time I get groceries, I'll ask if they have any SFF tomatoes. And why can't Detroit make a good, small form factor car?
On a happy note, I just got a Dell 7050 and deleted every nasty SFF bit of Windows OS, of course, and installed Ubuntu Pro Studio. It screams! I love it. 16 GB of RAM easily handles large 4K video and all of the max quality audio editing I can imagine. A great machine like the 7050 deserve a great OS.
Haha! Back in the 90s-early 2000s “small form factor” would have been equivalent to today’s towers; Big heavy metallic monsters. You can find SFF tomatoes around the cherry or grape tomato section, and the last good “SFF” car from Detroit was the Geo Metro, which was kinda built in Japan but oh well. I love disabling the telemetry in Windows as well. There’s a reason new versions are free, and your data is the culprit. Ubuntu is an excellent alternative. You’re doing everything right! I still see these in use everywhere and I’m sending my regards towards your video editing prowess. Good luck :)
This 7050 tower has an optical drive slot. Being it’s a smaller tower do you need a specific size(smaller) optical drive?
Yes, it uses a laptop-style 9.5mm optical drive
@@RealElementProductions thank you!
Your video was very helpful 👍
wait so does it have wireless wifi and able to connect to a router or no
Not from the factory, although you can buy a USB wireless dongle that allows you to connect to WiFi. They’re pretty cheap but most business users will be connected via a LAN cable for the quickest and most secure internet
I’m think of getting the i7 6700 16gb ram and 512 ssd can this do some light gaming
Check the back of the machine before buying, see if you can get a picture and if it has a graphics card definitely. Dell had some great AMD Radeon low-profile cards. You'll know it has one if one of the 2 expansion slots on the back has video outputs
I just got an optiplex 5070 mt, i’m considering if i could run an rtx 2060 super with my current 360 watt psu. If my cpu only draws 65w, gpu max draws 200 wats, and the rest of the system draws around 35 watts do you think it could handle that?
@@capxlotquin Wouldn’t recommend. The recommended PSU is 550w for a 2060 super and also it requires an 8 pin power connector whereas I believe the PSU in your Dell has a 6 pin. I think a GTX 1660 Ti would be perfectly adequate for running most games. When you stride into RTX territory your 9th gen CPU will become the biggest bottleneck going into the future
I was going to look for a 6-8 pin adapter. I’ve heard some say on forums that a 3070 would be a perfect pair for the 9th get i7 as long as the resolution is above 1080p (I have a 4k tv) but i thought a 2060s would’ve been better. I guess i’ll go the cheaper and more reasonable route and get the 1660 super/ti
Thank you for a great review😊😊
@@achomeonee4244 Anytime! I’ll try to make more
Can you run it on window 11 because I have a HP all in one pc and I was wonder of I buy this pc and connect it to my all in one computer. Will it run?
@@TheworstAltaccount It can run Windows 11 with a workaround pretty well, but I would recommend getting an Optiplex 7070 or 7080 for not much more and you’ll be able to run it natively with a lot more security. As for using your HP all in one, you’ll need to ensure there’s an HDMI input in the back of the computer and that it’ll work as a standalone monitor
@@RealElementProductions so I am able to connect a pc to a “all in one” pc but just need a HDMI port with the computer? Thank you 🙏
does a dell OptiPlex 7070 tower work?
@@TheworstAltaccount Only if the label on the back of the all in one says “HDMI in”. It’s not a very common feature but it is possible. Look up on google if your particular model supports HDMI input
@@TheworstAltaccount Yes
Can we update this cpu with Nvidia quadro k620 2gb graphics card with 180 watt power supply.
Not a good idea. The integrated graphics on a newer version (7060, 7070) are better than the K620, and since posting this video you can find those machines for roughly the same price. Also, you get an 8th or 9th generation Intel CPU!
Will this computer support a 3.5” HDD and 2.5” SSD internally??
That was my question, but I guess he doesn't reply to comments.
@@thebronzetoo oOoOO 👻
Yes, if you're willing to sacrifice the optical drive
2 x sata3
1 x PCI Express 3.0 x16
1 x PCI Express 3.0 x4
1 x M.2 2280/2242 (PCIe 3.0 x4, NVMe)
Love the video bro have a question would be huge if u could give sum advice. I was gonna pick this up and try pop in a rtx 3050 low profile u think that’s a good idea. It’s the msi one btw if that helps
@@hmpbarr6157 Wouldn’t work, power supply is 2x as small as the recommended. The best you can use is a low profile 1650
@RealElementProductions thanks bro the one I was going to get doesn’t take any extra power it only takes power from the pcie will this still not work ? Again thanks for the reply and advice it’s very much appreciated man 😊
@ That sounds like an awesome card for something like an XPS tower with a 500w PSU, but the 180w in these won’t be able to handle any gaming
@@RealElementProductions thanks so much for the aidvice bro
Previously had 9020, fan was extremely quit. Same with 70 series?
Yes
can u pls tell me which graphics card will be best for this?
With the small power supply and limited space a GTX 750 low profile would be your best bet
How much storage dose it have?
@@SevthaGoat1 It depends on the unit. Most would have come with a 500GB or 1TB hard drive that can be upgraded to any 2.5” SSD or 2.5”/3.5” hard drive
How much fps would this pc get on games like fortnite etc
40-60 with the graphics card on medium settings. 20-30 on low without
Any 6th computer is upgradable up to 9th (modding)
Hmmmmmm I’ll have to look into that
Hi, I bought the dell d6000 docking port only to find my laptop wont support 3 screens. Looks like I might need a usb c in. Will this pc do the job?
Yes, it supports 3 monitors out using the HDMI and both DisplayPorts. Make sure you're on the latest BIOS
what video graphics 4gb is compatible to this OptiPlex 7050?
Not worth it, get an HP Pavilion Gaming desktop with a Ryzen CPU and AMD RX graphics. They’re about $270-350 total and will blow the Optiplex 7050 out of the water
Does it have built-in microphone ?
No, and even if it did you should have a nice separate microphone to move between computers, a Blue Snowball completely blows any integrated microphone out of the water and other people on Zoom or Webex calls will notice a huge difference
umm, I have a question, is It possible to replace graphic card? for instance GTX750 or RTX 2060
It IS, but the two major constraints are power and card size. It is very hard to find a decent low profile, dual slot GTX 1650, let alone an RTX 2060. The 180w power supply cannot handle anything faster than a GT 1030, which is slower than integrated graphics. You technically could pull a 460w PSU out of an Optiplex 7071 and it will fit and hook up. It is infinitely easier to find a GTX 750 low profile card, and you might even be able to get away with using the normal power supply, but the more I think about it upgrading the power supply and throwing in a nice 1650, IF you can find one, sounds like the ultimate sleeper project. I would do extensive research into the project, including matching part numbers. Forums are your friend and from the multitude I've looked at while writing this comment it's entirely possible. Good luck and let me know how it goes!
Edit: I would like to add that it would be a better idea to buy a CMT (Mini Tower) to fit a far cheaper, full size, and potentially more reliable graphics card in a chassis with a larger 240w power supply to start with. The newer Optiplex models are falling in price, and you can land yourself a nice 8th or 9th generation Intel processor in the process for around the same price! Again, the project of replacing the power supply and using a low profile card in the machine you already have sounds like a lot of fun! But you will be spending a lot more money in the process using parts that may or may not work.
I have the same computer but no wifi. Did you add a wifi card?
No, at Office Depot you can get a TP link USB drive that gives your computer Bluetooth and WiFi. It's the same size as a Logitech mouse USB receiver. Tiny!
Nice walkthrough of internals of the machine. I don't know why Dell decided to put only one PCIEx16 slot in Optiplex SFFs ever since 4th gen Intel era, and also put it under under the x4 slot.
If you need both expansion slots, you would naturally go with a single slot option for a GPU upgrade. By placing the x4 slot up top, Dell essentially limits the machine to a GT1030, RX550 or some LP Quadro cards for discrete GPUS.
RX6400 gets pretty huge performance hits without PCIE 4.0 support, since it only has 4 PCIE lanes
I need your knowledge and technical explanations in future videos
"huge hits" = 10% = 5-7 fps less.
Someone testes it out. It's a non issue!
I’m buying one of Walmart it have 32gram ddr4 And a i7 quad core And I just wanna know can it have a graphics card?
Nice, it won’t have a graphics card unless specified, the GPU most people optioned for when new was the AMD Radeon R7 350X, which is so-so but still better than integrated graphics. If the desktop is a small form factor then that limits you wildly on the different GPUs you can option because it only accepts low profile cards and the power supply is too weak to handle most of them. Also, I wouldn’t recommend buying a refurbished PC from Walmart. They aren’t done by Walmart themselves, but any one of thousands of companies that pay Walmart to advertise their PCs. I would shoot towards eBay where you’ll save a hundred or more bucks for the same thing, just check for good feedback from the seller in question, you can have a bad experience with either platform
So it supports 3 monitors out of the box?
@SecretDiva thank you
2 monitors via DisplayPort built in. I don’t think you can cross HDMI or VGA alongside them but I may be wrong. I know for sure you can’t use a graphics card and the onboard video at the same time
Put a low profile 1650 in there and you can game pretty well because since it’s not going to use as much power as a normal 1650 and if you remove the vents next to it you can actually get some decent ventilation on a low profile but the big ones heck no
Yesss that’s my recommendation for most replacements on smaller form factor PCs
What about the gpu?
Integrated Intel HD graphics, which are enough for everything but gaming. For that I would recommend a GTX 750ti but it has to be a low profile card
Would you say this is decent for video and picture editing?
With the graphics card, sure to 2560x1440. Without I would limit editing to 1920x1080
Does it support window 11?
Not natively, but using certain applications you can find on the internet you can create a USB with Windows 11 that will bypass the TPM 2.0 requirement that’s only on 8th generation Intel Core I-series CPUs. Hope this helps, I don’t want to mention programs that bypass security requirements set by Microsoft
@@RealElementProductions oh, thank you for the information
Can you please recommend internal upgrades for this pc? I’m new to desktops and I’m not sure what to get
Honestly? The best internal upgrade for this computer is a newer optiplex. Now, before you say "That's not what I was asking", a 7060 or 7070 offers support for newer, more efficient Intel CPUs in their respective newer motherboards, faster memory is installed, quicker M.2 SSD support is present, and Windows 11 becomes natively supported. You'll get more USB-C ports on the front/back for your modern devices, and they're barely any more expensive than the 7050 in this video. The best upgrade to this Dell Optiplex, is another Dell Optiplex
crazy that this thing has a serial port still
It's nuts but at the same time a lot of businesses are still upgrading from their Windows 2000/XP dinosaurs that never needed an internet connection. That's how you use a computer!
2x Sata3
1 x PCI Express 3.0 x16
1 x PCI Express 3.0 x4
1 x M.2 2280/2242 (PCIe 3.0 x4, NVMe)
Nice, I’ll make sure to include similar specs in future videos. Now that even newer versions are widely accessible on the used market I’ve been dabbling less with hard drives and now I’m using 2.5” SSDs or nVme
180 watts is less than the 230 watts on the 9020, I got the i7 9020 for the same price as a i5 7040 and the extra cores do make a difference. (NOTE the half PCI slot can take a 1050ti, the power output is less but you will never push it to the level it will need the extra power, probably a good thing given the watt output on the PSU)
Nice! You can never go wrong with a Haswell. There was a security flaw that led Intel to discontinue DirectX 12 support, but I'm not completely sure if that's only for the integrated GPU or any graphics card period. The 4770 still is a legendary processor, and 230 watts is a nice improvement over these newer models!
cool vid thx!
You’re welcome!
Is it capable of windows 11?
Not natively, Windows 11 requires an 8th gen Intel CPU, this one has a 6th gen. You would need to make a custom ISO using Rufus, when you click start it will prompt you to bypass TPM 2.0 security then you can install Windows 11 from a USB drive
@@RealElementProductions I'm looking for a pc within my budget and came across this on amazon. I wnat to buy it but i was worried about windows 11. I won't pretend i'm fully comprehensive on it but if i install windows 11 using rufus, there wont be any software errors and it runs smoothly?
Sir Can i upgrade I7 7th generation ??
Yes, the 7050 supports 6th and 7th gen Intel CPUs all the way from the Pentium (gross) to the i7
element productions. im getting one of these this year i am gonna work hard and try my best to get 300 bucks but i still will need a gpu for it. do you know any good cheap ones or does this come with a gpu amazon said ti didnt
I feel bad, these are old now and I should make an update video. At this point they’re only good for running a Plex server off of. Grab an HP Pavilion Gaming desktop with an AMD Ryzen and RX graphics. They’re $250-$300 and will blow this Optiplex out of the water!
@@RealElementProductions i got it but now i just need a gpu bro. i have
Dell Optiplex 7050 SFF Desktop PC Intel i7-7700 4-Cores 3.60GHz 32GB DDR4 1TB SSD WiFi BT HDMI Duel Monitor Support Windows 10 Pro Excellent Condition(Renewed)
thats what i bought and i just need a gpu now. but im kinda broke still pls do more pc building vids. it makes me want to sub like do opening pc and looking and stuff like that installing stuff or just looking or gaming it would be so cool
You got it man, I’m very good at fixing broken machines and putting them together. I’ve come across dozens of rare and content worthy things like the very first Dell XPS laptop and a PlayStation 3 TV, but in my lifelong quest to avoid hoarding I quickly get rid of them. Creating content takes a lot of time, but it’s the times when I don’t have much to do I wish I’d kept some of these items. But hey, I’ve got some cool stuff. Let me enjoy my birthday today and I’ll get right on it tomorrow for ya :) - The big Optiplex 7050 has a 240w power supply, and the small form factor has a 180w power supply. Both of these are poor candidates for graphics cards. I’ve had an AMD R7 350 low profile card that came from the factory in one of these and got respectable gaming performance, but to elaborate on my previous comment these machines are not built for gaming and these days another unit would give you fewer problems down the line. I would honestly take it to the forums since it’s been a long time since I’ve had one of these and I don’t want to give you the wrong information
@@RealElementProductions would you happen to still have this pc that was in the video. i love videos like this. your very creative. pls do more pc vids if you can. but i wanted to know if you still had the pc if you could add me somewhere help me put a gpu in mine and like upgrade it?
I just got one today lol I paid 20$ for 7050 series good PC
Sadly the fastest GPU you can add to these PC's is the 1650 by Nvidia, which is a bit on the limit of performance. Hopefully Nvidia or AMD release a new "good" 75 watts GPU! That is what I am waiting.
@@ignacio6454 I sold the PC lol finish working on my gaming PC
Wow I’m jealous! Good price, hopefully it’s still kickin’
Thank you 😊
You're welcome 😊
Would this computer be good for gaming? Like apex legends?
Oh no. Not unless you have a low profile graphics card like the R7 350 these were available with. Because the power supply is only 180w that's a stretch. I would recommend getting the tower (CMT) version and fitting a normal graphics card
@@RealElementProductions Thank-you and do you know where to get any?
@@darlingfranxx0264 The best option is to call colleges around your area and ask for the IT department. See if they have any decommissioned engineering computers for sale. The bigger the college, the more often they tend to cycle out older machines. You'd be surprised what you can find! My next favorite place is eBay, followed by FaceBook Marketplace
@@RealElementProductions OH ok thx and I'll just go to Amazon and do you have any suggested graphics cards or anything
@@darlingfranxx0264 GTX 1060, Amazon is just eBay but more expensive. I would check both sites
Dell OptiPlex 7050 SFF Desktop Computer PC | Intel Core i7 - 7th Gen (7700) Processor @3.60 GHz | 16GB RAM - 2 TB SSD | HDMI, Wifi, BT | (Windows 10 for 309$ should I get it ?
That’s too much. The most valuable part of that setup would be the 2TB SSD, but it’s also likely they installed 2 separate 1TB SSDs. I had paid $100 for the one in my video and that was 2 years ago. Now they’re beginning to show their age; I’d try to find a newer model with an 8th or 9th generation processor, they should still be around or even less than the $309 you were going to pay for this older one
Just ordered a Dell Optiplex 7050 SFF, i7-7700 3.6ghz, 16gb ram, 512gb m.2, no BT or WiFi(I think), powercord+Keyboard+mouse(apparently) all for $59 through Wal-Mart which you know what that means. I just took this scam of a chance because it said I could return it to Wal-Mart within 90 days(apparently) haha 😂. Wish me luck.
might get onee
@@akirraslay I would try to get a newer one. These are aging pretty quickly. Try looking for a 7090 or 7000
I have purchased 3 of these for $60 each. They are very fast, if not gamers.
@@Somatom_Man Good deal! I’m seeing more of these everywhere
Wait would one of these ham enough storage to get genshin impact?
@@JayTraynor-t4o Storage is upgradeable. Some of these come with no storage and you’ll have to add it yourself, it all depends who you buy it from
Will this pc run genshin impact and Roblox good?
Roblox for sure, Genshin impact may have slight frame stutters with integrated graphics. I recommend a low profile GTX 1050 then you can play practically anything
FL Studio gang 💪🏼
Right now I’ve got FL Studio 20 running on a 2005 ThinkPad with Windows XP almost perfectly. Bless ImageLine for making their software so compatible
i got one today for 125 what nvidia card will fit in this? thanks
Half card slot will take a 1650 thats runs of PCI power alone, but you would be safe to stick with a 1030gt as well, go for a thin card if you want to use the full sized slot.
A 1650?? Hot diggity dog
I just came on one of these for free wanted to know if it would be good for gaming? , WARZONE to be specific!
Okay, so there's 2 of these models you'd be looking at. The ones with integrated graphics, and the ones that came with an AMD R7 350. There's about a $50 price difference between the 2 and one of the PCI slots on the back will be filled with display adapters. The integrated model is out of the question, but the AMD R7 will certainly push 45fps on medium settings @1080p. That makes it a solid value given the sheer number of these on every site you go to, along with their subsequent low prices. BUT... Gaming PCs are coming down in price with the introduction of 12th gen Intel processors and how ridiculously inefficient mining coins has become. I would look for a nice HP Pavilion gaming desktop, HP has had an interesting reputation throughout their Pavilion line and prices are pretty solid on them.
How much is the W of the power supply? I want to put a Gtx 1050 ti or Rx 550 Low Profile?
180w. Not enough
@@RealElementProductions a gtx 1050ti will actually work on this pc. Lots of people on youtube have installed it without any problem
at the time of making this comment, you can buy a dell optiplex 7050 with 32gb ram and intel core i7-7700 for $245 refurbished
I wouldn’t pay more than $120 tops
@@RealElementProductionswhy? I thought it was a steal and I'm thinking of buying it
@@georgeramirez3120I paid $80 for the 7050 in this video and that was 2 years ago. 7th gen Intel CPUs are out of date and you’d be much better off getting a newer model with a 9th or 10th gen CPU. DDR4 memory ain’t that expensive anymore and you can get 32GB for $40 or so. Boom, $120 for the same machine. Call up your local university and ask to speak to the technology department. They will have recent computers for pennies on the dollar. Best of luck, save $120
@@RealElementProductionsI got one with 16gb ddr4, i5-7500 and 256gb hard drive for only. 115$
And myns the tower size
put in a rx6400. did not boot, probably bc of the psu. Pls confirm this is fhe issud
Depends. The power supply should be able to handle booting with the RX6400. If there aren't enough/the right connectors for the card it won't boot. If you see a flashing orange light the power supply is overloaded. The recommended PSU is 350w, runs flawlessly on 450w-750w. This one is likely too low, yes. I would recommend a CMT (convertible mini-tower) Dell Optiplex 7090 with a 10th gen Intel processor. They have more power, are falling in price, and allow you greater expendability with the excellent driver support that comes with Dell
@@RealElementProductions what slot should i plug the gpu jn the big one or small one
This machine should be called Optiplex 7050 SFF(small form factor)
I use 7050 as a broad term since the small form factors are by far the most common model. The CMT models are too large for most people and the USFF models are too limited by their expansion. I’m banking on the fact the majority of my audience will know the difference, but for the beginner computer enthusiast I will try to fit that information into the title or description of my future videos.
Windows 10 ?
Windows 7, Windows 8, and yes Windows 10
How much fps would you say that this pc can run?
Depends on the game and if it has a graphics card inside. The AMD Radeons that some people configured with these machines make a huge difference, like going from ~15fps to ~55fps on GTA 5. I know because I've owned both of these models. You should be able to find one of these machines with a graphics card in it for the same price as a standard model, you'll just have to look a little harder
Omg finally 😭😀
New content cooking up today!
Wifi womt connect for me
@@Dandylion46 These don’t come with WiFi, if you’ve already added a USB WiFi receiver make sure you’ve installed the drivers properly
Mine crashes every 4 hours
Can you be a little more descriptive? How does it crash?
@@RealElementProductionsevery four hours it freezes and says “hard drive not found” or “no bootable devices found” then I have to keep rebooting the pc just because that’s the only way it works
@@Animboyexe sounds like a failing hard drive or solid state drive. Believe it or not ssds have a shorter lifespan on average than hard drives but either way I would try purchasing a new 240GB SSD from Best Buy, they have them for $15. Pop it in, install Windows, and see if that fixes the issue. If it doesn’t then you have 2 working storage drives you can install in a newer PC
@@Animboyexe If you want to diagnose it for yourself install CrystalDiskInfo from online and check the status of your drive
@@RealElementProductions thanks very much I will try it
Any model that is NOT Win11 compatible, will be much cheaper than the rest. An i5-9500 CPU is not compatible
Great point, although I think you meant to say 6500, any 8th generation or greater CPU is compatible with Windows 11
Sub cause u sound like jerry rig everything aha
@@DeonClayworth I’ve had similar fantasies of durability testing some of my items but not the budget 😂
Can you play fortnite or gta
Not anymore, and they weren’t really capable at the time either. I would suggest an HP Pavilion gaming laptop or desktop. I’ve had a lot of great luck with those types of machines dedicated to gaming
@@RealElementProductions can any of the dell optiplex play those games
@@TamaragreenwayIf you’re really set on a Dell Optiplex for gaming get a Dell Optiplex 7070 CMT with an 8th or 9th generation Intel Core i7. The CMT is the largest tower they offer which generally comes with a larger power supply good enough for a GTX 1060 graphics card. The reason I didn’t recommend an Optiplex for gaming is the price of purchasing the computer and graphics card would outweigh getting a used purpose built gaming machine. I don’t recommend Dells gaming desktops like the G series due to poor quality and even some reports of fires due to shoddy wiring and power supply failures
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