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Dell Inspiron 9400

100% Positive Reviews
Rated #54 in Notebooks

Posted
I needed a laptop with a dual core processor, but also a decent graphics card. The Inspiron 9400 was one of the only laptops available that had both, and at £1950, it’s not a bad price either. Thanks to UPS, I received the laptop within two days of placing my order with Dell.

Also in the box
  • * 2 x 9 cell 80mWh Li-ion batteries
  • * AC adaptor
  • * Snap-on LCD cover (Carbon fibre design)

Features

The laptop came shipped with the usual bloat. Dell’s utilities, free trials and a copy of XP MCE 2005. MCE is fine, but I needed domain support and other stuff included with XP Pro, so the first thing I did was format and install XP Professional. MCE isn’t needed anyway because Dell’s MediaDirect utility, which is just a customized version of windows on a hidden partition is included. It’s accessed by pressing a button on the keyboard. The laptop itself is a great piece of kit, but Dells sloppy programmers set a bad impression.

The laptop has media controls on the front, which let you control the volume and move through tracks while the lid is down. There are also four inbuilt speakers and a subwoofer, delivering high quality audio not normally possible from inbuilt speakers. They left out gigabit ethernet which was a big disappointment. 100Mbps isn’t that fast anymore, especially when you’re moving uncompressed DV files around.

Battery life isn’t bad either. I bought two 9-cell 80mWh batteries, which provide about 2 hours of battery life each. The batteries take about an hour to charge from 10% to 100%, and there are inbuilt power saving features. The network card can be configured to turn itself off when on battery power and if no network cable is connected. The screen brightness can also be lowered to preserve battery life.

The touchpad is ok when you’re on the move. The buttons feel expensive, and the accuracy and sensitivity of the touchpad is good. The only thing lacking is a numeric keypad, the numpad is overlaid onto the keyboard, meaning you have to hold function and a letter to get a number, or use the main number above the keyboard. Once you get Dell’s drivers installed, lots of functions can be controlled through hotkeys. The radio can be toggled, screen brightness adjusted, DVD drive ejected, and the external video output and volume can be controlled.

The LCD was the most impressive thing when I opened the box. Being used to a 1280×1024 CRT monitor, a 1920×1200 widescreen LCD really impressed me. Everything looks so small! Having a high res panel is a good thing though, there’s more room to fit everything on and you don’t have to maximize windows.

WiFi comes as standard, and the range on the included Intel 3945 card is very impressive. I have no problems connecting from 70m or so away from the router.

Dell included an ExpressCard slot, dropping the aging PCMCIA format. There are only a few Expresscards available at present. No external WiFi for wardriving, no TV tuners, and no 3G CDMA cards. In a few months time, when manufacturers start to make Expresscards, this situation should improve.

Dell have apparently stopped shipping recovery CDs. Instead, they use a hidden partition on your hard drive which contains an image of the OS as it left the factory. The partition’s about 5gb in size, so the best thing to do is delete it. If you email Dell support a few times, you can persuade them to mail you the recovery CDs.
Benchmarks

The 7800 Go is rated by NVIDIA as 400Mhz clock speed and 1.1Ghz memory bus, but Dell underclock it to 250/688. The main problem is heat dissipation. Even so, I managed to get the frequencies to 330/830 which peaks at a tempareture of 75º. The frequencies can easily be changed with third party drivers such as the XTreme-G MobileForce driver set.

PC Mark 04 rates all aspects of a PCs performance. The other benchmarks focus mainly on graphics, meaning the 9400 usually loses to the XPS due to only having a 7800 Go whereas the XPS has a 7800 Go GTX, with more pixel pipelines.

The 9400 isn’t far behind the XPS in FarCry and Doom 3, despite having 8 pixel pipelines less. The Dual Core makes up for the difference.

Again, there isn’t much of a gap between the 9400 and the XPS, even though the XPS has a much more powerful graphics card the the 9400.
Pictures

Accessories

The carbon fibre case which came with the laptop is nice, but nowhere near worth the £35 Dell charge for it. I fell like they’ve taken advantage a bit, trying to get peoples’ money when they’re caught up spending £2000 for a laptop, what’s another £35.

I bought a Jansport Air Logic bag for my 9400. It’s got plenty of padding on the straps, lots of space inside and doesn’t look like a laptop bag (which is a good thing). I’d advise against buying it if you’re in the UK though, or if you do, find a UK supplier. I bought it from a company in the US, and got stung with the import duty, meaning the shipping cost nearly twice as much as the bag itself.

Low availability of ExpressCards means that wardriving is off for the moment, or atleast until someone makes a linux driver for the IPW 3945. I bought a GPS, which I’m happy with. It’s loads better than my TomTom because you’re not limited by the number of Points of Interest you can add, and the laptop speakers is much louder.

10th June 2006: The IPW3945 driver for Linux has finally been released, so WarDriving under linux is possible.

Conclusion

Overall, the 9400 is a good laptop. It tends to overheat alot when playing graphics intensive games like Oblivion, even though the GPU is underclocked. I think this is probably a problem most notebooks experience due to the small space the components are crammed in to. I wouldn’t buy a performance notebook again, purely for the fact that desktops are clearly better for gaming and upgradability. There are still hardly any ExpressCards available, whereas you can get PCMCIA versions of sound cards, TV cards and WiFi cards with external antenna connections. The IPW3945 WiFi card still isn’t fully supported under linux, and after hours of frustration I was ready to buy an earlier model and swap it with that. The only problem was that Intel decided to change the connection type from all previous IPW generations, meaning the whole concept of MiniPCI cards goes down the pan.

Next time, I’d buy an Ultra portable such as the 123 Alienware Sentia which only weighs 2Kg, just over half the 3.6Kg of the 9400. I was really torn whether to buy an XPS or a 9400, and if I could go back I’d go for the XPS. The lights kick ass, you get a PCMCIA slot and it has gigabit ethernet.

The Inspiron 9400 is a great laptop. The graphics are amazing and battery life is better than I expected. Overall, I’d definately recommend the 9400 as both a desktop replacement and a notebook ideal for people on the go.

Also available at LegHumped.com

Posted
This(Dell 9400/E1705) laptop is a great computer for 'most' power users.

Pro's

Processor.

Firstly the dual core processor is very fast, in my case which can be upgraded to a Core 2 Duo. I currently get around 27 seconds for 1M super pi which is darn quick. You can upgrade to a 2.33 C2D CPU if you have the extra $$$ for around $1000AU. This would the give you possibly the fastest laptop currently on the market.

Video Card.

There is only one work to describe Nvidia's 7900 series - and that is...............wow. This card is designed for gamers, and it really shows 3D mark scores (3d mark05) of around 5500 at std clock settings. But this card is really at it's best when O/Ced. This process takes u up to another level. The highest score I have achieved so far is 3D Mark 05 of 9199. This will play all the current games at either high or at extreme settings. The best bit is that the chassis can be modified to support the monster 512meg 7900 GTX.

Con's

The biggest issue that most users and myself included is light leakage. In my case it is rather minor some users however have had major issues on this. But for me and this laptop the screen is a beauty, while I have some minor light leakage it is a very minor issue.

Design would have to be the second issue, lets face it when it comes to looks this laptop missed out!!!! - To me this can be fixed but I wanted a performance laptop not at beauty contest.

What I really love about this laptop is the ability for the user with some simple skills to modify it as time permits. A bit like a desktop, it's easy to add extra ram, I'm now running 2x1gig 667 DDR2 ram. The ability to swap out CPU's and upgrade to the latest C2D if needed for future proofing. Also the ease at swapping out video cards, when I purchased mune I had the 256 meg geforce 7800 go - now this card is still pretty fast, but I easily upgraded this to the 7900 go. It's this ability to add extra features that really causes me to think this is one of the very best bang for buck laptops on the market.

The bottom line is thus..........................Can you name many performance 17inch laptops which can score over 9000 in the 3D mark05 test, for under $3000AU.................I think not!!!

And that is the bottom line, for the price paid you are getting the latest and fastest components out there, with the ability to upgrade components as you can afford them. Not a bad package is it!!!

edit - updated 3D score, now running a core of 550 and memory of 700 (1400), gives 3D Mark 05 score of 8300 Tested with ATI tools for 30 min no scan issues and heat of around 75 deg C - have oc'ed up to 610/850 for a 9199 3D mark 05 score

edit 2 - Well now it's 2009 and 2.5 years has passed since I brought this laptop - I still believe this unit was one of the best decisions as far as computing was concerned. This unit still performs, still has the original T2600 and was never upgraded. The reason is simple........................why????? This motherboard will not support more than 4 gig of ram and by default has a limited future as 64 bit computing rolls out. But for normal 32 bit OS its still a performer, will play most games and now with the 7950GTX card will do this with little complaint.

The key to the longevity for this unit while others have had failures with the graphic cards was to ensure IK8fanGUI was running all the time keeping the card and other critical components cool. I still have the origional 7900 go graphis card and this ran OC'ed at 550/700 for quite some time but the key was ensuring temps did not exceed 60 deg. Now understand this laptop was used every workday as my work unit - yes on for at least 50 hours per week and was gamed on in BF2142, FEAR, Command and Conquer. In all this time I have not had any failure on the graphics card so really the key is - keep it cool.

Overall - I still rate the Dell 9400 has a good option, now affordable still a reasonable performer and still UGLY!!!!
Dell Inspiron 9400
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Description:

Brand:Dell Model:Inspiron 9400 Processor Type:Intel Core 2 Duo LCD:17" Widescreen Video Card:NVIDIA GeForce Go 7900 GS Weight:8lbs Memory Maximum Amount:up to 4GB (2 slot) Memory Amount:4GB Memory Speed:DDR2 533,DDR2 667 Chipset:Intel 945GM Screen Type:Glossy,Matted Native Resolution:1440 x 900 (WXGA+),1920 x 1200 (WUXGA) Second Monitor Output:DVI and VGA HDMI Out:No S-Video Out:Yes SLI support:No SLI enabled:No Built-in Speakers:2 speakers & Subwoofer Optical Drive 1:DVD/CD-RW,DVD±R/RW Numeric Keypad:No Hardrive 1:80GB 5400rpm SATA 150,100GB 7200rpm SATA 150,120GB 5400rpm SATA 150,160GB 7200rpm SATA 300,200GB 7200rpm SATA 150,250GB 5400rpm SATA 150,320GB 5400rpm SATA 150 Hardrive 2:No Battery Type:9-Cell Lithium-Ion 1 IEEE 1394a (Fire Wire):1 Port USB Ports:6 USB 2.0 Ports Built-in Bluetooth module:Yes,No Built-in TV Tuner:Yes,No Built-in Wireless Device:802.11b/g Built-in Web camera:No Built-in Card reader:5-in-1 Card Reader Video Memory:256MB Fingerprint Reader:No Battery Life:2 Hours+ Height:1.7" Length:11.2" Width:15.4" Secondary Battery:No Hardrive 3:No Raid Configuration:No Optical Drive 2:No Processor Model:T7400 (2.16GHz / 4MB L2 Cache / 667FSB ) Audio Jack Ports:2 S/PDIF Digital Output:No Floppy Drive:No eSATA Port:No Built in 3G/4G:No Optimus Switching:

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