CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 09/06/2006
- Updated on: 01/02/2010
- Released on: 07/27/2006
Systemax sent us its default Sabre configuration, which includes an Intel Core 2 Extreme X6800 processor, an ATI Radeon X1900-based CrossFire graphics card setup, and 2GB of 667MHz DDR2 SDRAM; you even get a pair of fast 150GB Western Digital Raptor 10,000rpm hard drives. In price, specs, and performance, that config stacks up well against similar systems' from Dell, Gateway, and other high-end PC vendors. You might want to tweak the hard drive configuration a bit, as 300GB goes pretty fast these days. Luckily, the Systemax Sabre's online configurator lets you customize those specs and others with a reasonably wide selection of options.
Systemax keeps the Sabre's price low by skipping some of the intangibles--custom paint jobs, hand-tied internal cable routing, proprietary cooling systems--found on PCs from the boutique shops. The red-painted case we received is actually out-of-stock at the time of this writing, so right now Systemax offers the same model in only a blander blue and gray. Four of the Sabre's fans are lit with red LEDs, and the internal cables are arranged neatly enough, but those two features and the see-through side panel are about it for unique design elements (and at this point, they're not that unique). The Sabre has little-to-no functional customizations such as sound-dampening foam, and the system is noticeably loud, thanks to its eight fans between the system, the CPU, the power supply, and the two graphics cards.
Many people might be willing to forgive a boring or even offensive design if the price and the performance are right, and in that case, we can wholeheartedly recommend the Systemax Sabre. The system to which it's most comparable is the Gateway FX510XT, a fixed configuration more or less. That PC costs $500 more than the Sabre, and the two have nearly identical performance. The Gateway has 4GB of memory (more than Windows XP can use) and slower 7,200rpm hard drives. Systemax's customization options are limited, so you can't get match it exactly to the Gateway, but if you configure the Sabre with 900GB of 7,200rpm storage (its current high-capacity limit), you'd actually drop the price another $100. Clearly, the Sabre is a much better deal. The only other systems that beat it on performance are either overclocked, like the WinBook PowerSpec Extreme 9800, or have a different and (possibly) more advanced chipset, like the Dell XPS 700. And even those performance wins aren't by all that much.
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
| Multitasking test | Apple iTunes encoding test | Adobe Photoshop CS2 image-processing test |
(Shorter bars indicate better performance)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| F.E.A.R. 1,600x1,200 SS 8xAF | F.E.A.R. 1,024x768 SS 8xAF | Quake 4 1,024x768, 4xAA 8xAF |
A DVD burner, a CD-RW/DVD combo drive, and a media card reader round out the system itself, and extras include a Razer Copperhead gaming mouse and a Saitek Eclipse backlit keyboard for gaming in the dark. Clearly those devices and the config in general make the Sabre a gaming-oriented box, but with all of those optical and removable media options, it makes sense to use this system with your digital still or video camera or for general digital media consumption.
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