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PC Specialist Aurea i3-530 Pro review

in Desktop PCs

Verdict

Despite the low price there's an awful lot of power here, and a solid PC behind it

Review Date: 21 Jan 2010

Reviewed By: Mike Jennings

Price when reviewed: £382 (£449 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
5 stars out of 6

Features & Design
4 stars out of 6

Value for Money
6 stars out of 6

Performance
4 stars out of 6

PCPRO Recommended

Details
Part Code Aurea i3-530 Pro
Review Date 21 Jan 2010
Price ex VAT £382
Price inc VAT £449
Overall rating 5 stars out of 6
Performance 4 stars out of 6
Features & Design 4 stars out of 6
Value for Money 6 stars out of 6
Warranty
Warranty 1 yr return to base
Basic specifications
Total hard disk capacity 500
RAM capacity 2.00GB
Screen size N/A
Processor
CPU family Intel Core i3
CPU nominal frequency 2.93GHz
CPU overclocked frequency N/A
Processor socket LGA 1156
HSF (heatsink-fan) Intel low profile cooler
Motherboard
Motherboard Asus P7H55-M Pro
Motherboard chipset Intel P55
Conventional PCI slots free 2
Conventional PCI slots total 2
PCI-E x16 slots free 1
PCI-E x16 slots total 1
PCI-E x8 slots free 0
PCI-E x8 slots total 0
PCI-E x4 slots free 0
PCI-E x4 slots total 0
PCI-E x1 slots free 1
PCI-E x1 slots total 1
Internal SATA connectors 6
Internal SAS connectors 1
Internal PATA connectors 1
Internal floppy connectors 1
Wired adapter speed 1,000Mbits/sec
Memory
Memory type DDR3
Memory sockets free 3
Memory sockets total 4
Hard disk
Hard disk Maxtor DiamondMaxSTM3599418AS
Capacity 500GB
Hard disk usable capacity 465GB
Internal disk interface SATA/300
Spindle speed 7,200RPM
Cache size 16MB
Hard disk 2 make and model N/A
Hard disk 2 nominal capacity N/A
Hard disk 2 formatted capacity N/A
Hard disk 2 spindle speed N/A
Hard disk 2 cache size N/A
Hard disk 3 make and model N/A
Hard disk 3 nominal capacity N/A
Hard disk 4 make and model N/A
Hard disk 4 nominal capacity N/A
Drives
Optical drive LiteOn iHAS/124
Optical disc technology DVD writer
Optical disk 2 make and model N/A
Optical disk 3 make and model N/A
Rear ports
USB ports (downstream) 9
PS/2 mouse port yes
Electrical S/PDIF audio ports 0
Optical S/PDIF audio output ports 0
Modem no
3.5mm audio jacks 6
Graphics card
Graphics card Intel X4500
Multiple SLI/CrossFire cards? no
3D performance setting Low
Graphics chipset Intel 4500MHD
Graphics card RAM 256MB
DVI-I outputs 1
HDMI outputs 1
VGA (D-SUB) outputs 1
DisplayPort outputs 0
Number of graphics cards 0
Monitor
Monitor make and model N/A
Resolution screen horizontal N/A
Resolution screen vertical N/A
Resolution N/A x N/A
Pixel response time N/A
Contrast ratio N/A
Screen brightness N/A
DVI inputs N/A
HDMI inputs N/A
VGA inputs N/A
DisplayPort inputs N/A
Additional Peripherals
Speakers N/A
Speaker type N/A
Sound card Realtek HD Audio
Peripherals N/A
Case
Chassis PC Specialist proprietary
Case format Midi tower
Dimensions 190 x 474 x 423mm (WDH)
Power supply
Power supply FSP 350-PNR
Power supply rating 350W
Free drive bays
Free front panel 5.25in bays 2
Front ports
Front panel USB ports 3
Front panel memory card reader yes
Mouse & Keyboard
Mouse and keyboard N/A
Operating system and software
OS family Windows 7
Noise and power
Idle power consumption 52W
Peak power consumption 82W
Performance tests
Overall application benchmark score 1.66
Office application benchmark score 1.42
2D graphics application benchmark score 1.73
Encoding application benchmark score 1.58
Multitasking application benchmark score 1.91
3D performance (crysis) low settings 21fps
3D performance setting Low
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User comments

These i3,5 and 7 processors seem to represent a real step up in performance and power efficiency. I notice that Dell has an Inspiron 15 i3 330m processor laptop, can't wait for a review on that. Would the onboard graphics be of any advantage to Photoshop elements 8.0?

By stokegabriel on 22 Jan 2010

Let's start a campaign for PC Pro to buy a sound meter, so they can list the sound level rather than "It's a bit loud."

By phantombudgie on 22 Jan 2010

Is the system capable of displaying full HD-video, such as from Youtube or iPlayer, with the built-in Intel graphics?

By piphil on 22 Jan 2010

"Buy PC Pro a sound-meter..."

... and an anechoic room. They should get some change from £10K-£20K.

Or use someone's?

By JohnGray7581 on 22 Jan 2010

I can do it.

Great idea by PhantomBudgie. This would really make a difference and then you would see others copying. I would be organise this if PCPro really wanted to.

By TheObvious on 24 Jan 2010

Dear JohnGray7581

PCs are used in real rooms, not anechoic chambers. If the sound echoes off the walls and makes the reading 5% higher it will not make a difference, all the PCs tested will be affected the same. I'm not going to sue them if I buy a PC and it's 29.5 decibels when measured under perfect conditions instead of 29, I just want to know if the Graphics card fan is going to rattle the windows or not.

By phantombudgie on 24 Jan 2010

Not Boxing Clever

Aurea have done well to bring this budget box to market, although it has still missed a few tricks along the way. It was good to see a reasonable on-board graphics chipset. If ALL boxes had noise reduction, or liquid cooling, the box could be made much smaller. The small incremental cost of the improvements would be offset by the savings on materials. The concept of the desktop box as a piece of furniture has passed.

By specious on 25 Jan 2010

Noise testing

We noise test all PCs in our group tests, where we're able to send them collectively to a specialist centre in Milton Keynes: it's not practical to noise test in central London due to the wide variety of background noises.

We're the only magazine in the UK that does this, but it's not practical to do it for every PC we review. One, it would cost too much: courier costs, plus the setup time involved at the testing centre, mean that it's only practical in groups. Second, PC manufacturers are generally unwilling to let us keep hold of the PCs for too long, so we can't keep them all and then send them up in one batch.

It's press week so I won't be able to respond too much to this thread, but if you have any more thoughts on this topic I'm happy to hear them.

Tim Danton
Editor, PC Pro

By TimDanton on 25 Jan 2010

Whilst I enjoy reading pcpro reviews, I dislike the fact the retailers take advantage of positive reviews by bumping up the prices. Cheapest I can find this for is £462. Whilst not a massive premium, it would be nice if reviewed itms could occassionally be purchased for the price shown on pcpro's review.

By jamesv1001 on 2 Feb 2010

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