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NUCs not capable of 192kHz/24bit PCM audio via HDMI

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Here's a story about "specifications" (and "change of specifications") that I believe it's worth reading. If you purchased an Intel NUC in the last couple of years you may find it pretty interesting. And, whether you are aware or not, it may also apply to you. Of course, some kind of comment from someone @Intel would be very appropriate.

 

I got my first NUC in the spring of 2014. It was a DN2820FYKH which I used exclusively to stream HiRes audio to my Onkyo receiver via Foobar 2000 (directly through the HDMI output via WASAPI). Never had a glitch, which, after all, is pretty obvious: all the NUC had to do was to decompress FLAC audio into a PCM bitstream and send it to the amplifier, which took care of everything else. Easy. So, since 2014, my library of HiDef music increased steadily, including plenty of 192kHz/24bit audio.

 

Given the satisfaction with the above, in the spring 2016 I decided it was about time to consider a similar approach for movies and videos as well. So, given the CPU limitations of the DN2820FYKH, I decided to purchase a NUC6i3SYH which, ON PAPER, had all the capabilities of my earlier NUC, plus enough processing power to cope with most video sources (after all, if DTS-HD, Dolby TrueHD, and whatever else are simply "passed-through" to a capable receiver/amp, you just need a CPU powerful enough to take care of video decoding... right?).

 

While such assumption concerning video was right (and, after setting the appropriate audio pass-through, video works indeed smoothly), I soon realized that my brand new "Skylake" NUC wasn't capable of playing any of my 192kHz/24bit audio files. What?!?

 

Useless to say, as such audio files played perfectly with my old DN2820FYKH, my disappointment was huge... but as the NUC6i3SYH had just been released, I optimistically assumed that such an obvious issue would have been fixed pretty soon by some Intel update. And, please note, I perfectly remember that at that time I double checked the original "Technical Product Specification" (which I still have): and that TPS clearly stated that "LPCM, 192 kHz/24 bit, 8 channel" was supported (and both through HDMI and Mini DisplayPort). So I felt sure that, one way or the other, sooner or later, I would have been able to play such files using the new NUC.

 

Hence, from time to time, I simply checked the Intel site to see if a new "HD Graphic Driver" (which includes the so called "Intel Display Audio") had been released, installed it, crossed my finger, and tried again.
No way.

 

Until last Sunday, after installing yet another driver version released on June 15 2017 (with no benefit whatsoever: just another waste of time), I decided that it was enough, and it was about time to post something on this forum. As I had browsed this forum in the past (and I was familiar with the typical follow-ups of "try changing the HDMI cable" or "maybe your receiver doesn't support that format"), I started gathering documentation and screenshots to show that everything was fine with my receiver and HDMI cables, and that 192kHz/24bit audio could be streamed perfectly not only from my old DN2820FYKH NUC but even through any other kind of PC I have (even an old i7-2600 with a Radeon HD 6450 can perfectly stream 192kHz/24bit to my amp, and both via the Intel® HD Graphics 2000 HDMI or via the Radeon HDMI!).

 

Then, when I was just about ready to create a new thread on this forum with all such evidence, I thought that it would have been a good idea to start such a post with a "cut-out" from the "Technical Product Specification", showing what Intel had announced/promised in terms of PCM audio support via HDMI and NEVER DELIVERED... This time though, rather then refer to the original PDF that I downloaded over a year ago (when I purchased the NUC), I decided to check the latest available document on the Intel site... And, guess what?

 

At the very beginning, on page "iv", under "Specification Changes or Clarifications", among a bunch of other things that are mostly meaningless and have no impacts whatsoever, it states:

 

"August 2016 Spec Change • Page 23 Table 7 from 192 kHz / 24 bit to 192 kHz 16 bit"

 

Huh?

They fixed the 192kHz/24bit problem by simply and silently downgrading the specs...!
How cool is that?

 

Now, does this apply only to the NUC6i3xxx series?
Or, in other words, would I have been in a better position if I had bought a NUC6i5xxx or better?

No: I would have simply spent more money for the same kind of rip-off!

 

Because such an "August 2016 Spec Change" also applies to the whole NUC6i5xxx series and even the NUC6i7KYK (which is not exactly cheap, right?).

 

And what about the latest NUCs?

Oh well, you won't find a "change of specifications" history in their TPS (yet), and they all promise "192kHz/24bit" exactly as last year Skylake NUCs did... but I wonder why I should ever trust Intel again on such promises: maybe by August 2017 those specs will also be "downgraded" to "192kHz/16bit", huh? Or something else that worked fine on previous NUCs won't work any longer...

 

So, here's my 2 cents about this story:

 

1) Intel knows very well that lots of NUCs are used as "media players" in entertainment systems, or they wouldn't be providing CIR support in every one of them.


2) Yet, in their designs/implementations (and testing!) they seem to frequently overlook and disregard basic standards and assumptions (192kHz/24bit audio via HDMI was already supported by platforms that are now 6 or 7 years old, not to speak of all NUCs before Skylake).

 

3) I find it quite amazing to think that, while still at the design stage, people at Intel may have screwed up a simple computation such as:


192000 (hz) x 24 (bits) x 8 (channels)

 

and not realize that their design didn't provide enough bandwidth to PASSTHROUGH such a bitrate (which, by the way, is far from huge by today standards: just 36,864 kbps, huh?).

 

4) And it's even more disconcerting to think that nobody at Intel ever took care of thoroughly testing their PCM implementation through HDMI before the launch of all their Skylake NUCs (otherwise, they would have easily spotted the problem with 192kHz/24bit PCM audio and done something about it).

 

5) It's pretty clear that we (the users) are not treated by Intel's NUC division as customers, but rather as "guinea pigs". If you have the patience to do some searching/browsing on this forum, you will find plenty of people (mostly using the NUC6i7KYK) complaining that 192kHz/24bit audio through HDMI (or whatever else) was not available, and no Intel representative ever took the pain to confirm/address the problem. They just suggested to update the bios, drivers, try a better HDMI cable, or even told them that it was probably the fault of their amp/receiver. And of course all such suggestions turned out to be a waste of time (because the problem was Intel's own design/implementation).

 

6) It took about ONE FULL YEAR for Intel to recognize the problem with their HDMI/PCM implementation on their Skylake NUCs (6i5xxx were launched in Q3/2015, the spec revision occurred in August 2016), and, after one year, how did Intel address the problem? They just simply (and silently) "downgraded" the specs.

 

7) I was not born yesterday, and I am well aware of all the fine prints and "specifications subject to change" stuff, but that's meant to give manufacturers freedom to update specs and features for future revisions of their product, not to downgrade the specs of something that has already been sold on false promises. If you sell me a car saying it has 4 wheels, and deliver a product that has only 3, changing the specs one year later (and downgrading the description to "3 wheels") doesn't do the trick: I'm entitled to a refund, even more so if, for nearly a year, you mislead me suggesting a should get a new pair of glasses (or in our case get a different HDMI cable or even a new amp/receiver) to see and enjoy the "fourth wheel"... And/or implicitly lead me to believe, given the obvious nature of the issue, that some kind of fix was surely going to come (and wasting my time in multiple useless updates of BIOS, drivers, and whatever).

 

8) All in all, it seems that the whole "customer care" concept appears to be unknown to the Intel NUC division. Because once you recognize your error (as they eventually did), at least you should do whatever possible to alleviate the problem for your customers. Or not?
In this case, once you realize you have not enough bandwidth to passthrough 8 PCM channels @ 192kHz/24bit via HDMI (as they originally stated in their TPS), at least provide support for 2 channels (stereo!) or 5.1 (six channels). But they didn't, and simply removed 24bit audio entirely from their specs.

 

9) Please note that the kind of fix-up I just suggested above (supporting at least stereo and maybe 5.1) doesn't imply write tons of code. They already support PCM passthrough streaming (via HDMI and whatever) at different frequencies and bit depths, so all that's needed is to allow the PASSTHROUGH of any 192kHz/24bit bitstream that, because of the limited number of channels, still fits the available bandwidth, so that applications can at least stream 192kHz/24bit stereo. But it seems that for Intel NUC division their customers don't deserve not even such a partial solution to the problem. Too much work, huh? Let's simply remove any hint to 24bit audio all together from the specs: who cares... And not even an apology.

 

10) As I already mentioned, though Intel knows very well that lots of NUCs are used in entertainment systems, they clearly don't seem to have a clue of what people assume and expect to be "standard feature" nowadays. 16bit audio is 30 years old stuff (compact disc). And all subsequent advancements in digital audio implied higher bit depths (DVDs, DVD-Audio, BluRay, etc. all assume bit depths > 16) for the very simple reason that higher bit depths provide better dynamic range and accuracy. So seeing a "change of specs" in which Intel in August 2016 tells us that its HDMI implementation supports 16bit PCM is simply laughable. And that's exactly what they have done. Period.

 

11) Here's how the PCM support/implementation for HDMI and DigiPort is now described after the change of spec:

 

"LPCM, 192 kHz/16 bit, 8 channel"

 

Nothing else.
Honestly, who cares about 16bit PCM nowadays?

 

Dear Intel/NUC guys, 24bit audio has been around for years, and, guess what, we expect your specs to tell us something about that: what do you support in terms of 24bit audio through HDMI, DigiPort or whatever? Up to what frequency, and how many channels?
Instead, after the screw-up, it seems that Intel/NUC guys prefer to stay clear of any further reference or commitment on the 24bit audio front, and thus they just don't write/specify anything at all...

We just have to find out by ourselves, huh? Wow!

 

12) So, guess what: before writing all this I spent some time experimenting with different audio files and programs and came to the conclusion that, at least on my NUC6i3SYH (and latest driver), 24bit audio is supported up to 176kHz (multichannel). So, if such conclusion is correct, there's plenty of bandwidth to support at least 192kHz/24bit stereo and even 5.1 passthrough. If only Intel cared, of course. But they don't: the fact that in their revised specs there's not even a single hint to 24bit audio through HDMI tells it all.

 

-------------------------

 

Now, I'm sure someone (maybe even from Intel) will tell me that the difference between 192kHz/24bit and 96kHz/24bit is not that discernible, so I should just feel lucky and be happy that the latter works and just stick with it. Yes, indeed. Even the difference between FULL HD and 4k and is not that discernible unless you are sitting pretty near to the screen... so what?


I have an amp that accepts 192kHz/24bit and that worked perfectly with my old NUC. So I purchesed a lot of audio files in that format and I don't see why I should have any trouble playing them with a platform that "promised" to support that (as just about every single PCs does!). That's all.
Am I wrong?

 

Indeed, I can play those files at a lower frequencies on the NUC6i3SYH. For instance, while Foobar simply gives an error on any such files (saying that 192kHz/24bit is not supported), if I try with Kodi such files gets played anyway... But guess what: if I check what my amp receives it's a 176kHz/24bit bitstream. In other words, Kodi resamples the audio at the highest supported frequency for 24bit. This resampling, of course, doesn't certainly do any good, and performing such resampling each and every time I play the same file it's just a waste of CPU. Right?

 

Sure, I could spend days (maybe even weeks!) performing such resampling offline, once and for all, on all my library files. Yet I would need additional storage, because I don't want to throw away the original Hi-Res files, so each and every audio file in my library would end up being duplicated in different formats (and we are speaking of Hi-Res audio: files much larger than CD). And, of course, I would also need to reorganize my entire audio library accordingly. Given I was sold a NUC that promised 192kHz/24bit support out of the box (exactly as earlier products did), and after more than a year of useless driver and bios upgrades, I'm not that happy having to waste more time like this (not speaking of adding more storage, reorganizing the library, etc.).

 

Of course, I could put the old NUC DN2820FYKH back into use (though I now use it for different purposes in a different room). In other words, as ridiculous as it sounds, I could use the old DN2820FYKH just for audio, and the NUC6i3SYH just for video. But, guess what, all 7 HDMI inputs on my amp are already in use. And anyway it would probably be a mess having those two NUCs sitting side by side and operated by the same remote control. Right?

 

Lastly, I could buy a new NUC... But why in the world, after this experience, should I trust anything written on an Intel NUC TPS anymore... huh?

You tell me.

 

Kindest regards,
A very disappointed "Guinea Pig"


WLAN RF connector on NUC6I5SYK

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Hi,

 

I'm trying to figure out which type of RF connector that is used on for the WLAN card on the NUC6I5SYK. Any idea?

 

Thanks!

NUC7i5BNH Resume from S3 not working properly

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NUC7i5BNH with latest bios 0046 running Windows 10 Professional fully patched with Microsoft eHome Infrared Transceiver device in either of the front USB ports. Consumer IR Device enabled in the bios, also wake on IR checked for both S3 and S4/S5 states in the bios:

 

1. Power toggle button on Harmony 200 remote puts NUC to sleep.

2. Hitting power toggle button again repeatedly shortly after putting the NUC to sleep wakes the NUC again.

3. Waiting any length of time after putting the NUC to sleep then pressing the power toggle button repeatedly fails to wake the NUC again.

 

Mouse or keyboard can always wake the NUC from sleep after any length of time.

 

The same USB eHome Infrared Transceiver device  and harmony 200 combination is used successfully to sleep and wake both a NUC D54250WYK and NUC NUC6I5SYH.

A lot of HDMI 2.0 problems on my new NUC7I5BNK

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Hi,

 

Recently I upgraded my Sky Lake NUC to this Kaby Lake i5 NUC to be 4k ready since Sky Lake doesn't support HEVC in HW.

But surprisingly it's HDMI port works even worse than 6th gen NUC.

There are several problems:

1. It flickers quite often (turns black for sec and restores signal immediatelly). Sometimes it happens rarely, sometimes quite often. Very annoying.

2. HDMI doesn't work after device going to sleep. So I turns my TV on, Switch the NUC on, it shows SSD activity (by ring LED), but TV says there is no signal. Plugging / unplugging HDMI doesn't help. So only way to restore the video signal is hard reboot (4 secs pressing of power button).

3. 3D MVC Video Playback doesn't work at all. When I try to play the stereo iso file in PowerDVD - it switches resolution to 1080p and then switch it back to 4k and reports that the driver isn't compatible.

 

All this was worked on my NUC6.

Now the question, Why I upgraded to 7th gen NUC? It is much worse than Sky Lake. Sky Lake sometimes had Audio issues after sleep. But missing video is much much worse. Because I have to reboot the NUC using hard reset which is not recommended for Windows! And I have to do this several times per day.

 

My configuration is:

The NUC is connected to TV LG 65E6V through AV Receiver Marantz. Refresh rate is 60Hz, Resolution is 4k.

All FW's are official latest (including HDMI 1.66). Drivers are up to date according to intel drivers update utility (Except Thunderbolt one which is constantly fails to install).

HDMI cable is most expensive one. Actually I have about 20 of HDMI cables just because first thing which recommend in such cases - is to replace HDMI cable. But... this just never helps. All cables are the same.

 

Looks like this fake HDMI 2.0 port through internal chip adapter is still very buggy.

Did you ever test this with modern OLED 4k TV's before selling the stuff? I'm feeling that I'm beta tester here (half year problems with Sky Lake Audio issues, and now this HDMI 2.0 things)...

 

Any help will be appreciated!

IR receiver not working on NUC7i3BNK after startup

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I have two NUC7i3BNK that both have the same issue of the ITECIR Infrared Receiver not being detected after startup. It seems to only happen when the units are started by turning on their HDMI monitor or by pressing the power button on a RC6 IR remote. If I press the power button on the unit to turn it on or select restart in windows the ITECIR Infrared Receiver shows up in device manager and a IR remote works normally. When the IR decides not to work, scanning for new devices in device manager makes no difference and the ITECIR Infrared Receiver does not show up under HID. Both units are running windows 10 and didn't have the issue when initially installed.

Is there a recommended site that I could go to get an idea about my speed on my NUC?

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Hello all,

 

My current setup is driving me nuts!  It's a i5 with 16GB of memory and running on a M.2 card.  Writing this I have one browser tab and I guess noting in the background.  It's a new install of UbuntuStudio.  You should see this thing type.  I hit the key and about 2 or 3 seconds the letter pops ups!  Now if I wanted to find out my internet I could easily go and find that out.  I don't have to install anything, make sure my parameters are set correct or learn this program.  I just click, click and click and I have a clue of my internet speed.  Now is there something similar to check my computer speed?  Tell the truth, my Chromebook with 2GB of memory is faster than this thing!

PTT on Linux

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So I am trying to encrypt my file system, ideally by LUKS, and one way to do this is using the TPM chip, but my NUC does not have one. I am looking to use PTT to store the key, but I am unsure of how to go about this. I have already gone into the BIOS to enable PTT, but I am kind of lost on how to continue. If anyone knows, any help would be greatly appreciated.

NUC7i5BNH does not find Linux bootloader

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The primary installation on my NUC7i5BNH is Windows 10. After successfully installing Linux Mint 18.1 64 bit for dual booting on a second partition of the primary SSD, on rebooting I observed that the Windows bootloader was missing from the UEFI boot order in the bios. Then after disabling UEFI boot and unsuccessfully trying to boot into either operating system with Legacy boot, I observed that neither the Windows nor Linux bootloader was in the UEFI boot order in the bios. On rebooting again, the Windows bootloader appeared as the first option in the UEFI boot order in the bios, but no Linux bootloader was present.

 

Whatever I try I am unable to tweak the NUC Visual Bios to detect the Linux installation. Ideally I would like to have both the Windows and Linux options available under the UEFI boot order so I can choose which operating system to start up.

 

I see that this is not unique to the NUC7i5BNH. It seems that the Linux bootloader may need to be manually moved and renamed to what the NUC expects. As I cannot even get into the Linux system, this may need to be done from within Windows 10.

 

Any advice on how to get both Windows and Linux bootloaders into the UEFI boot order would be much appreciated.

 

Regards


Nuc 7i7BNH - screen goes blank (black) periodically in Windows 10 64 bit.

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Issue:

 

Since upgrading to the newest bios BNKBL357.86A.0048.EB.EXE my display periodically goes blank (black) for a few seconds and then returns to normal.  This happens several times an hour.

 

All drivers are up to date according to the Intel Update utility.  Video driver version is 15.45.19.4678.

 

I am using Windows 10 64 bit, version 1703,  OS build15063.483 

 

It looks a lot like this:

 

NUC NUC6i5SYH and LG 31MU97 flickering on DP - YouTube

 

Equipment:

 

Intel Nuc7i7bnh

32gb ram

Samsung 960 evo ssd

Dell 2415Q 4k monitor  (Single display)

USB C (Thunderbolt) to displayport cable - StarTech.com USB C to Display port cable

Specific part-number for the internal USB2 header - NUC7

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Hi.

 

I need to get a few headers for the internal USB2 connector on the NUC7i5/i7

 

 

 

What would be the right name for the contact?

 

Thanks!

 

Gunleik

Thunderbolt 3 Controller Firmware 25 Information Request

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Intel has released a firmware update for the TB3 controller. The download page lacks the release notes/changelog. The PDF on the page shows the update for FW Ver 18....

 

What is new in FW 25?

 

 

 

Can Intel please include a changelog+releasenotes with every driver/firmware/bios update?

Netflix audio problems

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Hello,

I recently got myself a 7i3BNH and while it works fine the Netflix app does not. Netflix support pages suggest audio problems even though there is no specific fix for error U7361-1253-C00D6D60 which is the one I'm getting. After trying all their suggested fixes without success I thought I'd ask here if anyone has had a similar issue with their NUCs. What makes this error especially annoying is that a title will start to play and then after 5 to 15 mins fail.

Using the browser player works fine but then I loose 5.1 audio which is why I'm using the app in the first place.

 

I'm running W10 pro 64 on the machine. All drivers are up to date as of 170706 and the app has been reinstalled numerous times.

 

edit: I found this thread, Netflix, D34010WYK and 5.1 audio , but I want pass-through audio and considering that thread it three years old I kinda though the issue would be gone by now.

 

Edit 2: I get the same error with 2.0 audio but, and this makes me think it has more to do with Netflix than drivers, their own content seems to work fine. Total recall borks after a few minutes but okja ran fine for 1,5h until I turned it off.

 

 

Thanks!

Bluetooth SCO audio packets can be TX but never RX on NUC6i7KYK, chipset Intel Wireless 8260

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Hello

 

Board: intel NUC (NUC6i7KYK)

Network Chipset: Intel Wireless 8260 (8086:24F3)

OS: custom linux distro based on linux Kernel 4.8.8

Bluez-5.45

Pulseaudio-10.0

 

Whenever a bluetooth SCO connection is made on the NUC I can send SCO packets but not receive them

L2CAP packets and a2dp work.

 

When I use a DELL laptop XPS13 with Qualcomm Atheros Killer QCA 6174 as soon as a bluetooth, with exactly the same software (home compiled), I receive SCO packets:

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #819 [hci0] 16.686260

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #820 [hci0] 16.696251

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #821 [hci0] 16.696258

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #822 [hci0] 16.696259

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #823 [hci0] 16.706253

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #824 [hci0] 16.706259

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #825 [hci0] 16.706260

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #826 [hci0] 16.706261

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #827 [hci0] 16.716256

    > SCO Data RX: Handle 9 flags 0x00 dlen 48                #828 [hci0] 16.716262

 

So this is hardware related:

probably an SCO audio routing issue, as encountered for other chipsets: https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/PulseAudio/Documentation/User/Bluetooth/

 

I have posted on stackoverflow: c - Linux Bluez: unable to receive SCO data packets - Stack Overflow

 

Thank you in advance for your help

 

Vincent

Liquid Cooling system for S7200AP

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Hello Everybody,

 

there is anyone knows if we can use the liquid cooling system on Intel Server Board S7200AP and which reference, from which manufacturer?

Thank you in Advance

Yet more NUC7i7BNH issues; this time dual display blackout

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Upgraded to latest BIOS just today and my 2nd display (Samsung SyncMaster SA850 27-inch monitor) is now completely black. The Samsung is using a USB-C-to-DVI cable (bought on Amazon here) and was working fine for weeks until my BIOS update today. I think the HDMI 2.0 firmware I installed a few weeks back had something to do with this issue today, as I also had to change adapters when doing this stupid HDMI firmware update. Please let me know if this is a simple fix, it REALLY shouldn't be so difficult to get dual displays to work, but NUCs really seem terrible at it. My main ASUS 27-inch display on HDMI port works just fine.

 

See CPU-Z output for my setup data.


NUC7I5BNH keeps freezing/crashing in Windows 10, constant flickering with 4k@60Hz

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So like many others I'm having a number of problems with my NUC7I5BNH that doesn't resume from sleep properly and keeps freezing even when it's set to not sleep.  First, here's my hardware:

 

NUC7I5BNH

Windows 10 x64 Pro running Creator's Update

PNY CS2030 240GB M.2 2280 PCIe NVMe Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) - (M280CS2030-240-RB)

1 x G.SKILL Ripjaws Series 8GB DDR4 2400 Model F4-2400C16S-8GRS

 

I've connected to two different displays that have both exhibited similar behavior

Vizio m55-C2 4k TV

CROSSOVER 324K UHD 32" 3840x2160 60Hz HDMI2.0 DP 4K LED Monitor

 

All drivers are up to date and I have updated the HDMI 2.0 firmware.

 

If I try to run at 3140x2160 @ 60Hz, the display flickers frequently, with it sometimes being so bad that the computer is completely unusable.  Running KODI, NETFLIX, or even just some websites in Chrome seem to make the problem worse.  The only thing that makes the flickering go away is if I go to 4k@30Hz or go down to 1080p at 60Hz.  I am using amazon basics hdmi 2.0 cables that worked fine driving 4k@60Hz with my 5th generation NUC so I'm fairly certain it's not the cable.

 

In addition to the flickering issues, the computer would not wake either monitor when it resumed from sleep >50% of the time and had to be reset using the power button.  As a temporary solution, I disabled sleep entirely and that seemed to fix the problem.  HOWEVER, after upgrading the HDMI 2.0 firmware, I'm now seeing another similar problem but I have no idea what is going on.  After the display is turned off after 10 minutes, it eventually powers off but the computer is set to never sleep. When I power on the TV again, >50% of the time, the computer has frozen.  This is different than the previous behavior because before I could remotely login to the computer and restart it.  Now it is completely unresponsive and can't even be pinged.  It requires a hard reboot to get the computer to respond again.  I have looked in the event viewer and can't figure out why the computer is crashing.  There is an error message that says something like: "The previous system shutdown was unexpected." but gives no more information about the error.  Again, this problem seems to have started happening after updating the HDMI firmware.  Is there any way to check the current firmware version and is it possible the update went wrong somehow?

 

The only BIOS setting I have changed is disabling HDMI CEC (I can't remember if I enabled it in the first place or if it was on by default).

 

Please help!  I am at a complete loss as to what else to do to fix this problem and, as it stands, the NUC is hardly usable.

WLAN RF connector on NUC6I5SYK

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Hi,

 

I'm trying to figure out which type of RF connector that is used on for the WLAN card on the NUC6I5SYK. Any idea?

 

Thanks!

NUC7i3BNH Post Fails after changing IGD size

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Hi,

I was playing around in BIOS today to try to identify a HDMI display error. However I changed the IGD size to 4 MBytes and now my system wont POST. I have tried to rest BIOS by moving the Yellow jumper (as holding the power button between 3-4 sec does not work at all) but the system never goes into BIOS.

When booting I can see the F2, F7, F10 options but the system freezes there, i.e. does not load my OS, nor allow me to select any F-key.

 

As it stands now I'm stuck. Is there anything that can be done apart from getting a replacement?

 

BIOS seems to be very unstable. I'm on Version 47, updated from 46. Had to do the update twice as the process also got stuck. The Unit get's really hot when used, perhaps that's normal?

will only start on second boot after windows update

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2017-07 Cumulative Update for Windows 10 Version 1703 for x64-based Systems (KB4025342)

After this update it will not boot only to the Intel screen, i have to switch off and then on and it boots no problem,never had this problem before this update.

Are the NUC6i3SKY, NUC6i5SYH, NUC6i5SYK, or NUC6i5SYH still being manufactured, and if so where can they be purchased?

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Are the NUC6i3SKY, NUC6i5SYH, NUC6i5SYK, or NUC6i5SYH still being manufactured, and if so where can they be purchased?  I have checked all of the sources I know and receive "OUT OF STOCK".  I have 14 or these and need to replace 4 due to lightning damage.  Surely Intel is not leaving users with no way to replace units in their network??

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