Dell Desktop Computers Reviews
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Dell Dimension 9200
Dell Dimension c521
Dell Dimension e520
Dell Dimension e521

Taking advantage of Intel's new Core
2 Duo E6700 desktop CPU (Conroe) and paving the way for a new range of Vista
Ready PC's, the Dell Dimension 9200 looks stylish and is diverse in its
application, but also employs some different design ideas to make this PC
efficient and manageable.
It's got the look
From the outside you'll immediately notice
some abnormal design features. First, the mostly white case is starkly different
to the usual blacks and greys, or waxy blue seen in previous Dell models.
A large space, big enough to put your hand through, behind the mid-section
of the front panel exposes a 120mm fan, drawing air into the case. A large
lever in the top-rear releases the side panel revealing a BTX motherboard
and a complex display of shrouding, fans and cables.
To BTX or not BTX
Dell was among the first to adopt the BTX
(Balanced Technology eXtended) form factor and using it here gives this
unit several advantages. Taking into account the 13-in-1 media card reader,
the TV tuner and Windows XP Media Center Edition (MCE), it's safe to assume
that Dell hopes that people will use this PC as a media centre among other
things. As a media centre, both power and silence are essential. Naturally,
power generates heat and heat means fans, which in turn means noise. The
BTX design places all the hottest components of the computer in the direct
path of a front-to-rear air flow. In the case of the 9200, a 120mm fan draws
air from the front of the case, which immediately passes over the long fins
of a large passive heatsink on the CPU. Before exiting the case via a large
vent at the rear, air also passes the system memory, chipset and most importantly
the graphics card, providing them with some extra cooling as well.
Combine this quieter cooling system with
the powerful, low wattage Core 2 Duo 2.66GHz CPU and you can expect plenty
of power with minimal system noise. It's actually the small fan on the graphics
card that's the main source of noise in the 9200 when everything is running
at peak performance. The extra cooling from the BTX design should help keep
the fan rotation down to a minimum, but there's little that can be done
during a hefty session of gaming. If you're savvy when it comes to hardware,
you might want to consider changing this over to a larger, quieter fan and
heatsink combination -- there's plenty of space to do so.
Results
To see if this system, with its 1GB of DDR2
667MHz RAM and Core 2 Duo CPU was up to the job, we put it through WorldBench
5 (WB5) and a number of other tests. In WB5 it scored an impressive 123.
This score seems close to normal based on our tests of similarly built systems
and will be more than sufficient for any application, including Windows
Vista. The 64-bit capabilities of the Core 2 Duo CPU will also allow you
to run the inevitable 64-bit applications that will emerge when Vista is
finally released.
The GeForce 7900GS is still considered one
of the top performing graphics cards on the market. We ran 3DMark 2006,
in which it scored 4341 -- an expected result for the specifications and
plenty of power for almost all of the latest games. We also ran the FEAR
in-game benchmark, which averaged 55fps (frames per second) over the demo
sequence on maximum quality settings, a comfortable playable rate.
Leave no cable behind
To maintain an uninterrupted airflow, the
Dell 9200 has been meticulously wired to ensure that no cable gets in the
way of the main thoroughfare. This involves an ornate series of cable ties,
brackets and clips to run cables up against the edges of the case and hardware.
This can often make hardware changes difficult, but Dell's implementation
leaves the most commonly interchanged components fairly accessible -- though
changing your power supply will involve some serious untangling. A variety
of quick-release features in the case make upgrades and maintenance easy.
A bracket holding all the PCI cards in place unclips and swings open on
a hinge, while a sliding release gives you instant access to all forward
removable drive bays by detaching part of the front panel.
Storage space
Storage is one thing that this PC is lacking
-- a serious oversight for a system with media centre aspirations. The $2527
price tag on our sample machine comes with only an 80GB (7200rpm) hard drive.
A 160GB hard drive is the minimum you can select using Dell's online shop,
though it may affect the final price. That said, you may wish to make your
initial purchase of a 9200 with a large hard drive, as this case only comes
with two 3.5in internal drive bays, leaving only one spot left to add more
storage on top of your standard drive. A maximum of one terabyte (2x 500GB)
is available through Dell. The drive bays face sideways, giving you quick
and easy access and are cooled by one small fan drawing air from a grill
in the front panel and blowing over the top of the drives.
Connect away
Following the grand-plan design of
BTX style systems, the Dimension 9200 provides no PS2 or serial ports, but
instead supplies an abundance of USB 2.0 connections, starting with six
USB 2.0 ports at the rear of the case. Take away two of these for the mouse
and keyboard and you still have four to play with. For quick connections,
like USB keys or MP3 players you can use one of two USB ports on the front
panel. A headphone jack and microphone port have also been placed on the
front panel for easy access. The motherboard uses integrated Sound Blaster
Audigy 7.1 HD audio software, with the associated analog ports found at
the rear of the case. The Dell TV tuner has S-Video and composite ports
available, while the media card reader, located in the front panel of the
case, supports a wide range of memory cards including CF I&II/SD/mini-SD/MMC/RS-MMC/MS/MS-Pro/Duo/SM/xD/MicroDrive.
A Gigabit Ethernet adapter is available onboard and there's also a 56Kbps
modem installed.¬¬
Review provided by www.pcworld.idg.com.au

For under $1000 the Dell C521 comes with a 17in LCD screen,
keyboard and a mouse, making it a complete package that's ready to go
from the moment it's delivered. As a budget option we were reasonably
happy with the performance of this AMD-based machine, and as Dell units
are built to order this system can easily be expanded to better fit your
needs.
The compact design makes it ideal for cramped working conditions
and the case can be positioned upright on its side or laid flat like a
DVD player. The clean white chassis has a silver fascia, which houses
a few helpful devices for a diversity of uses. In our budget model a DVD-ROM
is installed, though this can be upgraded during the purchase for a small
additional cost. Two USB ports as well as both audio and microphone ports
are easily accessible at the front. One of the nicest additions though
is the inclusion of a 13-in-1 media card reader for transferring your
photos to the PC.
We ran World Bench 5 to see how the system performed. The
PC completed all but the MusicMatch WAV to MP3 conversion test due to
an error with the benchmark software. For this reason, an overall World
Bench 5 score was not obtained. However, individual results show that
that it was above average in performance across most of the essential
software tasks, such as using Microsoft Office and Adobe Photoshop. Media
encoding tasks and the multi-tasking test showed less impressive results.
However, the installed AMD Athlon 64 3500+ CPU is a good piece of hardware
and upgrading the base systems 512MB of RAM to at least 1GB would likely
bring a welcome performance boost in these areas. We also encoded 53 minutes
of WAV files to 192Kbps MP3 files using Cdex, which the Dimension C521
completed in one minute 59 seconds. This time indicates that the C521's
encoding capabilities should be fine for most peoples music encoding needs.
The system includes a GeForce 6160LE integrated graphics
chip, a simple graphics solution not aimed at gamers or high end rendering,
but a score of 4622 in 3DMark 2001 SE shows it can handle some older games
at least.
There's only one PCI Express and one standard PCI expansion
slot for upgrades, but the clip-in system on the rear panel makes this
an easy task for quick changes even if you're doing an upgrade for the
first time. Due to the size of the case only one hard drive slot is available.
Increasing your storage space will require an external storage option
or a replacement hard drive. Dell has used an AMD BTX motherboard. Although
only a DVD-ROM is installed in the system, it is a SATA DVD-ROM, the first
system we've seen with one of these. A passive heatsink on the CPU is
cooled by one single case fan. This fan also pushes air across the chipset
and out of the case. This configuration results in a fairly quiet operation.
Review provided by www.pcworld.idg.com.au

The Dimension E520 may look like its cousin the E521 on the outside, but
inside it's a different beast. It has a faster processor, more memory, a
bigger hard drive, and a dedicated graphics card that makes it a more desirable
proposition for a wider range of activities. But it's also more expensive
at $989 (as of November 6, 2006) versus $489.
For the higher price, you get above-average
components--including a 200GB hard drive and dual optical drives (a dual-layer
DVD burner and a DVD-ROM drive)--and reasonable performance. The system
contains a 1.86-GHz Intel Core 2 Duo E6300 processor and 1GB of RAM, and
it achieved a respectable WorldBench 5 score of 105. That's well above the
average mark posted in our roundup of cheap PCs, but it's 29 percent lower
than the 148 turned in by the Micro Express MicroFlex 66B.
Still, the E520 is not for gamers. Its nVidia
GeForce 7300LE graphics board generated hit-or-miss graphics performance;
our test games were playable, barely, at 1024 by 768 resolution. For example,
at a resolution of 1280 by 1024 pixels, the system achieved frame rates
of 24 frames per second on our Doom 3 test and 32 fps on our Far Cry test.
Like most sub-$1000 PCs, this system doesn't
leave you much room for expansion. Housed in a standard Dell Dimension midsize
tower case; our test configuration provided a single internal 3.5-inch bay,
and two expansion slots (one PCI and one PCI Express x1).
The system is Vista-capable, according to
Dell, which offers Vista upgrade information on its site.
Source: www.pcworld.com

Windows Vista Home Premium. Sure you could run that Vista edition with less
(1GB instead of 2GB, single core instead of dual core), but in my opinion,
this E521 is the effective minimum configuration to keep you computing in
good stead for the next few years. With the introduction of more programs
that take advantage of Vista's new features, and with the extra add-ons
like Vista Gadgets and (missing) security software, you'll need the future-proofed
features if you're the type of user (beginning multimedia enthusiast or
budding power user) who wants Vista Premium instead of Vista Home Basic.
The Dimension E521 comes in Dell's standard
mid-tower BTX case, with room for a couple of hard drives, a couple of optical
drives, expansion cards, and memory. It's got the standard Dell level of
tool-less upgradeability: you don't need to turn a screwdriver to add memory,
an extra drive, or PCI or PCIe expansion card. Not that the system requires
anything else: the E521 I tested came with a discrete ATI Radeon X1300 Pro
graphics card, though the system can accommodate more powerful enthusiast
graphics cards, too. You could argue for a higher-powered graphics card
or a TV tuner, but these components cost extra, and I'm not sure if they're
necessary on a basic midrange PC.
Last year, finding an AMD processor in a
Dell would've been notable, now it's routine. The E521's AMD Athlon 64 X2
3800+ processor is a decent midrange dual-core processor. Along with the
ATI Radeon X1300 Pro graphics, it's more than powerful enough to run Vista
in full-blown Aero mode. Day-to-day activities like web browsing and casual
games were snappy and performance was as expected. The E521 came with 2GB
of memory, which is plenty for even multimedia tasks like video encoding
and photo editing. Gamers and professional users may want to upgrade to
4GB or more, but mere mortals should be able to run with 2GB. The E521's
160GB SATA hard drive is good for a mainstream system, and you can add DataSafe
for about $80 extra. (DataSafe adds another 160GB hard drive as a live backup.)
The E521's 256MB ATI Radeon X1300 Pro graphics
card is enough to activate the neat Aero features in Vista. Windows pop
up in a 3D effect on the system's 20-inch widescreen, and the translucent
window borders are lovely. Vista is a much more attractive operating system
than the six-year-old Windows XP, but if you are an XP power user, you'll
need to learn where certain things are. The control panel layout has totally
changed, particularly the "Personalize" control panel, which used
to be called "Display". It will take a few hours of using the
system to get used to it, but it's all still there. Whether on Vista or
XP, the Radeon X1300 isn't a gaming graphics card: we were only able to
get 10 fps on our Company of Heroes test, exactly matching our results testing
the same system under Windows XP. That said, the Aero interface didn't seem
to slow day-to-day operations down either.
The E521 came with Dell's standard set of
trialware and freeware, including a 30-day trial of PC-cillin's Antivirus
suite. I'd like to see at least a year to fifteen months as standard on
all PCs, but you can add your choice of AntiVirus utilities on Dell's website
for under $100. Media Center is now part of Windows Vista, and it's a beaut.
Media Center works well with the Dell USB multimedia keyboard, including
dedicated playback buttons. It's still not quite as polished as Apple's
iLife suite, particularly since MCE has to contend with competing music
and movie stores online, but Vista's MCE is noticeably improved over the
2005 version.
The Dell Dimension E521 is attractive when
compared with other mainstream desktop systems, like the HP Pavilion a1600
series and Gateway dx420 series. Sure, the E521 doesn't have a TV tuner,
but these days you can legally watch many of the most popular programs on
the network's Web sites or through online stores like iTunes. The system's
160GB hard drive is enough for digital photos, music, and home videos. The
E521's optical drives work with neither Blu-Ray nor HD-DVD. I'm sure that
one or the other format, or better yet a combo drive, will appear in Dell
high-end and mainstream systems before the year is over. (Dell is going
with Blu-ray on laptops.)
At just over $1,000 when bundled with a 20-inch
widescreen LCD monitor, the Dell Dimension E521 represents a good value
for a mainstream dual-core desktop PC with Windows Vista Premium. It will
serve a moderately demanding user well, and does so at a decent bang for
the buck. Keep it on your short list if you're looking for a PC with a bit
more than a budget PC, especially if you don't want to pay more than about
$1,000.
Source: www.pcworld.com
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