PC Specialist Impulse 625 review

Written By K.G. Orphanides
Published on 13 February 2009
Our rating
Reviewed price £625 inc VAT and delivery

If you think PC Specialist’s Impulse 625 looks familiar, that’s because it uses the same AOpen mini-PC case as Fujitsu Siemens’ Esprimo Q5030 and VeryPC’s Parkwood II, only in a slightly different colour. Like the other PCs that use this case, the Impulse 625 is built from laptop components. This makes it fiddly, although not impossible, to upgrade, but also means it’s smaller and less power-hungry than a regular desktop PC. The Impulse 625 contains a 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 Duo P8400 processor, 2GB of RAM and a 320GB hard disk. Rather than providing normal PCI and PCI-E slots, the Impulse 625 has two PCI Express Mini slots. One of these is used for the 802.11b/g wireless adaptor, leaving the other slot free for expansion cards. The choice of compatible cards is limited, but you can buy flash drives to expand your PC’s storage capacity and Bluetooth adaptors fairly cheaply online. The easiest way to add features to a compact PC is usually to plug in external peripherals. With a total of six USB ports, an eSATA port and a FireWire port, the Impulse 625 has plenty of options for adding extra peripherals such as external storage devices, optical drives, sound cards, TV tuners and lots more. With a power consumption of 39W, the Impulse 625 is not the most power-efficient PC here when running at full tilt, but its idle power consumption was outstanding at just 18W, the joint lowest of all the PCs here. The Impulse 625 also consumed only 2W on standby, a negligible figure that’s beaten only by the Eee Top’s standby power consumption of 1W.

The Impulse 625 doesn’t have a particular outstanding feature that sets it apart from the other computers in this group, but it has a great specification, a tiny case and is almost £125 cheaper than VeryPC’s practically identical Parkwood II. This combination of great value, low power consumption and compact construction make it a good choice, but Sony’s all-in-one VGC-JS1E/S is the same price and includes a monitor.

Written by

More about

Popular topics