Skip to navigation

Alienware Aurora ALX review

in Desktop PCs

Verdict

Relatively slow, loud and over-engineered, the Aurora is twice as expensive as it needs to be

Review Date: 16 Dec 2009

Reviewed By: Mike Jennings

Price when reviewed: £1,964 (£2,259 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
3 stars out of 6

Features & Design
3 stars out of 6

Value for Money
2 stars out of 6

Performance
5 stars out of 6

Alienware machines are some of the most unashamedly aspirational systems on the market today – powerhouses that place just as much emphasis on first impressions as they do framerates. The firm’s latest, the Aurora ALX, is no different.

The exterior features the dramatic lines and matte black finish that we’ve come to expect, and every crack and crevice is filled with a light – which, of course, can be changed to a colour of your choice, or even made to pulse and flash. The lid is adorned with a row of motorised fins, which are designed to rise up and let more air into the case should the temperature inside reach a certain threshold.

Inside, the major components are sequestered into their own areas to improve airflow and heat dissipation, while the processor is chilled by a Cool-It water-cooling unit. There’s even a battery-powered light that illuminates the inside of the chassis when the side is removed, in line with Alienware’s claim that the Aurora ALX is one of its most easily upgradeable machines ever.

Alienware Aurora ALX

While some of these additions sound impressive, they’re less useful in the real world. The roof fins, for instance, made no difference to CPU and GPU temperatures: when the system was stress-tested with and without the fins activated, the processor peaked at around 68. The graphics card, meanwhile, always ran around 5˚C hotter. With just a single intake fan at the front and another on the rear water module, those top vents just don't get the air pushed towards them to be of any real use.

We also found the case awkward. The GPU cage and housing makes graphics card removal far trickier than it would be in the average chassis, and while there’s a decent amount of room to upgrade – three free DIMM slots, a pair of hard disk bays and a single PCI Express x16 slot – the numerous stray cables that litter the interior make the upgrade process a bit clumsy.

The water-cooling unit also generated plenty of noise, especially when the Aurora ran through our demanding graphical tests. It’s possible to reduce the fan’s RPM via Alienware’s thermal control software, but this still left an audible hum that became significantly louder during arduous sections. The use of water-cooling should really be about pushing a processor to its limits, but the chosen CPU – an Intel Core i7-920 – is inexplicably left running at its stock speed of 2.66GHz. A quiet heatsink and fan would have done the job perfectly well.

1 2
Subscribe to PC Pro magazine. We'll give you 3 issues for £1 plus a free gift - click here

From around the web

User comments

Benchmark Results!?

Who exactly spends £2,000 in order to run Crysis at the lowest settings?

No one, I hope, so why not benchmark this PC at settings it was build for - e.g. Crysis at 1920x1080 on High Settings.

By Jayce85 on 11 Feb 2010

nop

way wrong rating !!!

By alienware_me on 15 Feb 2011

Leave a comment

You need to Login or Register to comment.

(optional)

Latest Desktop PCs Reviews
Chillblast Fusion Elixir review

Chillblast Fusion Elixir

Category: Desktop PCs
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £599
Quiet PC Streacom FC5-Z68 Fanless Media PC review

Quiet PC Streacom FC5-Z68 Fanless Media PC

Category: Desktop PCs
Rating: 4 out of 6
Price: £1,526
Yoyotech XDNA Platinum review

Yoyotech XDNA Platinum

Category: Desktop PCs
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £2,498
Tranquil PC MMC-12 review

Tranquil PC MMC-12

Category: Desktop PCs
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £779
HP TouchSmart 520 review

HP TouchSmart 520

Category: Desktop PCs
Rating: 4 out of 6
Price: £742
Compare reviews: Desktop PCs

advertisement

Most Commented Reviews
More From PC Pro
Latest News Stories Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Blog Posts Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Features
Latest Real World Computing

advertisement

Sponsored Links
 
 
SEARCH
SIGN UP

Your email:

Your password:

remember me

advertisement


Hitwise Top 10 Website 2010
 
 

PCPro-Computing in the Real World Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.pcpro.co.uk/registration.

The newsletter contains links to our latest PC news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.