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HP Business Dx5150 (Athlon 64 3500+ 2.2 GHz, 512 MB RAM, 40 GB HDD) (06/07/2005)

HP Business Dx5150 (Athlon 64 3500+ 2.2 GHz, 512 MB RAM, 40 GB HDD)

Entered CNET Catalog: 06/07/2005

SKU: PE680AV-MNP

Manufacturer: HP

Manufacturer description

With the features to deliver high-performance, enhanced productivity, and investment protection, the HP dx5150 Business PC is designed to meet the needs of demanding business environments.

Product summary

The goodThe good: Extremely quiet; versatile, high-quality LCD monitor; surprisingly expandable; excellent warranty; includes deployment and management tools.

The badThe bad: Weak performance; tower hard to open; monitor's USB ports hard to reach.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: HP knows how to build solid, well-supported business machines, but look past the HP dx5150 if performance is your chief concern.

Average user rating: 0 stars

Editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 06/13/2005
Priced at $1,264 and designed for medium and large businesses, the HP dx5150 combines versatile design with top-notch customer service. It's also whisper quiet, something to consider if you're planning to deploy several of them in a service center or other noise-sensitive environment. Wherever it goes, you'll appreciate the dazzling 17-inch LCD bundled with our test system. The HP dx5150's subpar performance disappoints, but the PC also costs $200 less than the competing Dell OptiPlex GX280 BTX, which included only a 15-inch LCD. Therein lies the trade-off.

The HP dx5150's attractive silver-and-black tower keeps things refreshingly quiet. Measuring about 16 inches deep and 14.5 inches high, the dx5150 is compact enough to sit on a desk without overwhelming your work space. Even so, it's surprisingly spacious on the inside (more so than HP's microtower moniker suggests), offering unobstructed access to its expansion slots, RAM sockets, and drive bays. Indeed, the dx5150 has room for a little of everything, so you could add up to three more memory sticks to our test system's lone DIMM, as well as a full-height PCI Express graphics card and a second hard drive. That's the advantage of choosing a tower over HP's small-form-factor desktop case, which accommodates only low-profile expansion cards and has fewer bays.

Although there's only a single captured thumbscrew holding the HP dx5150's side-access panel in place, we had a difficult time sliding the panel loose. Thankfully, once you're inside, it's a simple matter to pop out a drive for replacement or to drop in another RAM module. You can also connect a near-endless supply of external components, thanks to the dx5150's eight USB 2.0 ports, two of which are located in the front (along with headphone and microphone jacks).

Our HP dx5150 test system's no-frills configuration included an AMD Athlon 64 3500+ processor, 512MB of 400MHz DDR SDRAM, a 40GB hard drive, and a CD-RW burner. The motherboard's ATI Radeon Xpress 200 chipset manages multimedia duties with its integrated Radeon 9600 graphics processor and onboard sound chip. Although the dx5150 ships without external speakers, there's a speaker built into the tower so that you can hear system sounds in all their tinny glory.

The HP L1740 monitor comes with both VGA and DVI inputs, so you should have no restrictions if you decide to upgrade to a discrete 3D card that has only one type of port. The L1740 can rotate 90 degrees and rise up several extra inches, so it's easy to see if you're working from a standing position, for instance at a countertop. Its base also acts as a keyboard cradle, which lets you tuck your keyboard away beneath the screen to save space. The monitor comes with a pair of USB 2.0 ports, though you may not want to endure the hassle of reaching them. They're recessed far behind the screen and accessible only by tilting it way back--an effort that requires a fretful amount of muscle.

Although the HP dx5150 and the L1740 both have DVI video connectors, HP supplies only a VGA cable. Fortunately, the monitor manages to produce sharp, colorful detail even with an analog connection. Its high-contrast, ultravivid images struck us as good enough not only for everyday business use but for professional graphics and video work as well.

We're not sure the same can be said of the HP dx5150 itself. On both our SysMark 2004 application test and our Unreal Tournament 2003 3D test, the dx5150 trailed the competition, even when compared to the HP Compaq dc7100 Business Desktop, which came out 11 months ago. This is not to say that the dx5150 is a terrible performer. Its scores were in the same ballpark as its competitors'. Still, if performance is an issue (that is, if you need a business PC for anything other than word processing, e-mail, and surfing the Web), you'll want to configure a dx5150 with a faster CPU and a discrete 3D card. HP offers CPUs up to the Athlon 64 4000+, but the choice of graphics cards gets no better than the weak ATI Radeon X300 SE.

HP supplies no applications or utilities to speak of with the dx5150, although Norton AntiVirus 2004 is available at the time of purchase for just $5. IT departments will appreciate HP Client Manager and Altiris Deployment Solution Agent, which come preloaded to assist with system deployment and management.

HP's exemplary three-year warranty compares favorably with those of competitors such as Dell and Gateway; it includes parts, labor, and next-business-day onsite service, plus toll-free 24/7 phone support. We particularly liked the online support, which enabled us to quickly find HP dx5150-specific help and even chat in real time with a live tech.

Application performance
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
BAPCo SysMark 2004 rating  
SysMark 2004 Internet-content-creation rating  
SysMark 2004 office-productivity rating  
Dell OptiPlex GX280 BTX (3.4GHz Intel Pentium 4 550, 512MB DDR2 SDRAM 400MHz)
194 
222 
169 
HP Compaq Business Desktop dc7100 (3.2GHz Intel P4 540, 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz)
186 
210 
164 
Gateway E-6300 (3.2GHz Intel P4 540, 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz)
179 
205 
156 
MPC ClientPro 365 (3.2GHz Intel P4 540, 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz)
173 
202 
149 
HP dx5150 (2.2GHz AMD Athlon 64 3500+, 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz)
153 
178 
132 

3D gaming performance (in fps)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Unreal Tournament 2003 Flyby-Antalus 1,024x768  
HP Compaq Business Desktop dc7100 (integrated Intel 915G)
70.3 
Dell OptiPlex GX280 BTX (integrated Intel 915G)
57.5 
Gateway E-6300 (integrated Intel 915G)
51.8 
MPC ClientPro 365 (ATI Radeon X300 PCIe)
51.4 
HP dx5150 (integrated ATI Radeon X200)
41.2 

Find out more about how we test desktop systems.

System configurations:
Dell OptiPlex GX280 BTX
Windows XP Professional SP2; 3.4GHz Intel P4 550; Intel 915G chipset; 512MB DDR2 SDRAM 533MHz; 128MB ATI Radeon X300 (PCIe); Seagate ST380013AS 80GB 7,200rpm Serial ATA

Gateway E-6300
Windows XP Professional SP2; 3.2GHz Intel P4 540; Intel 915G chipset; 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB (shared memory) integrated Intel 915G; Seagate ST3160023AS 160GB 7,200rpm Serial ATA

HP Compaq Business Desktop dc7100
Windows XP Professional SP1; 3.2GHz Intel P4 540; Intel 915G chipset; 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB integrated Intel 915G (shared memory); Seagate ST380013AS 80GB 7,200rpm Serial ATA

HP dx5150
Windows XP Professional SP2; 2.2GHz AMD Athlon 64 3500+; ATI Radeon Xpress 200 chipset; 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 64MB (shared memory) integrated ATI Radeon X200; WDC WD400BD-60JPA0 40GB 7,200rpm Serial ATA

MPC ClientPro 365
Windows XP Professional SP2; 3.2GHz Intel P4 540; Intel 915G chipset; 512MB DDR SDRAM 400MHz; 128MB integrated Intel 915G (shared memory); Seagate ST380011A 80GB 7,200rpm ATA/100

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 2 user reviews

Nice silver tower and good performance

Pros: 64-bit processor, minimal tower size, IDE bus onboard

Cons: No old-OS drivers available

Review: Good tower size to match with small furnitures and desks. Cool'quiet with no-noise of machine when operating.
Another nice features: floppy, front sound & USB ports. 4 memory slot, fast SATA default disk storage. Nice video quality.
Good performance with Linux 64-bit distros.
User Rating:
4.0 stars

out of 2 user reviews

Great Business PC for the Money

Pros: Good Price

Cons: No DVD/CD-RW

Review: I'm very happy with the 38 DX5150's I purchased from CDW and Zones. Special Promo Price $850 with an HP L1906 19" LCD monitor,80 gig HD and 512MB RAM. Used mainly for Office Apps and Internet. Dual monitor outputs is a nice touch as is the pci express slot. One unit was DOA out of the box and needed a new power supply which HP provided without a problem. I would recommend this PC to anyone looking for a business computer.