Dell Dimension E521 Sault Sainte Marie MI

This system is a bargain, but its low price reflects its basic configuration.

Local Companies

McClelland-Johnstone Ltd
705-946-0876
669 Queen Street East
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Acer America Corp
705-256-6855
464 Albert Street East
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Computer Maintenance Services
705-946-5620
253 Bruce Street
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Algoma Office Equipment
705-945-6061
708 Carmen's Way
Sault Ste Marie, ON
S&T Group
705-942-3043
158 Sackville Road
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Phase Four Electrical Contractor Ltd
705-942-0043
165 Industrial Court B
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Algoma Business Computers
705-759-8809
417 Trunk Road
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Clockwork Computer Software And Hardware Sales
705-253-3305
119-C Black Rd
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Microage Computer Centres
705-946-0876
773 Great Northern Road
Sault Ste Marie, ON
Digilink Computers
(517) 841-3000
975 W Argyle St
Jackson, MI

Dell's Dimension E521 doesn't set the field afire with its performance or looks. However, at $489 (as of November 6, 2006), including a 17-inch LCD monitor, this system is powerful enough to handle basic computing tasks.

Equipped with a 1.8-GHz AMD Sempron 3400+ processor and 512MB of RAM, the E521 achieved a modest WorldBench 5 score of 80--adequate for many tasks, such as Web browsing or word processing, but below the typical cheap PC score we've seen recently. The system simply isn't up to running games: In Doom 3, it managed a skimpy (and unplayable) 6 frames per second at a resolution of 1280 by 1024 pixels. It also choked when we tried to play a DVD movie and convert an MP3 file simultaneously; the video became jerky and unwatchable. Our review system came with a 17-inch Dell E177FP LCD monitor. Although we welcomed the inclusion of a small, unobtrusive LCD, the monitor is merely adequate, with undistinguished color.

The E521 comes in a standard silver-and-black Dell Dimension minitower case, whose clean design vents hot air without requiring additional (and potentially noisy) fans. The case provides a reasonable amount of expansion room, too, in the form of two vacant drive bays--one internal and one externally accessible. The former is useful if you decide to add a second hard drive, and the unit's small 80GB hard drive will likely fill up quickly if you use it to store digital photos, music, and videos. You'll also likely want to add a DVD burner someday to the DVD-ROM drive that came with our system. The drive bays and the system's PCI slots don't require you to use a screwdriver to install new drives or cards.

The Dimension E521 is supposed to be Vista-capable, and Dell posts information about upgrading to Vista on its site.

The E521 is the least-expensive system we tested, but it's slow, has a small hard drive, and carries the bare minimum amount of memory you should even consider.

Richard Baguley

Featured Local Company

McClelland-Johnstone Ltd

705-946-0876
669 Queen Street East
Sault Ste Marie, ON
http://www.mcclelland-johnstone.ca


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