Mesh Elite CSR review

The overclocked Core i3 processor makes the Elite CSR blazingly fast, but it's let down by the poor monitor and it lacks a dedicated graphics card
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Published on 19 October 2010
Mesh Elite CSR
Our rating
Reviewed price £549 inc VAT

The Mesh Elite CSR comes in a slightly taller tower case than most budget Mesh PCs, which means there’s plenty of room inside for expansion. Mesh has relied on the Intel Core i3-530’s integrated graphics chip, leaving the single PCI-Ex16 slot free for a dedicated graphics card upgrade. You also get a 22in Full HD monitor for your money, although this can be omitted to save £77. Depending on what you want to use the display for, this could be a good idea, as the AOC F22s+ has only a VGA input, so you can’t use it for another device, such as a games console or Blu-ray player. Image quality from the display isn’t too bad, with decent colours and viewing angles. There’s some light bleed at the top and bottoms of the screen, but this is only noticeable on dark images, such as the black bars at the top of films. The Core i3’s integrated graphics chip isn’t powerful, and can barely handle decoding Full HD content. It failed to run our Call of Duty 4 benchmarks test, and is certainly not suitable for games. It’s fine for Windows use, however, and if you want to play games you should save up for a decent graphics card, such as the ATI Radeon HD 5770.

Mesh Elite CSR
You certainly won’t need to upgrade the processor any time soon: Mesh has overclocked the Core i3-530 from its stock speed of 2.9GHz to a speedy 3.6GHz, making the Elite CSR as fast computer. Single-threaded performance in our image-editing test was an astounding 153, but with only two physical cores, the result in our multi-tasking test was a much lower 106. This sort of performance is astounding at this price point, and only the most intensive applications, such as video-encoding or 3D rendering, will ever slow down this PC. Similarly, you’ll probably never need to upgrade the 4GB of RAM, and the 500GB hard disk will take a while to fill up. With neatly bundled cables, the inside of the case looks rather empty. There are a total of five free 3.5in bays, two of which are external, and three free 5.25in bays, all of which have easy-to-use tool-less mounting brackets. The motherboard is empty apart from the processor’s massive heatsink and fan: there’s one free PCI slot, two PCI-Ex1 slots and a single PCI-Ex16 slot, as well as two spare DIMM sockets and four SATA headers. On the outside, a total of eight USB ports are spread across the front and rear panels, although one is used up by the mouse. There aren’t any eSATA or FireWire ports to cater to fast external drives. For audio, there’s a choice of 5.1 or optical S/PDIF outputs, and you can also output both audio and video via HDMI.

Sadly, the Elite CSR falls behind the competition this month. Palicomp’s Core i3 Blast 530OC41-22 has an even faster processor, a better quality Full HD monitor and twice the hard disk space, and even has a cheap graphics card. It’s much better value.

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Barry de la Rosa has written various articles on a range of topics covering everything from TVs to mobile phones.

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