Published: in Videos
MeLE Quieter 4C Mini PC Review: Silent, Fanless, Surprisingly Capable
Today we’re taking a close look at the MeLE Quieter 4C Mini PC — a fanless, ultra-compact computer designed for low-power, silent operation. Despite its size, it packs DDR5 memory, NVMe storage, triple-display support, and Windows 11 Pro preinstalled. I’ll cover unboxing, specs, BIOS features, Windows and Linux testing, and where this £260 box makes sense in the real world.
⚠️ Disclosure: This video is sponsored by MeLE, who provided the Quieter 4C unit for review. All opinions are my own.
Unboxing & First Impressions
Inside the box you’ll find the Quieter 4C unit, power adapter (12V/24W), VESA mount, and basic documentation. The PC itself is small enough to mount behind a monitor, with a clean design and no fan openings — perfect for silent environments.
Hardware Specs
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CPU: Intel N150 (4 cores / 4 threads)
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RAM: 16 GB LPDDR5 (soldered)
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Storage: 512 GB NVMe SSD (replaceable)
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Graphics/Displays: Up to 3 displays (2 × HDMI + USB-C, all 4K @ 60Hz)
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Networking: Gigabit Ethernet, Wi-Fi 5, Bluetooth 5.1
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Other: Ultra-low power (6W idle), USB 3.0, USB 2.0, and VESA mount
It’s not a powerhouse, but it’s designed for efficiency — think servers, media streaming, thin client, or portable toolkits.
BIOS Features
The BIOS is unusually flexible for a budget mini PC. Options include:
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Power limits and fanless thermal controls
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Wake-on-LAN and PXE boot (useful for IT deployments)
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Secure Boot toggles
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Boot order and device management
For tinkerers, this is far more advanced than most mini PCs at this price point.
Windows 11 Pro Experience
The Quieter 4C comes with Windows 11 Pro activated out of the box — no extra licence fee needed. I tested:
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4K@60Hz video playback across multiple displays
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Device Manager for driver coverage (all devices properly recognised)
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General performance: perfectly fine for office tasks, browsing, light multitasking
This is very much a “ready to go” system straight out of the box.
Linux Test: Arch Linux (KDE)
I also tested Arch Linux with KDE Plasma:
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Display output worked flawlessly at 4K@60Hz
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Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and Ethernet all functional
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System remained cool and silent under typical loads
This makes the Quieter 4C a solid candidate for a lightweight Linux workstation, home server, or IT toolkit.
Real-World Use Cases
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Home media centre (Plex, Jellyfin, Kodi)
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Portable pentesting device (Kali/Parrot bootable)
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Client deployment tool (PXE, imaging, diagnostics)
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Lightweight home server (Pi-hole, VPN, Docker containers)
For anything requiring heavy multitasking or sustained CPU performance, you’ll want something beefier. But for lightweight, always-on, silent workloads, it’s a great fit.
Verdict
For £260, the MeLE Quieter 4C delivers a lot:
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Silent, fanless design
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16 GB DDR5 + 512 GB NVMe SSD
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Triple display support
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BIOS features that appeal to power users
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Pre-activated Windows 11 Pro
It’s not a gaming rig or video editing workstation, but it doesn’t claim to be. If you need a quiet, low-power mini PC for media, Linux, or light IT tasks, this box is impressive value.