The Dynamo Mini is a standalone DC-DC converter that takes 16-24V input and provides everything you need to run a standard PC including 24 pin ATX, 8 pin EPS, SATA and 6+2 pin PCIe.
The Dynamo 360 is also usable as a standalone for some PC systems, but has no way to power a 24 pin ATX on its own. It can power SATA and 2 x PCIe 6+2 directly providing up to 360W of power. Where the Dynamo 360 differs from other DC-DC converters on the market is that is has not just a 16-24V power in, but also a 16-24V power out acting as an AC-DC converter passthrough. This means you can plug in a Dynamo Mini to the 16-24V power out header in order to power your ATX motherboard via 24 pin ATX cable and 8 pin EPS cable. In addition to the Dynamo Mini, you can also use the included 6 pin Molex to barrel connector to power virtually any mini-PC board in place of a standard ATX based motherboard. These include (but are not limited to) Micro STX, Mini STX, Intel NuC, Hades Canyon NuC, Devil's Canyon NuC and Thin Mini-ITX.
The simplest and primary intended use case scenario is to use the two Dynamo units in combination. In doing this, you will have a total DC power solution that provides up to 520W of total rated wattage (should be able to do 560W comfortably). If you have access to a very large AC-DC supply like the Eurocom 780W, you can plug the AC-DC supply into the 16-24V power in header on the Dynamo 360 and the Dynamo Mini to the 16-24V power out header. Note that if you choose to go this route, you may need to get a custom power in header for the Weipu many of these power supplies use.
@Josh | NFC can do these for you.
As an alternative, you can plug the Dynamo mini into a single AC-DC unit (HDPlex 160W AC-DC is the best example) and then plug the Dynamo 360 into a second and separate AC-DC supply (HDPlex 300W AC-DC is the best example). If you prefer external AC-DC bricks, this would also allow you to do a dual brick solution with (for example) a Razer 165W laptop adapter powering the Dynamo Mini and a Dell 330W AC-DC powering the Dynamo Mini.
On some motherboards, the power monitoring functions won't allow synchronized powering on and off of the two units. To solve this problem, the Dynamo 360 ships with a 2 pin sync cable. Through use of 2 pin headers on both units, this cable allows the units to synchronize power on and power off states when operating from two different AC-DC supplies. Using the above example with the HDPlex 160W + 300W, you have a power solution that provides 460W of rated power with the capacity to handle momentary power spikes into the realm of 560W
With respect to cable clutter, this was one of the primary reasons I chose to design this unit. If you place the Dynamo 360 close to the GPU you can get away with one or two very short custom cables rather than long cables that traverse your entire case. Additionally I am trying to work on a PCB based connector not unlike the EVGA Powerlink to allow direct plugging of the Dynamo 360 to the back of your GPU. The use of the Dynamo Mini in place of a standard ATX 24 pin cable quite literally removes 20 wires from your case. When compared to the HDPlex 400W DC-ATX (which often requires use of a very short and inflexible 24 pin cables in the NFC S4M) this makes building much easier and cleaner. Finally with the option of running SATA cables from the Dynamo 360 and/or the Dynamo Mini, you can simply choose the shortest route that requires the least cable bulk.
With respect to upgradability, buying the Dynamo Mini now will provide you with a very simple upgrade path later through the addition of a Dynamo 360 to your system.
I hope this answers you questions sufficiently
@chingi5 . If not, please feel free to ask away in this thread or alternatively via PM.