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HP Pavilion dv5000z Turion 64 review (2.2GHz)

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Average User Rating

3.5 stars 56 user reviews

The good: Attractive design; big, comfortable keyboard; decent display; good multimedia features, including a double-layer DVD burner; plays discs and music without booting the OS.

The bad: No TV tuner; a bit too heavy for regular travel.

The bottom line: With the Pavilion dv5000z series, HP delivers a well-designed and versatile multimedia laptop that starts at a highly affordable price point.

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The HP Pavilion dv5000z is virtually identical to the Pavilion dv4000 with one major exception: where the dv4000 can be configured with Intel's Celeron or Pentium processors, the dv5000z features an AMD processor--either the Pentium-equivalent Turion or the less expensive, Celeron-equivalent Sempron.

With the Pavilion dv5000z, HP delivers a well-designed and versatile multimedia laptop that starts at a highly affordable $679, which is a few dollars less than the dv4000. It weighs the same as the dv4000--about 6.5 pounds--and just over a pound more than the thin-and-light dv1000. Like the dv4000, the dv5000z is chock-full of entertainment features and is quite competent at productivity and multimedia tasks. It can be configured with a few different ATI graphics cards, which give it the potential for decent, though not exceptional, gaming power; for a higher-octane gaming experience, we recommend the more expensive Dell XPS M170, which has a much more powerful graphics card. Though it still lacks the built-in TV tuner found on significantly more expensive systems, there's not much else that the Pavilion dv5000z can't handle. We think it's a very good choice for any student, home, or small-office user.

Our loaded Pavilion dv5000z test unit, priced at $1,522, came outfitted with a 2.2GHz Turion 64 ML-40 processor; 1GB of DDR SDRAM (1x1,024MB); an ATI Mobility Radeon Xpress graphics card with 128MB of VRAM; a 120GB hard drive running at 4,200rpm; Windows XP Media Center; a 15.4-inch BrightView wide-screen display; a DVD burner featuring HP's neat LightScribe technology; an integrated 54g 802.11a/b/g networking card with Bluetooth; and an extended 12-cell battery. It turned in a good score on our MobileMark benchmark--almost the same score as the comparably priced Pentium-equipped dv4000 we tested last year. Equipped with an extended 12-cell battery, however, the dv5000z delivered great battery life, running for 5.5 hours; the dv4000 we tested, equipped with a standard 6-cell battery, ran for 2.4 hours. Though the extended battery adds only $40 to the price, it adds almost a pound to the system's total weight of 7.4 pounds (8.3 pounds with the small AC adapter), which makes the dv5000z a bit too heavy for regular travel. For more information about the Pavilion dv5000z's design, features, and warranty, check out our full review of the very similar Pavilion dv4000.

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Quick Specifications

  • Release date02/5/06
  • Processor AMD Turion 64 2.2 GHz
  • Memory 1.0 GB / 2.0 GB (max)
  • Hard Drive 120.0 GB
  • Display Type 15.4 in TFT active matrix
  • Operating System Microsoft Windows XP Media Center Edition
  • Graphics Processor ATI RADEON XPRESS 200
  • Video Memory 128.0 MB
  • Weight 6.6 lbs
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