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    I has a sager 5791 v.review when it comes

    Discussion in 'Sager and Clevo' started by Boogieman117, Nov 21, 2007.

  1. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    Thanks Justin, I'll wear the company hat proudly.

    I bought this knowing about the 8800GT coming out, here's my logic as to why I got it.

    1) The 5791 can be upgraded to the 8700GT, for DX10 games.
    2) The 5791 is being rumored to be able to support the 8800GT/GTX; Sagers tenedencies from what I remember and have seen, the popular machines sometimes have the option to be sent back to the factory for an upgrade aka the 9860 from the 7800 to the 7950, if memory serves me correctly.
    3) I got a 15 month 0% APR card from Chase, this gives me time to make smaller payments on the laptop, then use the sale of my 8790 to cover the rest of the balance, so I don't have to drop $2K in one fell swoop.
    4) The warranty on my 8790 ran out this November. :(
    5) I just plain wanted a new Sager!

    So, 5791 owners, where you guys at? :D
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 8, 2015
  2. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    It's here! Typing on it now... I plan on creating a full review on this sometime next week.

    I still have my good ole' 8790 and ran 3DMark06 on it... 494 3DMarks.. :( I've installed the programs I need, and will install the games I have later on.

    I only have one problem, one device (the card reader) isn't showing up correctly in the Device Manager, any advice?
     
  3. MegaBUD

    MegaBUD Notebook Evangelist

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    Ill get about the same thing... except 4gig of ram, 120gig SATA300 and the 8800m gtx :)

    AND! m571ru... ahhh sexy silver trim!
     
  4. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    Shoot for the stars much? :)
    Justin should learn not to keep his IM open late at night, and he got to help me figure out that the CIR driver needed to be installed.
     
  5. zfactor

    zfactor Mastershake

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    the cir driver is simply the ir port on the front...

    this is what you need to install... ftp://ftp.clevo.com.tw/M57xRU/Optional/CIR.zip

    do not update the driver. go to the device manager and make sure there is no driver installed. if so uninstall it.
    now go to the downloaded file and set it up from there.. worked for me and a bunch of others that way
     
  6. zfactor

    zfactor Mastershake

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  7. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    Small update, I have downloaded all of the demos, fraps, and installed many of the games I own and 'have', and will be reporting (hopefully) within the month.
     
  8. zfactor

    zfactor Mastershake

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    i have a full review thats been ready ive just been to busy to check it over. ill get to it tonight or tomm.. it will be nice to compare a few reviews now
     
  9. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    Hi all,

    Here's my review of the 5791. Please make any formatting or recommendations so that it is easier on the eyes... I just wanted to get the pics, numbers, and other info out there for all to see.

    With that said ...


    Boogieman117's Official 5791 Review

    Overview and Introduction

    This review is about my new Sager 5791, purchased from Justin Nolte at XoticPC. Specs are as follows:


    • 17" WUXGA "Glare Type" Super Clear Ultra Bright Glossy Screen (1920x1200)
    • Intel Core 2 Duo T7500 2.2GHz, 4MB L2 Cache, 800MHz FSB
    • 512MB PCI-E nVidia GeForce 7950GTX (User Upgradeable)
    • 2 1GB sticks of PC25300/DDR667 RAM
    • Stock Black Paint Job w/ Orange Trim
    • DVD+RW Drive
    o TSSTcorp CD/DVDW TS-L632D
    • 100GB 7200RPM HDD
    o Hitachi HTS722010K9SA00
    • Internal 7-in-1 Card Reader
    o MS/MS Pro/MS Duo/MS Pro Duo/SD/Mini-SD/MMC/RS
    • Internal Bluetooth 2.0+ EDR
    • Built-In Intel 4965 802.11 a/b/n Wireless
    • Built-In 1.3 Megapixel Camera
    • Windows XP Professional


    Reasons for Buying
    I purchased a Sager 8790 about three years ago, and fell in love with the fact that NO ONE knew what a Sager was, so I seemed to feel special for a while. I enjoyed the fact that I had a machine that was capable to play games (that at the time were the best) and be portable with it. The reason I spent another $2,000 and change three years later were because:

    • The Sager 5791 had the option to upgrade the GPU
    o So, I can buy the 7950GTX for running DX9 games at the best I could and upgrade to the 8700/8800 for running DX10 games/Vista down the road.
    • The look of the 5791 was extremely appealing, the ‘carbon fiber’ around the keyboard and the orange trim against the black paint made me really cement the idea that this Sager will again turn heads amongst my peers.
    • I recently noticed that the warranty on my 8790 would expire on November 11, 2004.
    • I started crying when I saw how puny my 8790’s GPU was getting in comparison.
    • I received a 0% APR for 15 months Chase card that would allow me to make decent payments over time instead of watching my bank account drop like a rock.

    Where and How Purchased
    I’d been speaking to Justin Nolte at XoticPC for about 6 months now, off and on about the newest laptops coming out from all of the companies he sells for. I also threw his name around to customers I did side work for, and they liked his prices, so I was a bit of a mini-salesman for the guy. He was so honored, he sent me a hat.

    I bought the machine for $2037. This included the what I call the “Sager Sale”, which included the 1920x1200 screen, 3 year parts/labor warranty through Sager, and 100GB 7200RPM HDD. This was an excellent deal, considering I paid $2200 for my old machine and seemed about right for the technology out right now.

    Build and Design
    The design of the laptop is to be portable, yet stylish. I compare the style of this laptop to the import tuners of this generation; flashy looks with the black/orange color combo and curiosity about what was under the hood. The hard plastic case and metal lid gives the feel of strength, while the screen lid feels extremely sturdy. I took my fingernail and placed just enough pressure on my nail that turns the color from pink to yellow and ran it across the screen, no ripples. I tried gently twisting the screen to feel for flex at both the top and the bottom of the screen; the top bent very little and the bottom made the base of the laptop shift.

    Screen
    The 1920x1200 screen is extremely bright and sharp when leaned back a bit, if the screen is at its strongest at a ‘right angle’, the screen is sometimes too bright to see, but to me it’s a non-issue. This Sager came with no dead pixels, different from my 8790 which had one white dead pixel. I inspected the sides of the screen for any light leakage or bleeding, but couldn’t find any at this time.


    Speakers

    I was extremely concerned 24 hours after pressing the “Buy Now” button on XoticPC’s site and started reading the forums about the 5791’s internal sound. To add to my paranoia, my 8790 had five speakers, located to the left/right of the keyboard, the left/right of the audio jacks on the front, and the subwoofer on the bottom of the laptop. To my surprise, some were unhappy and even disappointed with the 5791’s sound. Upon receiving the laptop, I listened to the speakers and was pleasantly surprised at the crispness of 64Kbps streaming audio and my ripped CD’s at 320Kbps.

    Processor and Performance
    Again, comparing apples to apples, the 5791 is a step up from the 3.2 P4/2GB of DDR400 I had with my 8790. The Core 2 Duo T7500 at 2.2 GHz I have inside my 5791 is performing exactly as I expected; with multiple IM’s windows open, 2 Microsoft Word documents open, and Mozilla Firefox with 5 tabs open, the laptop floats around like a dream. The 2GB’s of 667MHz RAM definitely seem to assist with the day-to-day activities and the games I play and will be playing.

    Synthetic Benchmarks
    SuperPi:
    1 Million - 22 seconds
    2 Million - 1 Minute



    Transfer Rate
    Minimum: 2.2 MB/Sec
    Maximum: 58.7 MB/Sec
    Average: 42.4 MB/Sec

    Access Time:
    16.0 ms

    Burst Rate:
    85.0 MB/sec

    CPU Usage:
    6.8%


    wPrime
    1 Million - 45 seconds


    PCMark05
    5403

    3DMark06
    5344

    [​IMG]
    Resolution: 1920x1200
    Detail - Maximum Quality
    HDR: Full:
    AA: 8x
    AF: 16x
    94.6 FPS

    [​IMG]
    Resolution: 1600×1200
    Ultra quality option
    Antialising: None
    Anisotropic filtering: 4×
    HDR: disabled
    Score: 100.75 FPS

    Resolution: 1600×1200
    Ultra quality option
    Antialising: 8x
    Anisotropic filtering: 16×
    HDR: Level 7
    Score: 50.39 FPS


    [​IMG]
    Video Quality: High Quality
    Screen Size: 1600x1200
    Aspect Ratio: Widescreen (16:9)
    Fullscreen: Yes
    HQ SFX: Yes
    Shadows: Yes
    Specular: Yes
    Bump Maps: Yes
    Vertical Sync: No
    AA: Off
    2007-12-17 20:36:16 - Quake4
    Frames: 9086 - Time: 154389ms - Avg: 58.851 - Min: 6 - Max: 63

    [​IMG]
    1280x960
    Screen Percentage: Windowed
    Texture Detail: 5
    World Detail: 5
    2007-12-05 21:49:38 - UT3Demo
    Frames: 7054 - Time: 277829ms - Avg: 25.390 - Min: 16 - Max: 33

    1280x960
    Screen Percentage: Windowed
    Texture Detail: 3
    World Detail: 3
    2007-12-05 21:58:14 - UT3Demo
    Frames: 8612 - Time: 265254ms - Avg: 32.467 - Min: 0 - Max: 54

    [​IMG]
    1024x768
    Fullscreen: Yes
    All settings: Medium (exception Objects = High)
    2007-12-16 12:47:15 - Crysis
    Frames: 47507 - Time: 1476459ms - Avg: 32.176 - Min: 10 - Max: 73


    [​IMG]
    display mode: 1024x768
    terrain: high
    effects: high
    geometry: high
    texture: high
    lighting: high
    dyn. shadows: high
    dyn. light: high
    texture filtering: high
    aa = 4x
    visual distance scale: 100%
    2007-12-03 20:39:32 - BF2
    Frames: 20414 - Time: 264322ms - Avg: 77.232 - Min: 9 - Max: 101



    Heat and Noise
    This laptop is leaps and bounds ahead of my previous machine. Anyone who owned a Sager three years ago knows about the Turbo Mode (Fn+F11 usually) to kick on the fans to cool the P4-powered machine. These things could very easily drown out any music played on a low volume; it would be about as noisy as one of the original Xbox360’s reading a disk. This laptop however has been virtually silent since I’ve had it. If I put my head near the bottom of the laptop and actually listen, I can hear the fans hum, but normal typing I hear practically nothing.

    Heat was also a massive issue with my old 8790. It was such a problem that the old message boards I hanged out on recommended a program called MobMeter (can be googled and found) and told me to watch the idle temps of the processor when idle and when gaming. The specs I went by were:

    It got to the point to where I had to purchase Arctic Silver 5 and an external notebook cooler (Antec Pacific Breeze) to keep the temperatures below the 55C mark. I even learned how to apply Arctic Compound 5 to a laptop processor. Fun stuff.

    The 5791 doesn’t seem to have that problem AT ALL. Right now, I have Firefox and Microsoft Word open, and the processor temperature reads 40C. I noticed when running the Crysis demo, playing it for 10 minutes, and closing it that the temperature was ~70C. I’m going to presume that 75C will be its highest and safest temperature. So my new little processor temperature chart looks like this:

    Unfortunately, I don’t have anything that monitors the 7950GTX, so if someone points it to me, I’ll update this review.




    Keyboard and Touchpad

    The keyboard is much more ‘tougher’ then my 8790. Of course since its newer that is to be expected, but there was a big of flex with the 8790’s keyboard. This keyboard doesn’t seem to have any flex at all, and I personally like that. The dull, minor ‘thump’ is the auditory tick I need to hear instead of the ‘clack’ sound of old style desktop keyboards.

    The touchpad is a bit new to me, as the old touchpad I had didn’t have the ‘autoscroll’ feature on the right and bottom of the actual touchpad. I will admit when I first browsed a rather large message board thread and needed to scroll, I accidentally released my finger from the right scroll and found myself at the bottom of the page  I now know to keep my finger on the scroll pads.

    Input and Output Ports
    The 5791 has four USB 2.0 Ports (two on the back, two on the right side). I like the fact that there are two on the right, this way I can quickly connect the mouse and anything else that I may need to quickly connect via USB instead of blindly trying to plug in devices using the back ports. The fingerprint reader between the touchpad buttons is a new addition to me considering this is where my touchpad scroll button was located before. The ability to unlock my machine via fingerprint is a nice touch. Along the right side of the laptop with the two USB ports is the ExpressCard slot (which I’ve never used on any computer), the 4-in-1 card reader (which I use a lot with my digital camera), a mini-IEEE 1394a port (see ExpressCard slot note), a telephone jack, gigabit speed Ethernet jack, and a CATV jack (I can’t think of anytime I’ll need this, but I’m glad I have it). Moving to the back of the machines, we have the S-Video out (which I’ll be using to show widescreen stuff off on TV’s); a DVI port (probably won’t use this, as the screen, a serial port (for god knows what), and two other USB 2.0 ports.

    Wireless
    The wireless on the laptop seems to be outstanding so far. I’ve gone about 500 feet from a G-based router and access point and have had no problems. As of this writing, I haven’t worked with a Draft-N network.

    I have been playing with large file transfers for game demos, so if this is helpful, so be it:

    File Size Time Wireless Strength
    1 GB ~ 3 minutes Excellent
    5 GB ~ 15 minutes Excellent

    Battery
    Going from a desktop replacement to a more mobile computer now has me paying more attention to words such as Stand By and Hibernate. I drained the battery and recharged it (as I will continue to do on a bi-weekly basis to keep the battery good and strong), here are my results:

    • start death: 12:38pm, fade the screen to lowest brightness, idle.
    • update: 12:53pm, 85%, fade the screen to lowest brightness, idle.
    • update: 2:02pm, 16%, fade the screen to lowest brightness, idle.
    • update: 2:05pm, 13%, fade the screen to lowest brightness, idle.
    • update: 2:07pm, 11%, fade the screen to lowest brightness, idle.
    • update: 2:08pm, 10%, fade the screen to lowest brightness, idle.
    • recharge start: 2:08pm, 9%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 2:18pm, 18%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 2:35pm, 34%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 2:51pm, 49%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 2:58pm, 55%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 3:05pm, 62%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 3:13pm, 70%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 3:20pm, 76%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 3:26pm, 81%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 3:41pm, 94%, charging, screen at the brightest, idle.
    • update: 4:00pm, 100%, running on AC power, screen at the brightest, idle.


    This tells me that the computer discharges at about 1% per minute, so I have a little over an hour and a half of on-time. Gaming during that time, would probably pull that number down to 40-45 minutes at the max.

    I accidentally determined the about of power the computer uses while on Standby by accidentally leaving it at home for a day and a half. After swearing to never leave home without it ever again, I was blown away at the amount of power it didn’t use:


    • 18 hours on stand by = 15% discharge
    • 36 hours on stand by = 30% discharge
    • 108 hours on stand by = 90% discharge


    Needless to say, I’m extremely happy with the battery power on this laptop. One last thing that I did happen to notice is the quick release on the battery latch. My old 8790 required manually unscrewing three rice-sized screws to switch the batteries. Not this machine; just pull on the clip, pull the battery, put the new one in, listen for the click, and done! Simplicity is bliss.

    Operating System and Software
    I had to really think hard on the operating system that I was going to install on this laptop. On one hand, Vista would give me DX10, but would require the 8700GT or eventual 8800GT found in the upcoming 5792. Or, go with Windows XP that shows higher benchmarks with the 7950GTX on the DX9 games I’m used to playing and getting a better gaming experience.

    With that, Windows XP was my choice of OS. I’m happy to announce that this is the first system that when powered off, goes from power button press to the Ctrl+Alt+Del / swipe your finger screen in less then one minute. Time to stand by is less then 10 seconds. The hardware in this laptop works great with the now six year old system.

    I’ve always enjoyed Nero’s Burning ROM Series; the DVD burner works like a charm as it should. As long as it works, I’m happy. Something useful that this installation of Nero has is Home Essentials, which can stream content to, in my case, my PlayStation 3. So having a laptop with this software lets me expand my home entertainment throughout my house. Win all around.

    Customer Support
    The only possible bad thing I can say about this laptop is the branding on it. I know I’m getting tired of beating a dead horse, but my 8790 had a few heat problems, and I at one point, sent it to get checked out. Fortunately, I’m a computer tech by trade and have learned the technique of communicating with those with an Asian dialect. Unfortunately, Sager’s tech support is rather small and based solely in California, this it bad considering I live in Maryland, around 3,000 miles away. So, tech support from the source is good, but not great. Sager does, however, offer their drivers on their website for download, so it’s not all bad. I’d suggest funneling any problems you have through your local re-seller first before trying to contact Sager directly.

    Conclusion
    I will be happily supply Chase Credit with my $100/month payments to pay off this laptop over the next year and a half. The fact that I can game portability without bringing external equipment makes me smile. The fact that my new laptop is extremely quiet makes me smile even bigger. To know that it is possible to upgrade (eventually) to the best GPU out right now, the 8800GT, makes me smile even bigger, and giggle like a school girl.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 8, 2015
  10. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    Forgot to mention that it's on it's way back to Sager.... apparently on the 29th day of my 30 day refund policy, Justin told me that I could send back my 5791, have them take the HDD from my 5791, drop it into a 5792, and ship the 5791 back to me for the price of the GPU upgrade and the shipping.

    I went with it, so now I'm back to my ole' reliable (and warm) Sager 8790. The 5791 was shipped last Friday (11/28/07) and should be arriving @ Sager's CA branch tomorrow. Justin told me it would be a 2-3 day job of receiving the laptop, pulling the drive, firing up the 5792, check it out, and ship it back 2-3 day air.

    Can't wait for... next week!

    In other news, I got engaged for X-mas. :D
     
  11. Vedya

    Vedya There Is No Substitute...

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    Thanks for the Review!
     
  12. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    After the previous dent in my wallet that Justin called about concerning the 5792/8800m upgrade, he made a post yesterday concerning the Penryn upgrades.

    I called him and talked to him today, and my new 5792 is getting upgraded from the T7500(2.2 GHz Merom) ...

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    to the T9300 (2.6 GHz Penryn)!!
    [​IMG]

    It delays my new 5792 for another week (after the 16th of this month) and tagged on a good price for the CPU upgrade, but it should be worth the wait!
     
  13. naticus

    naticus Notebook Deity

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    nice review!
     
  14. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    thank you, took a month to write up.

    I can't wait until I get my hands on the 5792 in my sig, then I'll be writing another one, only this time I can copy/paste some parts since the chassis is the same. :rolleyes: :D
     
  15. naticus

    naticus Notebook Deity

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    Yeah that will save you a couple of weeks anyway!
     
  16. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    Yes... I had to revert back to my trusty ole' 8790 from my sig... been kicking for 3+ years with no problems. At least with my 8790, I can save/store all of the game demos/benchmark programs I deleted, considering I wasn't ready for the whole 8800M/Penryn upgrade.
     
  17. Boogieman117

    Boogieman117 Notebook Consultant

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    First, the "not so good" news as Justin messaged me Friday:

    A communication from Sager revealed some poopy news concerning my 5791 that I shipped back:

    Your machine has 2 scratches on the lid, damage on the machine, and a scratch on the LCD.

    The first two images are the lid, then the damage, then the LCD.
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    Before this thread turns into a he said/she said flame fest, I'm going to say the following, and I don't want to discuss this little setback anymore. In my opinion, this is all 'what could've been' and doesn't affect my respect for Sager and shouldn't affect yours.
    • I don't know how these scratches got here. I had the laptop for 2 weeks and babied the thing for the time I had it.
    • David Liu @ Sager said that they were "extremely small scratches".
    • It's very possible I could've created the scratches and didn't know it.
    • Maybe this 'lemon' got past Sager's QA team and got shipped.
    • I'm fairly sure that I packaged the laptop in the pink plastic wrap it came in, although I might have packaged the AC adapter next to the black lid of the machine.


    Regardless, David @ Sager and Justin@XoticPC are speaking with Sager's sales department to bring down the damage prices that were given to me. My final thoughts on this, for your own sake:
    • Inspect the machine VERY closely when you recieve it.
    • If shipping out for an upgrade, inspect it very carefully beofre shipping.
    • When shipping, make sure the power adapters are at least a cardboard thinkness distance from the actual laptop.


    The Good news is..
    I sent the machine back to be replaced with the 5792. From the very small conversation that Justin had with me, it's sounding like I'm bypassing the 5792 and receiving the 5793 instead and that it would be shipped out to me this week! :D

    So, I'll be changing the status of my 579-something in my sig, and watch the Colts win vs. the Bolts, and hopefully watch the Giants win a miracle over the Cowboys. Red Bull and Vodka anyone? :p
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 8, 2015
  18. Heathkidd

    Heathkidd M860TU

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    hi im ordering what i think is a NP5972 from http://www.pioneercomputers.com.au/products/configure.asp?c1=3&c2=15&id=2249

    they dont say the model but yer...

    im sort of hoping its a NP5973 ... any way i could find out.. they dont sell any 2.8 extream core2s sooo?

    i will order it with a 2.4gig 45nm and a 8800GTX.. so it has to be a NP5792 mobo or higher

    i just really wana be able to put in a 2.8gig processor that i can over clock in a 2years time or so from ebay.

    any ideas?... do sager stop making the older revisions? would the store still have stock of NP5792's if i order tomoz? i want a NP4793!!!! gogo potential free multiplier
     
  19. Vedya

    Vedya There Is No Substitute...

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    what is you budget? If you read chazs review of the X9000, you will see that even and 3.2 ghz it does not make much of a difference.
     
  20. Heathkidd

    Heathkidd M860TU

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    yer im going to call the guy tomoz and ask if its a 2 or 3... i got the clevo model names so yer..

    i don't mind now tbh... the 2 is quieter and the 3 is louder.. so mehhhhh just want to know also have to make sure its the orange case they don't specify so just to be safe.

    im spending about 3400 Aus on my sistem... so thats like 3150 US... u can get the same hardware in the states for like.. prob 2400 sigh... i hate being Australian cry cakes.
     
  21. Fade To Black

    Fade To Black The Bad Ass

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    Not true. 2 and 3 are the same, with the exception of the better cooling system in the 3.
     
  22. eleron911

    eleron911 HighSpeedFreak

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    Cooling, casing and OCing the CPU support from BIOS, to be exact.