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Acer Ferrari 3000

StormX02
Posted · 0 Views · 51 Comments
I got it abouta week ago, and I've finally settled down enough to write a review on it =)

...excuse my crappy digicam, the pictures I took seriously don't do it any justice, so I'll use pictures from the acer site where possible.

Specs
AMD Athlon XP-M 2500+
512MB DDR333 SDRAM
60GB ATA/100 Hard Drive
DVD-RW / CD-RW combo drive (burns both)
128MB ATI Radeon 9200
15" SXGA+ TFT Display
802.11g Wireless
Bluetooth
10/100 Ethernet
V.92 modem

Review
The keyboard is slightly curved as you might notice from the picture. It was designed to keep your elbows apart so as to diminish the feeling of "cramped-ness". This being my first notebook, I wouldn't know. All I can say is that it took no time at all to get used to; I simply type as I would on my Logitech Elite and there's no fat-fingering. The layout is intuitive, not like some notebooks where they switch around the keys so you have to look to see what you want to hit. One exception is the placement of the Page Up and Page Dn keys, which are directly to the left and right of the up arrow key, which can sometimes be annoying if you hit the wrong thing. On holding the function key, you can increase or decrease volume by tapping the up and down arrow keys, increase or decrease brightness of the LCD display by tapping the left and right arrow keys, use 789, UIO, JKL, and M keys on the keyboard as a keypad (quite ingenius I must say), hit F8 to mute, F7 to enable/disable Synaptic touchpad, F6 to turn off the backlight for the LCD display, F5 to switch displays, F4 for sleep, F3 to toggle power management schemes, F2 for setup, and F1 for help with the hotkeys. (I might be a bit off for I don't dare try some of these buttons and I lost the manual ) The keys are quiet, yet responsive.


The mouse that comes with the notebook looks awesome, but because the buttons don't actually have a physical split between them, you have to press a little harder than usual. The optical tracking is also not up to my standards, so I prefer to use my own.


Another awesome thing about this notebook is its 4-in-1 card reader on the front. It reads MultiMediaCards™ (MMC), Secure Digital (SD) cards, SmartMedia™ cards and Memory Sticks®. Though I haven't yet had a reason to use it, I imagine it would be quite nice for someone who might not have the right camera for their notebook, like if someone had a Canon camera but a Sony Vaio (comes only with a Memory Stick reader).


The DVD burner is a plus as well. Most notebooks I'd been looking at only had a CD-RW w/ DVD reading capabilities.


USB connectivity is so-so... The good is that there are four of them, and they're 2.0. The bad is that it's on the left. I suppose this would be a plus for left handers, but for me, this is not so great. Minor detail though =)


The speakers are decent. Bass sucks of course, as it lacks a sub. But the sound is quite nice considering.

The screen is acceptably decent but not the best I've seen. As I would with any other LCD screen though, I still find myself connecting my notebook to my 19" CRT monitor when I'm at home, the CRT being easier on the eyes as it's bigger, brighter, and you can look at it from any angle.


Graphic performance is, I'm sorry to say, disappointing. While the 128mb Radeon 9200 beats most other notebooks on the market today, (from what I've seen, all but the Alienware Area51-M and the Sager notebooks) it's not as good as I would have liked. With the XP-M 2500+ and the R9200, the notebook scored a lowly 1060 3Dmarks in 3dMark 2003. While this performance is definitely enough to run CS, Tribes 2, etc at high resolutions with very high framerates, it will most likely fall short with upcoming games like Half-Life 2. With that in mind, I would strongly encourage anyone who wants a gaming machine to go with an Alienware Area51M, or an equivalent Sager. On a side note, I must inform anyone planning on buying a notebook that regular ATI drivers will not work with their mobile cards. You must download custom drivers like the ones a friend suggested to me... Omega or something.

One drawback is that the left palm rest gets really hot. It gets SO HOT in fact, that after many hours of continuous use at a LAN party, the "designed for Windows XP" sticker started to warp, from the adhesive melting! I simply smoothed it back over, but the fact that this happened at all is annoying. Interesting how the "GFX powered by ATI" and "AMD Athlon XP-M" stickers remained intact though. Maybe it's trying to tell us something about Windows, perhaps Microsoft products in general?

Application performance however, is quite nice, to be expected from any system with 512mb RAM and modern processor. It compiles at a respectable rate, which is all that matters to me =)

The Synaptics pointing device is a joy to use, though no replacement for a mouse. It beats the hell out of those "pointing nubs" seen on IBM laptops. You simply drag your finger around to point at something, then either press a "mouse" button, or tap the synaptics pad! The Acer Ferrari 3000 also comes with a 4 directional scroll device of sorts between the two buttons and below the pad. I can't say it's particularly useful but it's nice to have nonetheless.

Overall, the inside face of the notebook is simply awesome. I have yet to see a notebook that looks as nice, even the Sony Vaio series, with its silvers and greys, modern rounded, curved accents, and symmetrical layout, which is more than I can say for the Sentia . The Ferrari symbol in the lower right corner further underlines this inspiring look.

The bottom of the notebook also looks nice, even though I'm the only one fanatic enough to even look =)


The red sides are also nice, with the silver accents and rounded sleekness.

The LID however, is not for me. Its Ferrari Red is simply too bright and eye-catching for me. It just screams "look at me" in an even obnoxious way, I'd have to say. The Ferrari symbol that perfectly complemented the inside face now adds to the screaming radiance of the lid. It screams even more than the alien head with the bright glowing eyes that was on the Sentia that I was on the verge of purchasing. It does however draw a lot of attention because of this. It's amazing how at a lan party where there are modded cases aplenty with lots of lighting, people will still come up and ask about the notebook, stare at it, and inevitably inquire as to whether or not it's custom. (because of course, it's bright red and silver. With Ferrari logos. )


Dimension wise, this notebook has its ups and downs. The one thing that really makes me adore it is that it's very thin for a laptop with the parts inside of it, and the length and width. Amazingly, it is only 1.2" thin! The 15" screen however makes the notebook quite large, which was something I neglected to notice on purchasing it online, but I'm already growing acustomed to it. The one TRULY bad thing about this notebook however, is that it is, at 6.5lbs, quite heavy. The Sentia, in comparison, is only 4.9lbs! Sure, its screen is but 14.1", and it has fewer and simpler parts, but surely, it does not justify a 1.6lb difference! This is the one bad thing about the notebook. One thing though, to people who need/want a gaming laptop - the Alienware Area51M is 7.5lbs, making it even more heavy than the Ferrari 3000 by an addition 1lb. You're going to have to sacrifice a little in terms of mobility, but again if it's performance you want, you should definitely go for that.

Some other small things worth mentioning are that there are On/Off buttons for both the wireless card and Bluetooth, which are definitely convenient if you want to conserve power when not using those features. There are also five spherical silver buttons above the keyboard, one power button, another button for email, one for internet browser, and two additional ones that can be set to open any webpage or program desired. (mine are Visual C++ and BSPlayer ) There is also an infrared port, a PCMCIA slot, stereo headphone out, parallel port, VGA port, S-video out, microphone slot, and Type II PC Card slot. To top it off, the BIOS startup screen is a custom Ferrari background, and Windows has some preset custom Ferrari backgrounds and sound effects.

The system came with an "Acer Passport", Ferrari 3000 owners manual, a red microfibre Ferarri 3000 LCD display cleaning cloth, three recovery CDs, Norton Antivirus 2003, and a large plastic bag with which to play.

The build quality is excellent. No crooked panels, no squeaking, no flimsy, cheap feelings anywhere; it's solidly built. The surface texture is not as smooth and cold as that of the metalic Sony Vaio, but it's close enough =)

Tech support is acceptable. With the purchase of this notebook, you get a year's worth of it. I emailed them about a minor problem and received a timely response, and a helpful one at that. They gave me several links and put their advice in a way that really makes you feel like they care.

To wrap it all up, the Acer Ferrari 3000 is an extremely viable solution for one who desires a balance between mobility and performance, a screaming look of exclusivity and a nice looking mix of colours. (red/silver/black) It is unbelievably well priced at ~$1800 US (from CDW) and due to its fresh new chassis, represents a good investment in modern engineering.

Looks: 9.5/10
Layout/Design: 10/10
Performance: 8/10
Value: 10/10
Mobility: 8/10
Support: 8/10
Coolness Factor: 9999999999999999999/10!!!!!

51 Comments

Very nice review..... you really went into detail. Thanks for that.

This notebook really intrigues me. If only there was a Radeon 9600 in there....then I would be loving it.

Thanks again.
it certainly looks nice
Good review, the red looks catchy
Having also bought one recently, I just wanted everyone to know his review is incredibly accurate and indepth. For the record, I am really happy with mine.

A few minor things I wanted to comment on though:
-Admittedly the graphics performance isn't the best there is, but this is expected and more than made up for and explained by the size to performance ratio, style, and reasonable price of $1750 w/ shipping (Page Computers)
-I actually found the included mouse's sensitivity to be quite good even compared to the other two opticals I use: logitech MX700 and intellimouse 3.0
-This may be incredibly obvious but for morons like me who are brand new to laptops, make sure you switch the power mode to deskop from laptop otherwise the processor operates at half speed
-For anyone who actually cares, the dvd burner is +/-
I found the review one of the very best.

I checked it out on the acer site and just wanted to note that there is no docking option for this laptop... which kind of shoots it out of the water for my particular needs. I use a laptop as my desktop at the office with a docking station and 21" LCD and when I go home, I take the laptop and everything on it with me.

This is hugely more convenient than using a desktop at the office, synch to my laptop, and then out the door. Invarriably, you will forget to copy something to your laptop and then cuss til you get back to the office the next day.
Yikes, I guess I had better do a search of the forum before I ask for a review or an opinion in the future. That was a really great review. More than I could have ever hoped for.
Thank You StormX02! I guess my only other question is, how would you compare the CPU performance and battery performance to a 1.6 PM Centrino system? I am also looking at a Compaq Presario X1015US Notebook. 1.6 PM, 1GB Ram, 64 ATI 9200, 15.4-inch SXGA+ WGA Display (1680 x 1050). It is also available with a higher res screen of 19XX x 12XX. Maybe a bit to high res for me. This would cost a little bit more than the Ferarri 3000. I am leaning toward the Acer but maybe it is all the flashy sex appeal of it. Someone slap me and point me in the right direction. I have not owned an AMD system in years.

Thanks again,

George
What's a fast racing car have to do with a fast and powerful laptop?
Would a Porsche laptop be cool?
Would an Apple roadster be cool?
How about a SAGER sports car?

I don't think it makes any difference, just someone trying to cash in on a name brand.
It is a reasonably nice machine at a reasonable price.
I'm really thinking about this laptop pretty hard, this or a 4080 but can't decide. Hmm..

I hate these decisions.
Quote:
Originally Posted by StormX02
cool ^^
Hi,

I am also owner of an Acer F3000 and the only thing which is getting a little hot is the HDD and the RAM. Because under the Windows sticker on the left front side of the notebook the HDD and not the CPU is placed.

CU
Hows Halo run on this thing (looks good apart from a crappy video card).
Hi,
gdame mentioned upgrading the hdd to a 7200 one. Will the replacement fit straight in? Also, would the video card be upgradeable? Although i have managed on my thinkpad t21 for the last 18 months...

I am nearly sold on it and i can get it here (Ireland) and i am not sure whether sager will ship internationally..btw what is the best price availability in the US?

thanks
Can someone that has the ACER FERRARI 3000 please post their results for the following benchmarks:

3DMARK2001SE
PCMARK2002


I know that these tests are kind of old, but I just want to compare it to some of the other laptops I have been looking at, that have these benchmarks. Thanks for anyinfo.
Hi. I also just ordered the Acer Ferrari 3000LMi. It's my first ever notebook so I'm pretty excited about it. You can download the manual from the acer site:

http://csd.acer.com.tw/acer/URMUL1.N...=50&Expand=5#5
(Go to the link marked 'Ferrari 3000')

StormX02, I will be using Visual Studio.NET for work, and I wonder if there are problems with your VC++ (I'm presuming you're using version 6). Also, can the E-mail notification light be associated with an IMAP account? I think the notebook has its own software for checking POP3 mails but I'm not sure if it can do IMAP.
Hi guys. Thank you for your thorough reviews. I noticed Ferrari a couple of week ago and I am fascinated by it. It has very good configuration and all the communication interfaces which is great. I may say i have decided to buy it but before ordering I 'd like to get some more opinions.
Ferrari has a lot of attractive features (design, interfaces) but if we leave all these apart for a while, how would you qualify the Athlon processor. What about its performance compared to Intel Centrino at 1.6 GHz, 1.7 Ghz. The battery life is the one point; with this regard the real "heat" that is given offdissipated.... Other pluses/minuse in favour to Athlon? For instance, the FSB in Intel Centrinos is 400 MHz, in the P4s it exceeds 500 MHz and in Athlon XP-M it is the "classical" 266 MHz. How about that? Surely, an advantage of Ferrari is the 333 MHz DDR compared to the 266 of some others Centrino based models.
I don't think this processor thing could make buy a Centrino notebook like Aspire 2003LMi (which I am also considering or was considering before studying thoroughly the Ferarri) but may be this is the last thing that makes me hesitate whether to order it right away.
Another question, you (StormX02, gdame) mentioned about melting the stickers on the right (smb said there is the HDD not the CPU, but still) after how many hours of operation the stickers "melt"?
And another question, how about the display? Is it inverting the colors when you look it from aside?A friend of mine bought a Fujitsu 8830 and its display is poor: when you look at it from aside u can see almost nothing. Some models I have looked in carefully (HP nx7000, Aspire 2000) have vertical viewing angle +-55 grad and horzontal +=65 grad. I have not managed to get to such specs for the Ferrari. However, what's yr feelin whenu look at an angle at the display. Is it decent?
Installing XP Pro isn't too bad. You can get the original drivers here:

http://support.acer-euro.com/drivers/downloads.html

I had some problems figuring out the AMD power now driver, but all you have to do is go into Device Manager->Processors and click on properties and then install new driver. tell it to look for the file in the folder you downloaded.
The Ferrari will handle FFXI with no problems at all.

I have a Presario 2810T with P4M 1.9 M964mb and run the game at XGA with no slowdowns at all. All visual effects on high.
I was able to return my new Travelmate 800LCi to J&R. Here is what I didn't like and hope it is addressed by the Ferrari:
- 800LCi is being phased out and the Ferrari is much more recent
- Poor performance as the 800 is a 1.4 Centrino. Shouldn't be a problem, for the Athlon-M 2500+
- Extremely loud DVD/CDRW due to the modular bay. It improved if I squeezed the sides. Can someone let me now if their DVD-RW is very loud?
- Loud/long fan when watching movies. Probably due to being underpowered. Can someone share their experience with fan volume?
- Only one memory module is easily reached since the other is under the keyboard. This is the same for the Ferrari
- Poor style. Definetely addressed by the Ferrari red
- Creaking on the lower right-hand side. The Ferrari's metallic face should not have this.
My other option would be an IBM R40 (Centrino 1.5) where:
- Ferrari has much worse battery life,
- the 2nd memory module issue and
- slow 4200rpm drive and
- average wireless reception, but
+ IBM R40 is larger, thicker, and
+ is ugly !
Is the IBM better quality/support?

This would be my only copmuter for programming, music, movies, browsing...
thanks
Hi,

I also have the Ferrari 3000 + XP Pro. The performances are just ok, but The FSB is fixed to 133Mhz and not 166Mhz . That makes the memory access at 266Mhz and not 333Mhz as stated on the specifications!

Any idea on how to change it?

Thx.
If anyone could help answer ANY of the following questions, it would be greatly appreciated ! Just got myself a new Ferrari 3000 last week, the first one to arrive was faulty (noisy hard-drive causing system instability and personal irritability ), however Acer dispatched a new one immediately which is thoroughly quieter and problem free.
I'm reasonably happy with it so far, especially its design, however....there are some issues that are annoying to say the least. (1) Cant play Halo without it crashing constantly, even though i've switched it to Desktop in powermodes, its glitchy,slow and loaded with graphical errors! WHY!!??? (2) When i booted up primarily, the total space available was just SLIGHTLY over 50GB....am sure its supposed to be 60GB?? WHY!!?? (3) Cant get the processor to achieve greater than 1.32GHZ,usually sits around the 686mhz should it not be 1.86 or thereabouts?? WHY!!?? (4) I seem to have somehow disabled the Fn(function) key, so cannot use keyboard volume controls or Fn keys etc...any ideas what i've done to disable it and how to re-enable it !!?? I contacted 'Acer help' however,the assistant i spoke to wasn't sure what day of the week it was and was probably unable to tie her own shoelaces, she was absolutely useless.....nice person...but had a very limited knowlege of the product. She suggested that i increase the ram to 768MB which i did and it hasn't made the slightest bit of difference to Halo SO....if Stormx02 or any of you other happy Ferrari owners are able to help answer or make (NON ACER)suggestions, it would make my WEEK !! Thanks
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