Product ReviewsDesktop computers
The Dimension 8400 family bridges the gap between Dell's extreme XPS gaming machines and its more sedate lower-cost systems. Dell's configurator will allow you to include only a high-end graphics card - in this case, a Radeon X850 XT Platinum Edition - but not the fastest Pentium 4s. However, today's processors have more than enough grunt for most uses, so the Dimension 8400 series will still prove a powerful performer. To make a high-end PC for £1,099 still requires compromises. A truly extreme machine should have a 20in TFT, but these are rather expensive. Dell uses a 19in TFT to get a comparable screen size, if not the increased resolution: you'll have to make do with 1,280 x 1,024. Our tough display tests are designed to highlight even minor flaws, but Dell's 1905FP passed them all with only a couple of minor hiccups. DVDs are displayed accurately too, although some detail was lost in very dark or bright areas. This is common in TFTs and not of particular worry, although the obvious lag is more of a concern. Action scenes appear more frenetic and indecipherable, while gaming pleasure is impaired by the smearing. This is a shame, as the Radeon X850 XT Platinum Edition deserves to be paired with the best of screens to show off its brilliance. Our Unreal Tournament and Halo tests weren't enough of a challenge for it, so we unleashed our more extreme tests: Far Cry and Doom 3 with full detail settings at 1,600 x 1,200 resolution and 4x anti-aliasing (AA) and 8x anisotropic filtering (AF). They still didn't trouble the screen, as both raced along at playable frame rates. In fact, Far Cry was a significant 13fps faster than the dual 6660 GTs of the currently A-Listed Mesh Matrix Fireblade SLI (see issue 125, p53). Doom 3 ran at 33fps on both machines. With AA and AF turned off, we saw negligible differences between the systems of a few frames per second, with both games running at over 50fps. Gaming performance is helped further by the 3.4GHz Pentium 4 550, 1GB of PC3200 RAM and 925X chipset. The system's no slouch in real-world work applications either. With an overall score of 1.88, most tasks were completed about 80 per cent faster than
The Dimension 8400 comes with both a DVD writer and a combo drive to help distribute the movies and other files you make, or just to make backing up easier. Both are 16x speed, although the DVD writer lacks support for dual-layer and DVD-RAM discs. Although the 160GB hard disk is adequate for most, it's restrictive for a system costing this much. Fortunately, you can upgrade to a larger hard drive or even a striped array. According to Dell, an upgrade to a 400GB disk will cost £230, and choosing a 500GB striped array (composed of two 250GB disks) will add £210 to the current £1,099 price. We'd certainly consider making this upgrade. If you don't, you may have to use the a/b/g external wireless card to offload some data onto a home media server, or else burn DVDs of files you don't regularly use. The wireless card has to be external, as the double-height X850 XT PE graphics card, 56K modem and Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS card leave no free PCI slots. The Audigy 2 provides for 7.1 audio, but Dell supplies a 5.1 speaker set. The central speaker tidily attaches to the underside of the screen, neatly hiding the dangling cables. Sound quality is good too: the sub largely keeps to the lower frequencies, and the satellites output a rich sound. The only niggle was a lack of volume, although they still pack enough punch for a large room. Considering the high quality, high cost and highly powerful components included in this configuration, the standard Dell case is a letdown. The front USB ports are hidden under a plastic overhanging, which in turn is hidden under a flap. They're nigh-on impossible to use. The hinged case-opening mechanism makes it no easier to access drives and components than a well laid-out standard case, and it requires much more space to open into. It's quiet, though, with the single fan drawing air over the giant heatsink with the help of the a cowling. Looping Far Cry over a weekend left the Dimension 8400 begging for more. Unfortunately, Dell's one-year, collect-and-return warranty leaves us begging for more too: bear in mind that, after this, you'll need to pay the shipping costs to Ireland. The Mesh Matrix Fireblade SLI, on the other hand, comes with a three-year, on-site warranty. The Fireblade is more upgradeable too, with its 550W PSU and spare PCI slots, and has a superior hard disk and screen. So, while the Dimension 8400 is a good deal, and by far the best Pentium 4 system we've seen at this price, the Mesh Fireblade retains its place on the A List. By Clive Webster SPECIFICATIONS:
3.4GHz Pentium 4 550; 1GB PC3200 DDR2 RAM; Dell E210882 925x motherboard; 160GB Western Digital Caviar II hard disk; NEC ND-3450A DVD writer; LG GDR8163B DVD combo drive; 19in Dell 1905FP TFT; 256MB ATi Radeon X850 XT Platinum Edition graphics; Creative Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS audio; Dell MMS 5650 5.1 speakers; 56K modem; gigabit Ethernet; 8 x USB 2; FireWire; external a/b/g WLAN; Windows XP Home SP 2; Microsoft Works 7; 1yr C&R warranty.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||




