So I was able to get hands on with the Alienware Area 51m, and wow, I was impressed overall. The build quality, the keyboard, the trackpad, the bezeless display, the design. It is all very impressive. The main question is how cool the 9900k + RTX 2080 will run in the laptop. We'll have to see! Feel free to ask any questions, and I'll try to check by here every now and then and answer them. Here's my hands on video of the Area 51m:
What things would you guys like to see in my full review of the Area 51m? Cheers! Brandon
-
Vistar Shook, TBoneSan, Rei Fukai and 3 others like this.
-
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
Or is the second adapter needed to power the GPU? (and only 1 adapter triggers iGPU on the CPU or something)
2) How far can you open the display (estimate at angle)?
3) Any light-bleed on the 1080P panel that you could see (if still got hands on it, use black video test)
4) Speakers: how is the bass and overall quality
5) Does the black (or white) version have that rubber finish (soft touch) all over it again in this model?
6) We have conflicting reports that not all models will have same cooling configuration (some say heatsink will be different and another said that there will be less intake vents). Can you confirm if any of this is true?Last edited: Jan 11, 2019Aroc, Vistar Shook, Ashtrix and 2 others like this. -
-
Vistar Shook, TBoneSan, Rei Fukai and 7 others like this.
-
-
Oh wait... remember, Azor says it is perfectly normal and fine for modern laptops to get that hot. Silly me, I forgot. Their BGA tripod models do that, too... so it must be normal.Last edited: Jan 11, 2019unclewebb, Vistar Shook, Ashtrix and 6 others like this. -
yrekabakery Notebook Virtuoso
Vistar Shook, jclausius, raz8020 and 1 other person like this. -
Last edited by a moderator: Jan 13, 2019 -
Aroc, Vistar Shook, TBoneSan and 3 others like this.
-
yrekabakery Notebook Virtuoso
Aroc, Vistar Shook, TBoneSan and 5 others like this. -
The 9700k is almost certainly the choice I'd go for in a DTR given the choice, I think. Get a nicely binned one from SL.Vistar Shook likes this. -
Hi, I've seen u around NBR & uTube, nice to meet u Giz. I'd like to add some background to what my friend SSJ asked, & also OldGuy
Through reddit AMA the other day, SJ was told by Alienware GM that 9900k was locked to 120watts (if GPU load present)(CryoTech = shared CPU/GPU heatsink etc) & can boost to 136watts for CPU loads; SJ wants u to break that 136watt barrier if possible in order to see if 51m indeed has a hard power limit we need to be aware of
For heatsink & side vents query, a copy/paste from sales page
The highest-end configurations carry 8 total heat pipes
Entry configurations do not have side-exhausts
As u can see, low-end configs may contain different parts & those parts are a current mystery. Typically, Alienware will send out their top config for review; reviewers without exception will not inform readers / buyers of the uphill battle some may have to climb in order to DIY towards the top config, say, if they buy a low-end config & source their own parts later; the Aliens do what they can to thwart some user upgrades
For our purposes, we find the 8700 (non-K) CPU on the sales menu as starter CPU; in a world where they're marketing easy user upgrades to CPU, it'd be typical for someone to buy the entry 8700 & then now or later toss in 9700k 9900k etc, but to do so, we'd wonder if 8700's ship without K-series 'over-clocking' heatsink & side exhausts (or a side vent 'system' / baffle etc) referenced in the sales literature above
I expect they'll ship u 9900k for review & so u might not be privy to what lesser models are shipped with, but you'd be in position to ask what the minimum factory config needs to be to get better heatsink + side exhaust. Naturally, some of us wish to know what the heatsink (& side vent system if applicable) will cost from Dell Parts in order to move 8700 to a 9900k later on, but it'd be nice to know what the user can order upfront minimum to get it inside & shipped (example if 9700k + 2070 is minimum config for those parts it means 9900k is easy upgrade w/ no out-of-pocket expense; it also implies 8700 buyers will need to pay Dell Parts for the 'overclocking' heatsink)
I hope you understand that most buyers are unaware there are hoops to be jumped through sometimes, & are unaware that 'easy upgrading' may have an asterix next to it, like out-of-pocket expense for parts over & above just the CPU, perhaps another powerbrick etc
As for me? I'd like to know about the Bios (UEFI graphic mouse-driven, or is it old-timey blue + keyboard?); specifically, how far can you overclock it? Is the Bios locked down (gimped)?
Overclocking will be a combination of Bios & CmndCntr software so we're told. SJ wants to know if XTU or similar will work in order to get a better overclock
The #1 question we'd like to know is how far can u push it before it overheats. Is it a throttle monster?, loud?, can u hit 5GHz across all cores?, 4.9?, is the Bios locked?, are you restricted to their tame factory preset overclocks (Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 etc) or do you have granular control that lets u go as high as possible (& let the cooling system decide the top clock)
Honest review on performance & features, not a puff-piece
Thanks
(PS: if need be, do send SJ a PM for the best way to attempt to surpass 136watts & what software is needed to measure / monitor watts for the test, he's highly experienced)Aroc, Vistar Shook, TBoneSan and 7 others like this. -
Did you notice any considerable throttling for CPU or GPU?
Would you recommend this setup over something less like a 9700k?
Thanks! -
Aroc, Vistar Shook, Mr. Fox and 2 others like this.
-
On top 7 pipes (with side-exhausts)
Turn it around and you will find 8 pipes, bruh. Its called... Magic LOOOL
CptXabaras, Aroc, Vistar Shook and 9 others like this. -
Looks awesome. Only thing I don't like is the dual PSU requirement.
Also, the giant "A51" is a bit silly but I could live with itVistar Shook, IXVIXXII, jclausius and 2 others like this. -
The dual psu thing was starting to become more and common ever since they've been stuffing full desktop gpu's into laptops. Plus the new intel cpu's get hungry once you overclock them. I think Asus has been doing it with their 700 series laptops too.Aroc, Vistar Shook, jclausius and 1 other person like this. -
Vistar Shook likes this.
-
I don't know why they just didn't requisition their own 700+W PSU like the Eurocom folks did - http://www.eurocom.com/ec/images(404)780WACDCAdapter
Aroc, Vistar Shook, Ashtrix and 3 others like this. -
Vistar Shook likes this.
-
The activity / posts just here on NBR, I think, says a lot about possible market demand for such a product. The manufacturer's seem to have almost talked themselves into the 'thinner is better' mindset based on reviewer tastes or who knows what. However, the buzz around this tells me there's plenty of interest. The question is, is there enough world-wide interest to sell 250,000 to 1,000,000 units?
Aroc and Vistar Shook like this. -
I think the PSU thing is an issue with EU law or something. I forgot who it was, maybe @Meaker@Sager but something about the amount of power or size of the PSU? Not sure maybe he can chime in.
Might be related to the 99Whr battery limit for planes.Vistar Shook likes this. -
Meaker@Sager Company Representative
It's easier to get regulatory and safety approval with a sealed design, combine that with the cost of design/production and combining two is easier.
Aroc, Vistar Shook, Ashtrix and 3 others like this. -
Vasudev, Vistar Shook, Ashtrix and 2 others like this.
-
Last edited: Jan 12, 2019 -
I'm on the fence about one. I'm thinking 9700K / RTX 2070. If I can get it to behave with a 240w for the CPU and a 330w for the GPU, I'll jump on it. I can transfer the RAM and SSD from my 13 R3 into it to save a few bones as well.
Vistar Shook likes this. -
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
115W max stock for 2070 (per NVIDA released specs) with boosts presumably to about 150W given their xx70 history
124W Full load for i7-9700K stock at default settings; overclocking to about 5Ghz will stretch this system assuming you can do tweaks on the power settings and cooling.
Last edited: Jan 13, 2019Vasudev, Vistar Shook, jclausius and 3 others like this. -
No, Dell didn't let anyone test the thermals of the laptops officially since they are pre-production. I did come ready to test with USB loaded with Cinebench, heaven benchmark, and HWMonitor, but alas...
Okay, so main questions you guys want me to explore:
1) What can be ran on a single 330w power supply? (9700K+2070 possible?) CPU only? GPU/CPU Power limited?
2) What's the heat pipe upgrade path when you buy a low spec model and want to upgrade to 9900K later?
3) What's the actual power limits for the laptop? Can they be bypassed to push higher than 138w?
4) At what point does the laptop throttle temperature wise?
5) Speakers
6) Angle of display
7) Light bleed
8) Bios type and features?
9) Overclocking Method. Bios or XTU or Command software from Alienware?
Any other questions I missed? I had to read through them quickly. Flying out tomorrow morning. I'll check the thread again later.
If I were to guess, the 9900K will cause thermal throttling when at stock settings with heavy CPU loads like rendering videos, but I doubt it will throttle when playing 95% of games, unless they are super CPU intensive. So I'm gusssing that an AVX Offset of 2-4 would likely prevent any thermal throttling and would still render faster than any other setup out there. But only time will tell! We'll have to see! Maybe no throttling at all if you got a sillicon lotteried chip?
I'm thinking the Area 51m will be my new laptop, but I am still really liking the thinness of my Aorus X7 DT V8. Kinda hard to give up...Last edited: Jan 14, 2019 -
-
i'm not overly obssesed with CPU cinebench performance or how little cpu will affect actual games so my questions are more about graphics, ie. RTX gpus, display panel.
1. since alienware is using DGFF (not following any of nvidia set standards), does that mean they are using desktop class RTX 2080 GPU? from my understanding, laptop 2080 (not max q) is limited to 150W, while desktop GPU is given 215W for non FE. this is a big difference in terms of power and clock speeds. Azor did mention they will run the 2080 at180W power. so what's the deal here? is that laptop GPU standard or full desktop GPU standard? Can it be clocked higher or run at over 200W TDP?
2. if PSU is not providing enough juice, can Area-51m run on two 2x330W PSU giving it 660W effective?
3. any possibility for 1440p IPS high refresh rate panel? fhd is a waste for such an awesome laptop.Aroc and Vistar Shook like this. -
Heatpipe upgrade path? Lol the cooling doesn’t change between cpu/gpu choices.
-
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
Vistar Shook, Lunatik and raz8020 like this. -
Vistar Shook, ThatOldGuy and raz8020 like this.
-
Vistar Shook Notebook Deity
Papusan, jclausius, Cass-Olé and 1 other person like this. -
raz8020 and Vistar Shook like this.
-
Vistar Shook Notebook Deity
raz8020 likes this. -
raz8020 and Vistar Shook like this.
-
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
The GPU consumes way more power than the CPU if you get it with a RTX 2080.raz8020 and Vistar Shook like this. -
Vistar Shook likes this.
-
That's insane . I can't believe it... It's literally like shooting one's own foot.
I saw this line in the pdf too, but seriously ? I hope it's marketing BS. -
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
-
I like to keep the #1 rule of buying computers in mind: somewhere on the spec sheet is where the vendor makes their margin. Sometimes that is memory or other components and sometimes it is chassis. In this case, the cooling system. My guess is the "suits" said... ok make a crazy upgradeable laptop but remember 80% of buyers will never actually upgrade. So, give the best bells and whistles to the ones that buy at/near the top now and save on the others. So low end buyers now will have to make up for it later in new heatpipes, chassis inserts whatever.
Homer -
XxAcidSnowxX Notebook Consultant
If you choose to upgrade CPU/GPU in the future, you will need to upgrade at least one of the power supplies too... Lower configs only come with 180w and 240w.... You will need a 320w if you upgrade your cpu on your own ...
-
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
Every config below RTX 2080 Will also consume less than 330W.
Only the i9 + RTX 2080 should need 2 PSUs at stock
The i7 Ks + RTX 2080 Should run stock on single 330W but will need 2 PSUs to overclock any.
HOWEVER, there is no confirmation if the GPU is separately powered, in which case you are locked in at 2 PSUs if you want to run any games. (presumably iGPU only on 1 PSU in this case)Last edited: Jan 14, 2019 -
Falkentyne Notebook Prophet
So CPU=119W + RTX 150W is 270W.
The rest of the system will not use 60W.
Even if LCD uses 30W, thats 30W remaining for mainboard, DDR and drives and USB.
A single 330W PSU was enough here even if everything is 100% max load.
Delta 330W can pull 400W from the wall.
Why would they need a 330W +180W? that's silly.Vasudev, raz8020, Cass-Olé and 1 other person like this. -
ThatOldGuy Notebook Virtuoso
Vasudev, raz8020, Cass-Olé and 1 other person like this. -
My heart goes out to entry / novice buyers, & those who've never worked inside a laptop before. It's usually then when they find out it was easier & smarter to pay upfront for whatever Alienware classifies is the minimum high-end config which can get the good parts shipped inside now
One sentence in a review like yours to get the word out could go a long way, & I thank you for your time -
So it might be like Clevo. Also explains why battery life is so bad.Spartan@HIDevolution likes this.
I Was Hands on with Alienware Area 51m w/ RTX 2080 and i9-9900K. AMA!
Discussion in '2015+ Alienware 13 / 15 / 17' started by GizmoSlip, Jan 11, 2019.