Palicomp Alpha Blade review

The Alpha Blade has it all, from storage to desktop and graphics performance
Written By
Published on 13 October 2012
Our rating
Reviewed price £1000 inc VAT

The first Windows 8 PC we’ve seen from Palicomp is a no-nonsense powerhouse. Its Intel Core i5-3570K processor is overclocked to 4.6GHz, and the PC even has an overclocked AMD Radeon HD 7950 graphics card.

Unfortunately, it’s not a pretty PC, certainly not compared to the Windows 8 machines we’ve seen from companies such as Wired2Fire and Scan. The Thermaltake case has rather too much cheap-feeling plastic and glossy strips to look particularly classy. The case doesn’t have any soundproofing, either, and the PC makes a slight rushing sound, which seems to come mainly from the graphics card.

Palicomp Alpha Blade

The case isn’t a problem from a practical point of view, though. You get five free 3 1/2in drive bays and two 5 1/4in models for expansion. There’s also a SATA docking connector on the top of the case, which means you can plug a 3.5in hard disk straight in. This is useful for transferring files from your old PC’s disk. While there’s nothing to obstruct airflow and all the PC’s cables are neatly tied up in bunches, they’re not hidden behind a false side panel as in some of the neater PCs we’ve seen.

Palicomp Alpha Blade

The PC’s motherboard is the same Asus P8Z77-V LX we saw in Wired2Fire’s Windows 8 Diablo Predator. This means you get a fairly modest selection of ports on the rear, including four USB, two USB3 and 5.1 analogue audio outputs and optical S/PDIF. The front of the case has two USB ports, but unfortunately no USB3, although you could always add another USB3 port using a backplate and the header on the motherboard. There are three PCI expansion slots and a spare PCI Express x16 slot, which you could also use for PCI Express x1 or x4 cards.

Palicomp Alpha Blade

The motherboard’s 120GB boot SSD and large 2TB hard disk take up both of the board’s SATA3 ports, while two of the SATA2 ports are taken up by the Blu-ray reader/DVD rewriter drive and top-mounted hard disk dock. This leaves a couple of SATA2 ports for extra storage.

APPLICATION PERFORMANCE

The processor’s Intel Core i5-3570K processor has been overclocked to 4.6GHz. That’s a hefty overclock, if not as sky-high as the Wired2Fire Diablo Predator’s 4.7GHz. The chip’s kept cool by a large Thermaltake processor cooler, and 148 in our application benchmarks puts this PC right at the top of our performance charts.

The Alpha Blade is also very quick in games. The Radeon HD 7950 graphics card may be large, need two PCI Express power connectors and make a bit of a whoosh, but you can’t argue with its gaming performance. The card’s been overclocked from the standard 800MHz to 950MHz, which led to a smooth 36.1fps in our demanding Crysis 2 test, which we ran at 1,920×1,080 with Ultra detail and the high-resolution texture pack installed.

GAMING PERFORMANCE

We couldn’t get our normal Dirt 3 test to run under Windows 8 (previous tests of the Radeon HD 7950 have shown 90fps in this benchmark), so we switched to the more modern Dirt Showdown. This is a much more challenging benchmark than Dirt 3, but even at 1,920×1,080, 4x anti-aliasing and Ultra detail the Alpha Blade managed 41.1fps in this test. This PC will have no problems with current-generation games at maximum settings, and the power supply’s twin eight-pin power connectors and rated 850W capacity means you won’t have a problem if you need to upgrade the graphics card in the future.

MONITOR

Games certainly look great on the PC’s Asus VS247H display, thanks to the high brightness levels and punchy contrast of its TN panel. Its gloss chassis also makes it look smarter than many budget screens, and it has a useful tilt adjustment on its stand. Horizontal viewing angles are wide, but there’s some distinct colour shift when you move vertically, so you’ll need that tilt adjustment.

The monitor could display 98.4% of the sRGB colour gamut before calibration, and 98.8% after we’d run our Dispcalgui calibration program with a Spyder4Express colour calibrator. However, we weren’t so convinced in our subjective tests, where reds had a slight orange hue. It’s a fun monitor to use, but we’ve seen better overall image quality from IPS panels such as the AOC i2352Vh included with the Wired2Fire Diablo Predator and Scan Value G31.

CONCLUSION

Palicomp’s first Windows 8 PC may not look particularly posh, but it gets the internals right. It’s a seriously powerful PC with excellent desktop and graphics performance, as well as a useful 2TB of storage for your files. If you’re after a better monitor and smarter chassis we’d recommend the Scan Value G31, but if performance is all, the Alpha Blade is the PC to buy.

Written by

Chris has been writing about technology for over ten years. He split his time between ExpertReviews.co.uk and Computer Shopper magazine, while obsessing over Windows Phone, Linux and obscure remakes of old games, and trying to defend Windows 8 from its many detractors

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