Since the plan is to install Ubuntu 22.04 alongside Windows 11, so we will shrink the Windows 11 partition by about half first, before inserting the Ubuntu 22.04.3 USB drive to install the Linux distribution.
The installation went smoothly with no issues to report on.
Ubuntu 22.04 System information
Going to Settings->About confirms we have Ubuntu 22.04.3 64-bit running on the Maxtang MTN-FP750 mini PC with 32GB RAM and an AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS CPU with AMD Radeon Graphics, and a total of 638.8GB storage (512GB M.2 SSD included in the system, plus our own 2.5-inch 128GB SATA SSD)
We can get a few more details from the command line:
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aey@Maxtang-MTN-FP750:~$cat/etc/lsb-release
DISTRIB_ID=Ubuntu
DISTRIB_RELEASE=22.04
DISTRIB_CODENAME=jammy
DISTRIB_DESCRIPTION="Ubuntu 22.04.3 LTS"
aey@Maxtang-MTN-FP750:~$uname-a
Linux Maxtang-MTN-FP7506.5.0-15-generic#15~22.04.1-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Fri Jan 12 18:54:30 UTC 2 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
aey@Maxtang-MTN-FP750:~$free-mh
total used free shared buff/cache available
Mem:28Gi3.4Gi22Gi78Mi2.5Gi24Gi
Swap:2.0Gi0B2.0Gi
aey@Maxtang-MTN-FP750:~$df-mh
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use%Mounted on
tmpfs2.9G2.3M2.9G1%/run
/dev/nvme0n1p6185G15G161G9%/
tmpfs15G015G0%/dev/shm
tmpfs5.0M4.0K5.0M1%/run/lock
efivarfs128K24K100K20%/sys/firmware/efi/efivars
/dev/nvme0n1p1300M36M264M13%/boot/efi
tmpfs2.9G204K2.9G1%/run/user/1000
Inxi utility provides a few more details about the system as well:
It shows an AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS processor with 16 threads clocked up to 4829 MHz, a Foresee SU04Ge M.2 NVMe SSD, and a 118GB CJ225128TC SATA SSD, as well as an RTL8125 2.5GbE controller. The CPU temperature is clearly wrong, but the GPU temperature is shown to be 47°C.
Ubuntu 22.04 benchmarks with Maxtang MTN-FP750 mini PC
We’ll start the Ubuntu 22.04 benchmarks for the MTN-FP750 mini PC with Thomas Kaiser’s sbc-bench.sh script:
The maximum CPU temperature was 82.5°C, and no CPU throttling occurred. The 7-zip benchmarks score actually increased between runs starting at 54,174 MIPS, then 54,746 points, andfinally 55,305 with an average of 54,740 points.
Now let’s run CPU single and multi-core benchmarks with Geekbench 6.2.2.
The single-core score is 2131 points, and the multi-core one is 9,665 points. You’ll find the full details on Geekbench website.
Next up is GPU performance with Unigine Heaven Benchmark 4.0 where the Maxtang MTN-FP750 mini PC achieves 67.8 fps on average and a score of 1,707 points at 1920×1080 resolution.
We’ll now test YouTube videos streaming at both 4K and 8K resolution in Firefox.
We played a 4Kp30 video for about 5 minutes and it was smooth with no frames dropped at all.
Switching to 4Kp60 was fine too with only 41 frames dropped out of 37,737 when playing the video for a little over 10 minutes.
An 8K YouTube video at 30 FPS played great with no frame dropped at all.
8Kp60 was great too with 18 frames dropped out of 36,972 while playing the video for a little over 10 minutes.
4K video playback performance on Ubuntu 22.04 (Firefox) and Windows 11 (Chrome) is similar, but 8K 60 FPS was somehow much better on Ubuntu 22.04 since most frames were dropped at 8Kp60 on Windows 11.
Speedometer 2.0 was used in Firefox to evaluate web browsing performance.
The score was 247 runs per minute with some variations between iterations with the score ranging from 233.4 to 250.3.
Comparing Maxtang MTN-FP750 performance in Ubuntu 22.04 with other mini PCs
Let’s now compare the Maxtang MTN-FP750 against some of its peers to get a better understanding of the performance in Ubuntu 22.04. We’ll use GEEKOM A5 (AMD Ryzen 7 5800H), GEEKOM Mini IT11 (11th Gen Core i7-11390H), GEEKOM AS 6 (AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX), and GEEKOM Mini IT13 as reference points.
Before checking out the benchmark results, we’ll have a look at the key features and specifications of each system.
Maxtang MTN-FP750
GEEKOM A5
GEEKOM Mini IT11
GEEKOM AS 6
GEEKOM Mini IT13
SoC
AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS
AMD Ryzen 7 5800H
Intel Core i7-11390H
AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX
Intel Core i9-13900H
CPU
8-core/16-thread up to 4.75 GHz
8-core/16-thread processor up to 4.4 GHz
4-core/8-thread up to 5.0 GHz
8-core/16-thread up to 4.9 GHz
14-core/20-thread up to 5.4 GHz
GPU
AMD Radeon 680M Graphics
AMD Radeon Vega 8 Graphics
96 EU Intel Iris Xe Graphics up to 1.4 GHz
AMD Radeon Graphics 680M
96 EU Intel Iris Xe Graphics up to 1.5 GHz
Memory
32GB DDR5-4800
32GB DDR4-3200
32GB DDR4
32GB DDR5-4800
32GB DDR4-3200
Storage
512GB NVMe SSD
512GB NVMe SSD
1TB NVMe SSD
1TB NVMe SSD
2TB NVMe SSD
Default OS
Windows 11 Pro
Windows 11 Pro
Windows 11 Pro
Windows 11 Pro
Windows 11 Pro
Here are the benchmark results for each mini PC in Ubuntu 22.04.
Maxtang MTN-FP750
GEEKOM A5
GEEKOM Mini IT11
GEEKOM AS 6
GEEKOM Mini IT13
sbc-bench.sh
- memcpy
19,252.7 MB/s
18,717.0 MB/s
19,734 MB/s
19,131.7 MB/s
24,014.4 (P-core)
- memset
18,055.7 MB/s
43,837.0 MB/s
45,636.7 MB/s
16,781.4 MB/s
26,647.9 (P-Core)
- 7-zip (average)
54,740
53,610
25,167
54,592
56,540
- 7-zip (top result)
55,305
54,850
25,401
56,251
60,981
- OpenSSL AES-256 16K
1,297,694.72k
1,202,869.59k
1,707,917.31k
1,249,203.54k
1,844,401.49k (P-Core)
Geekbench 6 Single
2,131
2,002
1,977
1,992
2,745
Geekbench 6 Multi
9,665
9,347
5,729
9,535
11,974
Unigine Heaven score
1707
890
1,079
1,553
1,333
Speedometer (Firefox)
247
218
-
202
273
Overall performance is pretty good, and quite similar to the GEEKOM AS 6, although the Maxtang MTN-FP750 has the best 3D graphics score (in Unigine Benchmark 4.0) of the mini PCs above. It’s not too far from the Intel Core i9-powered Mini IT13 either, and offers a better performance/price ratio albeit some of that is due to the lower capacity 512GB SSD.
Storage testing and USB ports
We tested the performance of the preinstalled 512GB NVMe SSD with iozone3:
We then connected an ORICO M234C3-U4 “USB4” M.2 NVMe SSD enclosure to double-check each of the USB port’s speed using lsusb and iozone3 with an EXT-4 partition. For example, here are the results for the front left USB 3.2 port of the Maxtang MTN-FP750:
That would be 234 MB/s read speed and 126 MB/s write speed, so the SATA port works as expected.
2.5GbE networking
The Maxtang MTN-FP750 does not ship with a wireless module (although it could be fitted with one), so we only tested the 2.5GbE port with iperf3 utility and UP Xtreme i11 mini PC on the other end
We ran a stress test on the 16 threads of the AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS CPU to evaluate thermal performance by monitoring the CPU temperature with psensor and the CPU frequency with the sbc-bench.sh script.
The CPU did not throttle during our test with a maximum temperature of around 86°C in a room at about 28°C. The CPU frequency stabilized at around 3,400 MHz.
Fan noise
The main downside of the Maxtang MT-FP750 mini PC is the fan noise. It’s already noisy at idle, but under load, the fan can be heard 10 meters away. It’s a great feature if you’re afraid your staff may fall asleep during work… OK. I’m exaggerating a bit, but it’s the noisiest mini PC we’ve reviewed so far.
We measure the fan noise with a sound level meter placed at around 5 centimeters from the top of the enclosure:
Idle and web browsing – 40.1 to 56.5 dBA
Stress test on all 16 threads – 56.9 – 58.5 dBA
For reference, the meter measures 38 – 39 dBA in a quiet room.
Maxtang MTN-FP750 power consumption in Ubuntu 22.04
We measured the power consumption with a wall power meter:
Power off – 0.7 Watt
Idle – 9.0 – 9.3 Watts
Video playback – 59 – 62.2 Watts (Youtube 8K 60fps in Firefox)
CPU stress test (stress -c 16) – 57.2 – 58.5 Watts
During the measurements, the mini PC was connected to Ethernet (through a WiFi 6 router), one RF dongle for a mouse and keyboard combo, and a VGA monitor through an HDMI to VGA adapter.
Conclusion
Maxtang MTN-FP750 mini PC worked quite well in Ubuntu 22.04 with no major issues, good performance while browsing, 4Kp60 and 8Kp60 YouTube videos played smoothly, higher 3D graphics performance than most other mini PCs, and 2.5GbE networking working to expectation. It also provides some expansion capabilities an M.2 socket for a wireless module (sadly not included in our sample), five USB ports, and support for up to three independent displays. It performed better than in Windows 11 where our system struggled with 8Kp60 videos on YouTube.
A small downside is the power limit set to a conservative 35W (PL1/PL2) meaning the MTN-FP750 will not fully leverage the performance of the AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS octa-core processor by default, but this would be changed by the user if needed. The main downside is that the fan is quite louder than on other mini PCs we’ve reviewed. I can hear it even about ten meters away in another room and there does not even need to be a heavy load. Having said that the cooling solution is working fine and we did not notice CPU throttling during our tests, which may be important for a machine that’s supposed to run all day or even 24/7 as a digital signage or retail kiosk. In those settings (e.g. busy airports or shopping malls), the fan noise may not even matter at all.
We’d like to thank Maxtang for sending the MTN-FP750 mini PC with AMD Ryzen 7 7735HS CPU (NUC-7735HS-A16 model) with 32 GB of DDR5 RAM, and a 512GB M.2 SSD. The mini PC can be purchased for $387.03 and up on Aliexpress, as well as on the company’s online store where the model with 32GB RAM and a 512GB SSD as reviewed here goes for $483, but you can also select a barebone model for $400, and they offer a discount for orders of 4 pieces.
Jean-Luc started CNX Software in 2010 as a part-time endeavor, before quitting his job as a software engineering manager, and starting to write daily news, and reviews full time later in 2011.
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