
We can get confirmation that USB-4 is indeed a USB OTG port, the recovery button is located right behind the AV output port, and the USB Wi-Fi module is based on Realtek RTL8188ETV. I’ve also remove the heatsink to get a real look at the board with marking HD18Q_V0.95. There’s a stainless plate attached to the top of the enclosure, but I’m not sure what its purpose exactly is, because it does not touch anything in the case. There are no other screws to remove, simply pull out the board from the enclosure to take it out. EM6Q-MXQ Board and Stainless Plate (Click to Enlarge)
Fastfox ott mxq serial#
Nothing much to see on the bottom of the board, except the serial console pins close to the USB ports. You first need to stick out the four rubber pad on the bottom of the enclosure, then untighten the four screws, before pulling out the bottom of the case with a flat screw driver: Bottom of EM6Q-MXQ Board (Click to Enlarge) There’s also MAC address on the bottom of the casing starting with C44EAC that looks up to Shenzhen Shiningworth Technology Co., Ltd found in some other Amlogic products. The box features an LED and an IR receiver at the front, 3 USB 2.0 ports and an SD card slot on the side, with most ports on the rear panel: another full size USB port (OTG), coaxial S/PDIF, AV output, HDMI output, 10/100M Ethernet, and DC in. EM6Q-MXQ and Accessories (Click to Enlarge) The media player comes with an HDMI cable (1.2m), a remote control requiring two AAA batteries, a 5V/2A power supply, and a user’s manual in English and Chinese. The box comes with a brand-less “OTT TV BOX” package. The company sent me a sample for review, so today I’ll start with some pictures, and follow up with a full review in a few days.


EM6Q-MXQ is an Android TV box based on Amlogic S805 quad core Cortex A5 processor, with a quad core Mali-450MP GPU, 1GB RAM, and 8GB flash.
