Dell Dimension 5150

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February 27, 2006, 11:19 AM —  PC World Australia — 

Even though it would void the warranty, this Dell looks like a prime candidate for overclocking. Behind the front panel of the BTX case is a gaping hole for maximum airflow. This flows straight through the PC via the fins of a huge CPU heat sink with a surface area that would rival "The Biggest Loser". It then flows over the heat sink of the video card. The BTX motherboard is made for quiet computing, with only two fans.

Inside is cable heaven. Everything is tucked away nicely, increasing airflow. It is also easy to access, with a well-designed tool-less chassis and easy access tool-less hard drive trays. A second tray has been left spare, along with two more RAM slots for upgradeability.

Running on a Pentium 4 650 Processor, with HyperThreading, the Dimension let us down somewhat in benchmarking, delivering a score of 77 in PC WorldBench 5 - surprisingly, being held back by its multitasking ability. As expected with the ATI Radeon X600 video card, it scored 1723 in 3Dmark 2005, and an average frame rate of 6fps in FEAR on maximum settings.

It comes bundled with Sonic MyDVD and Windows XP Media Center Edition, a 13-in-1 USB 2.0 Hi-Speed media card reader for all flash storage formats and a 7200rpm 250GB hard drive. Couple this with a brilliant 20in LCD screen that supports a resolution of 1680x1050 pixels; a Sound Blaster X-Fi Xtreme Music (which sounds incredible with 5.1 support) and the quiet factor, and all of a sudden, the Dimension is very appealing as a media hub. Video-out is also supported in case you have a bigger and better screen.

VERDICT: An excellent media hub, but it will struggle with high-end games. A pity the peripherals aren't wireless.

SPECIFICATIONS: Intel Pentium 4 Processor 650 with HT Technology; 250GB SATA (7200rpm) hard drive; 2 x 512MB NECC dual-channel DDR2 533MHz SDRAM; two dual-layer 16x DVD+/ -RW drives; 256MB PCIe x16 ATI Radeon X600 HyperMemory video card with TV-Out and DVI; 56Kbps modem; 10/100 Ethernet; Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeMusic card; 13-in-1 USB 2.0 media card reader; Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005.

» posted by abennett

PC World Australia

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