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Posted by bunter
 - March 15, 2023, 02:35:19
Hi guys the 5521 special edition is a better bet, its basically a full alien ware M15 but the later variants has the full 140w GPU and full PL 115W. My first unit had an overheating motherboard replacement is perfect and very fast GPU scores 22,000 on pass mark 10.2 CPU scores 30500-32000 in bench tests.

Dell ships the 5521 gen 3 mostly Samsung drives in later versions but only scores 19000 changed straight away for 2tb Kingston KC3000 scores 57,000 NOW changed to the faster fury scores 60,000 fastest drive on market also changed the 4800 MHz memory that was scoring 3100 2x8 gb for the new crucial 5600 it still runs at 4800 but is much faster as it has more 4800 headroom

Biggest winner over the 16 though is the screen has the 240hz version that is simply one of the best screens out there despite it only being a 15.6 plus its 600 quid cheaper to buy refurbished and yes I don't like dell the company but their gaming products are the best for power delivery very few can match.
Posted by NikoB
 - November 08, 2022, 13:43:50
Quote from: Maxtech on November 07, 2022, 04:06:21why Dell.
Because Dell again goes to the divisting of the shares.
Posted by Maxtech
 - November 07, 2022, 04:06:21
No second ssd option  why? why Dell.
Posted by supergantech
 - November 03, 2022, 07:59:40
I think not bad
Posted by LinuxGamer
 - November 03, 2022, 07:54:39
I love that Dell went for a bit thicker chassis! 27mm is the sweet spot in terms of still good portability and cooling.

I like the rather thicker fans although I was astonished by the insane amount of fan blades. Do they even offer enough space for incoming air to be sucked in?

What I also like on the G16 is that they shifted the keyboard a bit downwards to drill ventilation holes above it for the fans to better suck in air.

While the internal temperatures are higher than I feel comfortable with, the fan noise of 45 db in balanced mode is the nearly perfect sweet spot of bearable noise and still good cooling. Temperatures and TDP / TGP in balanced mode would have been appreciated!

What I dislike is the flipped motherboard making repasting nearly impossible.
Posted by NikoB
 - October 22, 2022, 15:39:52
Increasing the weight of "game" models to a minimum of 3-3.5kg. All the same, they are most often dragged from room to room, and the weight in this case is not important, even taking into account the 1 kg power supply. Is it possible to deceive the laws of nature without significant progress in fundamental sciences and technologies? Miracles don't happen. Or noise or speed, if fundamentally and technologically, the IT industry has long reached an energy and noise impasse.

The problem is that it is impossible on the market (by analogy with the "Flicker Free" nameplate on monitors, but rarely for laptop screens - usually only Lenovo writes this in some series, while in others it still keeps silent about it) models to find a laptop with case it is written - we guarantee the noise level no more than 32dBA in the game in the maximum performance profile (for example). Or something similar.

Have you noticed that only NVidia has required manufacturers to explicitly state the TDP of their chips when implemented in laptops and discrete cards? But AMD ignored this initiative, as a result, if a laptop with AMD - TDP from the same Lenovo (for example, as the best company in terms of detailed specifications in the world, HP / Dell lose here cleanly) is not indicated, unlike models with a chip from NVidia .

And AMD / Intel also do not force all manufacturers to EXPLICITLY indicate the level in the datasheets PL1 / PL2. And none of the manufacturers explicitly indicate these key levels. They calmly sell you a pig in a poke. Most Chinese (Taiwan, not to mention the real mainland Huawei) manufacturers (Acer / MSI / Asus / Gigabyte) do not even bother to specify the exact speed specifications of usb ports and the allowable output power for power supply for them for external devices and its receipt from the outside.

And if you remember the natural fraud with HDMI / DP ports? Where can you safely (from the stupid submission of the HDMI consortium) stick an HDMI 2.1 nameplate and at the same time really implement only 2.0b over the real bandwidth, even with incomplete support, for example, VRR.

Or how they proudly stuck up the DP2.0 nameplate on Zen4, but this is not a real DP2.0. only UHBR10 mode is implemented there (in total it turns out even worse than the full and older HDMI 2.1), and not UHBR20. But the majority of illiterate inhabitants will not even notice this, they will buy into the marketing slogan - "support for DP2.0".

Thus, a vast field is created for marketers to manipulate and pure fraud with batches of the same model ...
Posted by RobertJasiek
 - October 21, 2022, 22:56:14
Quote from: NikoB on October 21, 2022, 22:49:0237 is too loud for me. Not higher than 32 in the game.

But how?
Posted by NikoB
 - October 21, 2022, 22:49:02
Quote from: RobertJasiek on October 21, 2022, 20:04:17air cooling at 37dB is possible
37 is too loud for me. Not higher than 32 in the game.
Posted by RobertJasiek
 - October 21, 2022, 20:04:17
Quote from: NikoB on October 21, 2022, 18:38:09With a video card, such a number will no longer work, especially with a modern one with a consumption above 200W. Here you need water cooling, very high quality in terms of efficiency and noise.

I do not think so. Up to 320W for the right GPU models, air cooling at 37dB is possible, e.g. with P14 case fans. What radiators for water cooling reach lower noise?

QuoteTherefore, many would be saved if the industry long ago introduced optical cables

Ok.
Posted by NikoB
 - October 21, 2022, 18:38:09
Quote from: RobertJasiek on October 21, 2022, 16:32:58Desktop? What GPU at what TDP? What are your case fans, at which RPMs and how is their noise? It is the case fans / radiators that are the loudest if the other components are chosen well.
It was only about the processor. I prove with my own experience that a processor with a TDP of 130-150W can be made almost silent even under constant full load, even with air cooling, with a very massive heatsink and a large low-speed cooler.

With a video card, such a number will no longer work, especially with a modern one with a consumption above 200W. Here you need water cooling, very high quality in terms of efficiency and noise.

Therefore, many would be saved if the industry long ago introduced optical cables for eGPUs. There is no problem to pass even a stream for pci-e 5.0 x16 over an optical cable at a distance of 50-100m from the workplace. Well, or the entire system unit in the utility room, away from the living room, again with an optical hub for the entire periphery at the work / gaming place. But alas, while it is almost unrealistic in practice. In principle, there are usb expanders, but all this is still at the "get it and do it yourself" level, and not industrial mass solutions. Yes, and many simply do not have the opportunity to take out a noisy PC in the back room away - it simply does not exist. Therefore, I emphasize - the vile trend of deprogress in hardware consumption, its growth, should eventually be stopped, like bans and restrictions for damn miners in EU/China. Moreover, "green tasks" directly contradict this trend.
Posted by VEGGIM
 - October 21, 2022, 16:40:09
Incorrect, thats the 5590. and that even gets near to 50db.
Posted by RobertJasiek
 - October 21, 2022, 16:32:58
Quote from: NikoB on October 21, 2022, 15:30:40I have an overclocked processor with a consumption in the region of 130-135W and silent at 100% load, in fact, air-cooled. Heavy heatsink+big cooler at low revs.

Desktop? What GPU at what TDP? What are your case fans, at which RPMs and how is their noise? It is the case fans / radiators that are the loudest if the other components are chosen well.
Posted by NikoB
 - October 21, 2022, 15:31:44
Quote from: RobertJasiek on October 21, 2022, 13:44:45The Dell G5 15 5587 had a reasonable cooling but a 4 core CPU (its TDP 45W is ok) and 1060
No. It has i7 with 6 cores.
Posted by NikoB
 - October 21, 2022, 15:30:40
Quote from: RobertJasiek on October 21, 2022, 13:44:45Watercooling with radiators on the PC results in about 39dB, aircooling with CPU 65W and GPU 320W results in 37dB. To become really silent except for coil whining, use custom built passive cooling but this is hard.
I have an overclocked processor with a consumption in the region of 130-135W and silent at 100% load, in fact, air-cooled. Heavy heatsink+big cooler at low revs. The temperature does not exceed 75C.

130-150W per processor is more than enough today, except for i9 maniacs. Those. making a silent processor is NOT a problem today. The problem is in the video card - and here everything depends on the quality of the water pump. It's just a certain amount of money. But this is solvable. In any case, "gaming" laptops cause me only Homeric laughter.

And that is why I will write 100500 times - there is no progress on the planet, but regression in IT, because hardware consumption is only growing, but should fall or, in the worst case, be the same as before.

The second thing that can cheaply solve the problem of noise from the system unit with cheap, but sufficient cooling in terms of temperature is the removal of the system unit to the utility room. And all the peripherals on your desktop communicate with it via optical links. And this already depends on the industry, which, for some reason, deliberately delays their introduction.
Posted by RobertJasiek
 - October 21, 2022, 13:44:45
Watercooling with radiators on the PC results in about 39dB, aircooling with CPU 65W and GPU 320W results in 37dB. To become really silent except for coil whining, use custom built passive cooling but this is hard. External radiators are a hard compromise. Maybe one should build a server, put it in the basement and use a silent terminal.

The Dell G5 15 5587 had a reasonable cooling but a 4 core CPU (its TDP 45W is ok) and 1060 GPU (TDP up to 70W is good for relative silence) are too slow for me, the display is dark and the arrow keys tiny.