PC Specialist Vortex 860GTX in Desktop PCs
Verdict
A decent PC in a bold chassis, but it’s overshadowed by quicker and cheaper competition
Review Date: 2 Nov 2009
Price when reviewed: £912 (£1,049 inc VAT)
Overall Rating

Features & Design

Value for Money

Performance

PCs used to be mocked for their “big beige box” tradition, but these days it’s the big black box school of design that dominates. PC Specialist’s latest system conforms to that in a sense, but its Cooler Master HAF 922 chassis could never be accused of being dull.
In fact, the brash design makes it one of the most outlandish cases we’ve come across. The lower half of the front is decorated by a huge 200mm fan drawing air inwards, beneath angled bezels and mesh panels, and the sides are similarly adorned. The roof boasts a further 200mm outward fan, alongside a small area for storing peripherals. At least cooling shouldn't be an issue.
It has its practical benefits as well as aesthetic touches. The interior is spacious enough to ease upgrading and tweaking, and PC Specialist’s meticulous cable tidying helps. Excess cables are tucked behind the motherboard, and vital wires are routed underneath graphics cards and around various struts to ensure they’re unobtrusive.
Aside from the lack of empty DIMM sockets, there’s also plenty of room for component upgrades. There’s a decent selection of ports, with 11 USB, two eSATA, FireWire, HDMI and a well-appointed card reader, all divided between the backplate and the front of the case.
We were also relieved to note that the PC Specialist isn’t a particularly loud machine. While it’s far from silent – the pair of 200mm case fans emits a constant low hum – we’ve certainly heard worse, not least from the Cooler Master’s bigger brother, the huge HAF 932.
PC Specialist has crammed the spacious case with plenty of impressive components. Intel’s 2.8GHz Core i7-860 processor powered to an impressive score of 1.98 in our application benchmarks, ensuring that even demanding software won’t tax the CPU too heavily.
The Vortex also sports an Nvidia GeForce GTX 275 which, in the face of ATI dominance, is one of the only Nvidia parts that’s regularly seen in the PC Pro Labs at the moment. It’s a good GPU too, brushing our low and medium-quality Crysis benchmarks aside with ease and running through our 1,600 x 1,200 high-quality test at a playable 45fps. Only at very high graphical settings did the GTX 275 fall below 30fps.
These results may mean every modern title will be playable but, with new cards from ATI and Nvidia either already released or just around the corner, it's worth asking PC Specialist about upgrades should you choose to take the plunge. The Mesh Matrix II 5870XT, for instance, included ATI’s new Radeon HD 5870 card, and ran through the 1,920 x 1,200 very high quality benchmark 12fps faster than the PC Specialist.
Elsewhere, 8GB of 1,600MHz DDR3 RAM is double the amount we’re used to seeing in most desktop systems, and should make mincemeat of intensive photo editing applications. The 1TB hard disk offers enough storage for all but the largest of media collections, and the Blu-ray drive should also endear the system to movie fans.
Unfortunately, though, while the £912 Vortex may sport a competent chassis and return decent benchmark scores across the board, it can't quite match other similarly priced machines. The Mesh Matrix II 5870XT, for instance, is a little faster in our 2D tests and a lot faster in games, and comes with a monitor, keyboard and mouse – all for the same amount of cash.
The Vortex does a lot right, but the all-round package just isn't quite there: if you’re looking to put together a full system you can get better deals for less cash. While the case is certainly interesting, there just isn't the value in this PC Specialist to stand out from a very competitive crowd.
Author: Mike Jennings
Bold chassis?
Sorry but from the outside the chassis looks very dated!!! The inside is much better, nice and neat! I wish the PC makers would make some nicer looking boxes than what they have been doing for donkeys years....
What ever you might think of an Apple, there designs are years ahead of the pc ones (there are exeptions like HP or Packard Bell or ACER with AIO's)
By Ip_vandermeereug on 3 Nov 2009 
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