Dell Inspiron 510m

So long as you don't need to carry it too far on your travels, the Inspiron 510m is an excellent general-purpose notebook.… Read full review

Typical price: £1293

Pros

  • Solid performance, good battery life
  • good range of wireless connectivity and expansion ports

Cons

  • Bulky and heavy for a 'thin and light' notebook

Observers of the notebook scene will have long concluded that Dell can make thoroughly worthy mid-range products, and the Inspiron 510m is further evidence of this. Of its kind, the 510m is notably well equipped. If you're happy to trade off size and weight for flexibility and connectivity, you might as well get the works -- and with parallel, serial, dual USB, IEEE 1394, infrared, SVGA, PC Card, modem and 10/100 Ethernet, there's not a lot you can't plug in except a PS/2 keyboard or mouse.

Our review model came with a dual-band 802.11a/b/g adapter and Bluetooth (much more wireless, and it would be able to talk to Beagle 2). There's a choice of four or six cell battery (ours had the latter), and a storage device bay that came with a DVD/CD-RW drive but will also house an extra 40GB hard disk to augment the 60GB internal drive. All this comes at the expense of a certain bulk that belies Dell's 'thin and light' designation for the 510m. At 2.6kg and 33cm (W) by 27 cm (D) by 3.3cm (H), this is no miniature of the species, and Dell's muted styling in silvers, greys and cobalt is an exercise in futuristic workmanlike aesthetics. Everything works well enough: the lid release button is solid, positive and easy to operate; the stereo speakers recessed into the front produce enough volume for personal consumption and sound as good as a reasonably expensive transistor radio; the keyboard and two-button trackpad are as good as twelve years of portable computer experience can make them. However, you'll look in vain for smartcard readers, integrated cameras or keyboard lights -- the 510m isn't that sort of beast. Functionally, the Inspiron 510m does the job. It has some good points: for example, the 802.11a/b/g Dell TrueMobile 1400 wireless LAN module, which is based on Broadcom's BCM4039 chip, has been reported to work under Linux; also, the 1,400 by 1,050 SVGA+ resolution 15in. TFT display is fine in most office, home and transport lighting conditions. Among the less good points is the choice of Intel's 855GM integrated graphics system: although most people won't know or care about this, it's not the chip of choice for the ardent gamer. The benchmarks show the computer to be a moderate performer under MobileMark 2002, with a productivity score of 153 -- not out of line for a 1.7GHz Pentium M system with 512MB of RAM, but hardly pulling up trees either. Battery life is good. We got 3 hours 46 minutes out of the MobileMark 2002 test with the supplied 53WHr six-cell battery, and found we could expect around four hours' moderate use with low screen lighting and medium network activity. One tiny niggle: there is a function key combination (Fn+F3) to bring up the battery meter on screen, but unlike other function key shortcuts it doesn't toggle -- once brought up, you have to click on OK or press Enter to remove it. That's a small piece of counter-intuitive design, although the fact that it's noticeable highlights how smoothly the rest of the computer works. As configured above, the Inspiron 510m costs £1,293 (ex. VAT), but the range starts from £908 (ex. VAT) for a 14.1in. screen, 1.4 GHz Pentium M, 40GB hard disk and no Bluetooth. Being a thoroughly online company, Dell prefers you to seek your warranty and support options through its Web site. As specified, the review system includes a three-year European collect and return policy -- you can boost that to next business day on-site maintenance for £49 (ex. VAT). Electronic documentation, Web-based tutorials and live chat links to Dell technical support staff come through the Solution Center software, and there is no shortage of other online areas for discussion and problem resolution. Dell's Inspiron 510m is a solid performer, if a little too solid for extreme portability. Doughty rather than flashy, it will fit into a wide variety of roles in the business and at home and makes an excellent general purpose notebook for those who don't have to travel too far. NOTE: Dell’s E-Value code for this review system is 200 I12REV

Specifications

Audio
Audio processor Sigma Tel C-Major Audio
Microphone yes
Speakers stereo
Audio connectors microphone, headphone
Battery
Battery technology Li-ion
Battery capacity 4700 mAh
Cabinet (chassis)
Dimensions (W x H x D) 33.3x3.3x27.3 cm
Weight 2.57 kg
Display
Display technology colour TFT
Display diagonal size 15 in
Maximum resolution 1400x1050 pixels
Expansion slots
PC Card 1 x Type II
Hard drive storage
Hard drive interface type Ultra ATA/100
Hard drive size 60 GB
Rotation speed 5400 rpm
Storage controller Ultra-ATA/100
Input
Pointing devices two-button touchpad
Keyboard 88 keys
Interfaces & networking
Serial 1
Parallel 1
USB 2
FireWire (IEEE 1394) 1
Ethernet Intel PRO/100 VE Network Connection
Modem BCM V.92 56K Modem
VGA (analogue) 1
Video out S-Video
Infrared 1
Docking station port yes
Wireless LAN Dell TrueMobile 1400 Dual Band WLAN Mini-PCI Card
Memory
RAM installed 512 MB
Number of memory slots 2
RAM capacity 1 GB
RAM type SDRAM
Motherboard
Chipset Intel 855GM
Data bus speed 400 MHz
Optical storage
CD / DVD type CD-RW/DVD-ROM combo
OS & software
Operating system Windows XP Home
Software included Norton Anti-Virus 2003, Dell E-Support Solution Centre, Microsoft Works 7.0
Processor
Processor manufacturer Intel
Processor model Pentium M
Clock speed 1.7 GHz
Service & support
Standard warranty 3 years
Expand

Member reviews

Low price machine, but great performance and value overall.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
Reply 9 Feb 04 00:26 Reply

Great performance and features for the price. Opted for 1.4GHz, 15in. XGA, 512MB RAM, 60GB HD and TrueMobile b/g card for just over £900! FireWire and USB 2.0 comes as standard. DVD playback is OK and sound is good for a laptop -- MP3s sounds better than I'd expect, particularly through decent headphones. Wi-Fi works well in 'g' mode anywhere in the house (much better than other laptops I've tried).

It's not exactly small with a 15in. display but it's lighter than many rivals. Standard battery life could be better -- I wonder if the non-Centrino Wi-Fi card makes it worse; I may invest in an additional MediaBay battery.

Overall a very competent laptop - I don't think you can find better value from any other reputable manufacturer - and delivered 6 days after ordering!

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
Reply 18 Feb 04 23:45 Reply

I'm typing this on my new 510m. Great spec for the price -- used the e-val code in this review, timed with £100 off and double mem offers got me 1GB RAM, 1.7GHz P-M, etc. for under £1200. Unfortunately they shipped it with wrong Wi-Fi card. First they blamed it on their system then said it was unavailable. And they had the audacity to suggest I buy the tm1400 when it was back in stock! Is the call centre in India? A firm grasp of English was definitely an issue while trying to sort out the error.

Member's rating:
  • 8.00 out of 10
8.00 out of 10
Reply 7 Mar 04 00:16 Reply

Member's rating:
  • 9.00 out of 10
9.00 out of 10
Reply 12 Mar 04 07:16 Reply

What a great slick and sharp screen. Very low noise and quite fast. This is my desktop replacement and I'm amazed that the sound of this machine is quite OK for a laptop!

Member's rating:
  • 7.50 out of 10
7.50 out of 10
Reply 12 Mar 04 21:20 Reply

Update to my previous review - 3 weeks of trying to get an incorrect part replaced have got nowhere. The past week has seen 2 ignored emails, 1 ignored Web enquiry (with 'guaranteed' 24hr response) and several promises to return calls unfulfilled. I cannot bear the thought of 3 years of having to deal with this call centre until my warranty runs out. The laptop is being returned.

Member's rating:
  • 6.50 out of 10
6.50 out of 10
Reply 19 Mar 04 17:18 Reply

Member's rating:
  • 10.00 out of 10
10.00 out of 10
Reply 21 May 04 14:06 Reply

Everything is excellent with this notebook. But if you are a gamer, then don't buy this one. The Intel Extreme Graphics 2 (shared memory, max 64MB) cannot compare to graphic chips with separate memory.

Member's rating:
  • 8.00 out of 10
8.00 out of 10
Reply 6 Jun 04 09:41 Reply

Placed my order on Monday luchtime and the machine arrived by Thursday. Invoice arrived the day after. No need for support so far, hence the rating. Seems solid enough, though the keyboard is a little mushy, especially when the keys aren't hit centrally -- probably more my lazy typing style.

Fairly pleasing to the eye... and also the pocket; I think this is a neat little machine which is built to last and be upgradable. In short, everything I was looking for. Would recommend to others.

Member's rating:
  • 8.50 out of 10
8.50 out of 10
Reply 25 Jun 04 22:47 Reply

Good machine on paper (512MB RAM, 2.4GHz processor), but within months took minutes to start up and was running slowly (slower than four-year-old 128MB, 366MHz Compaq). The final straw was an LCD failure, so it is now relegated to the desktop with external screen. Our business has bought four, had several problems, and will not buy Dell again.

Member's rating:
  • 5.50 out of 10
5.50 out of 10
Reply 13 Jul 04 10:59 Reply

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