Specifications

iBUYPOWER Gamer Paladin F860-a
Processor Intel Core i7-940 2.93GHz
Motherboard Asus X58 P6T Deluxe
Memory 6GB Corsair DDR3
Video Card ATI Radeon HD4870 1GB
Power Supply NZXT PP-800 800 Watt
Case Coolermaster HAF (High Air Flow) 932
Hard Drive 1 TB SATAII Samsung HD103UJ
OS Vista Home Premium 64-bit, SP1
Removables Memory Card Reader
DVD Burner LG Blu-ray/HD-DVD ROM DVD+/-RW SATA
LG 22x DVD+/-RW PATA
CPU Cooler Intel Core i7 Stock HSF

The Paladin F860-a we received has a nice mix of components for a midrange system. Sticker price is $1975 before shipping, a good price point for an "upper midrange" computer, though definitions vary as components get ever cheaper. The power supply is definitely oversized, but this does allow room for expansion - a lot of room.

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  • Hxx - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    You're basically paying $255 for the commodity of having it aseembled for you.
  • san1s - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    don't forget paying for the building the computer was assembled in, the worker's wages, power/water bills...
    $255 over is a very good deal
  • Rasterman - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    I totally agree, in fact its quite a good deal IMO, if you are building a similarly specced machine you would be crazy not to just get a pre built one with being fully tested, warranty, etc, although I think the case is quite ugly in this one IMO. I was astonished how little markup there is, I thought it would be well over $400.

    What I would love to see is Newegg or Zipzoomfly offer a build option, order all your parts from them, and pay them $200 or whatever to completely assemble, test, and warranty the build, that would be awesome. Probably the biggest bonus I can see to this is getting a known working system, I can't stress how infuriating it is to get all your parts and build your system only to find out one component is bad then having to wait to get another. With a build option they could handle all of this for you and more quickly. And even worse is getting a glitchy product that causes intermittent problems.
  • Hxx - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    FYI u can get a glitchy product that causes intermittent problems with a prebuilt computer too. They're just "testing" it - whatever that means.
  • vol7ron - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    i agree. and not only that, moved into an apartment where i dont really have space to build anymore. this is what i'm looking at doing next.
  • MadMan007 - Monday, April 20, 2009 - link

    How much space do you need to build a PC?
  • poohbear - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    why do u guys even bother reviewing these pre-built fully loaded systems? most of us are enthusiasts that like to MAKE our own comps, it takes all the fun out of it if u pay someone else to build it for u. Seriously, just review parts, who cares what some company that caters to rich folks can offer.
  • snookie - Monday, June 1, 2009 - link

    "most of us are enthusiasts that like to MAKE our own comps,"

    Most of us? Who are most of us?

    Check their prices. Hardly catering to "rich folks".
  • Hxx - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    I agree, however unfortunately not everybody can follow a walkthrough on "how to build ur own computer in a few easy steps".
  • vol7ron - Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - link

    it's not a waste of time. putting my own parts together was fun when i had time (and excess parts to test). it's no fun when you have multiple dead parts all at the same time and you don't know what it is, with no voltmeter to check.

    this is exactly as someone else said, taking newegg, putting it together, and charging a premium for the service. it's like getting a dell, with actually good parts. not to mention, if it's not working when you get it, just send it back; no need to hassle with the testing.

    i also would like to see other "competitors" in this genre as cyberpower seems to be the only one and they're a little pricey.

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