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refurbishing

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Refurbishing NUCs

NUCs are well-engineered systems and can find a useful second life. They are simple to maintain and upgrade. Their greatest weakness is their poor graphics capabilities.

Inventory

Many used items come as bare bones or missing parts, especially AC adapters and WiFi cards.

Examine for:

  • the model of the NUC and specifications
  • RAM (type and amount)
  • Storage (type, format, and amount)
  • is the power adapter included
  • condition (scratches, dust)

Cleaning

A thorough cleaning inside and out can restore even a very dusty NUC. Removing the NUC motherboard allows for a full clean. Canned air or a blower will help clean the CPU heat sink and fan. Cleaning gel does an excellent job restoring the device.

NOTE A very dirty CPU fan and device can indicate damage to the CPU cooling fan

Update BIOS

Be sure the BIOS is from 2019 or later to ensure you are not vulnerable to a critical security vulnerability. Windows update can update the BIOS in some cases.

CMOS Battery Check

A CR2032 3 volt lithium battery has about 3.3V new. They last around 5-7 years. When the voltage drops to 2.8-2.7V it is considered dead.

Intel NUCs have the date of manufacture on the bottom place, so it is easy to check the age of the CMOS battery, essentially a CR2032 wrapped in plastic, connected to a small electrical connector.

It is challenging to test the voltage with a multimeter, requiring removing the motherboard and using some very fine probes with your multimeter.

The simpler method is to download and live boot the latest Ubuntu distribution and run “sensors”. This should give you the current voltage read from the battery.

Upgrades and Replacements

Some NUCs have built-in 32GB storage, enough to barely run Windows 10 these days. The “tall” NUCs have room for 2.5“ drives. Many have space for mSATA SSD and others for a m.2 SSD.

Replacing any HDD with a faster SSD is highly recommended. The built-in 32GB storage is also relatively slow compared to 2.5” SATA III SSD. A 60GB or greater SSD is recommended.

As for RAM, read the Intel specifications for the type and maximum sizes of RAM SO-DIMM modules. Some devices only have one (1) RAM slot.

For older and slower NUCs, 8GB is sufficient for normal Windows 10 use. For higher performance applications, 16GB is recommended.

Many NUCs have a slot for a wireless card and come with antennas installed inside the case. For these, I recommend installing a wireless/Bluetooth card as it makes the device much more flexible.

A few NUCs do not have an ethernet LAN port at all. In these cases, a wireless card is extremely important. Otherwise an ethernet to USB adapter is required.

OS

If you are looking to build a Home Theater PC (HTPC), you can install OpenELEC or other operating system.

For a normal workstation, I prefer to build a Windows 10 system. Windows 8.1 and Windows 7 can be upgraded using the Windows 10 Update Assistant. When a NUC arrives with Windows 10 Pro, it's more valuable than a Windows 10 Home edition.

NOTE If the NUC originally came with Windows, the OEM key in the BIOS will activate the installation, so give it a try. This key can be read using the Windows OEM Product Key Tool.

With limited RAM 2GB, Linux Mint or Zorin OS are excellent choices for a basic desktop system.

When giving away a Windows NUC, I usually do a full reset and leave it at the initial Windows configuration screen. Pressing F-10 from this screen opens and command prompt, allowing running the shutdown /s /t0 command.

For a Linux NUC, I generally due a full re-install and set it to login automatically. I leave the credentials in a text note on the “desktop”.

refurbishing.1626385896.txt.gz · Last modified: 2021/07/15 21:51 by user