logo

logo

DELL Precision 7760 Review Part 1: DELL old bottles中文

2021-07-29 10:22:13 | Source:song1118FairReviews | Writer:song1118
Ten years ago, in 2010, I purchased the Precision M6500, a mobile workstation produced by DELL for the first time. Since then, with the annual update, I purchased M6700, 7710, 7720, 7730, 7740, 7750, and only M6600 during the period. I didn't buy it with

Article introduction

The original text is in Chinese, and it was translated by Google.Please understand that there are some unsatisfactory words!The original text can be viewed at https://www.song1118.com.

The Part 1 is less than 2000 words, 40 pictures, divided into the following chapters:

Inertia

Unboxing

Exterior

Port

Mouse and keyboard

Screen

Upgrade

Expect

1639794510501209.jpg 

 

Inertia

Ten years ago, in 2010, I purchased the Precision M6500, a mobile workstation produced by DELL for the first time. Since then, with the annual update, I purchased M6700, 7710, 7720, 7730, 7740, 7750, and only M6600 during the period. I didn't buy it with M6800, but I had a short experience.

Ten years later, in 2021, I habitually purchased the DELL 2021 mobile workstation flagship model Precision 7760.


 

Unboxing

For the DELL Precision 7760 (hereinafter referred to as 7760) purchased this time, the order was placed on July 2 and the received time was July 27.

1639794511641710.jpg 

It was directly sent from Kunshan, Jiangsu Province, using China Post. This time, there were three more stickers from China Post Yueyang Branch on the outer box. The resulting green pattern text was very dazzling on the original Dell packaging.

1639794511424876.jpg 

The internal packaging is the same as the 7750 I reviewed last year. It still uses an environmentally friendly pulp protection module. The right side is a cardboard-separated power storage space.

1639794511547326.jpg 

Packing list: 7760 body, power supply and power cord, and three paper documents in semi-permeable plastic bag.

1639794511776553.jpg 

The power supply and power cord are exactly the same as the previous generation, 240W. I took a photo and looked at it and stored it directly before using it, because the author had multiple DELL 240W power supplies before.

1639794511661345.jpg 

 

Exterior

The top view of the top cover (commonly known as A side) of the 7760 is as follows: Champagne gold gray metal, the center is the DELL logo, the upper edge has a clearly separated strip of the same color, the material should be plastic, and the gray-black shaft part can be vaguely seen below . The author did not find any difference with the previous generation 7750.

1639794511653851.jpg 

The top view of the bottom of the 7760 (commonly known as the D side) is as follows: each of the upper and lower edges has a long rubber foot pad, and the lower part (equivalent to the rear of the bottom of the fuselage when laid flat) is mainly a dense heat dissipation grille. The appearance is still the same as the previous generation.

1639794511418402.jpg 

The front view of the 7760 is as follows: without any ports

1639794511842603.jpg 

The rear view of the 7760 is as follows: there is a heat dissipation grille on the left and right, the middle part is the port, and the external power interface near the left heat dissipation grille.

1639794512104579.jpg 

The top view of the 7760 when the upper cover of the screen is opened is as follows: Due to the viewing angle, the screen looks close to 16:10, but in fact it is still 16:9, the same ratio as the previous generation.

1639794512645417.jpg 

The maximum opening angle of the screen cover of the 7760 is as shown in the figure below: it is about 135 degrees. Like the previous generation, it cannot be expanded by 180 degrees.

1639794838805179.jpg 

Above the screen is a microphone array and a camera with a physical shielding switch. This time I chose the model with the WWAN (wireless wide area network) pre-installed at the factory, so there is no infrared camera that supports Windows Hollo face recognition.

1639794838878096.jpg 

The overall appearance and structure of the 7760 is the same as the previous generation. The body is full of rigidity, feels cold to the hand, and has a good texture.

1639794838320386.jpg 

1639794839847668.jpg

Perhaps it is the problem of the difference in the assembly level of the factory. The author found that there are obvious imperfections in the left and right corners of the upper cover:

1639794839570865.jpg 

1639794839153067.jpg

At the same time, it was found that there were obvious traces on the bottom side of a fixed screw hole. The author suspected that it was the traces left by the high-speed rotation of the screwdriver accidentally during assembly during production.

1639794839322395.jpg

 

 

Port

The ports on the left side of the 7760 fuselage are as follows from left to right:

Two USB-C 3.2.2/Thunderbolt 4.0 ports, one USB-A 3.2.1 port (supporting PowerShare shutdown power supply), and one SC smart card reader.

Compared with the previous generation 7750, the Thunderbolt port has been upgraded from 3.0 to 4.0.

1639794839880610.jpg 

The ports on the right side of the 7760 fuselage are as follows from left to right as shown in the figure below:

SD card reader, 3.5mm audio output and input composite jack, 2 USB-A 3.2.1 ports, security keyhole.

No difference from the previous generation.

1639794839833742.jpg 

The ports on the rear of the 7760 fuselage are as follows from left to right as shown in the figure below:

miniDP 1.4 port, HDMI 2.1 port, RJ-45 port, power port.

Compared with the previous generation, the HDMI port has been upgraded from 2.0 to 2.1.

1639794839393477.jpg 

Mouse and keyboard

The keyboard and mouse of the 7760 are exactly the same as the previous generation. For its layout and experience, you can check the author's evaluation of the 7750 last year, and I will not repeat it here.

1639795042657831.jpg 

What I chose this time is the configuration of the power button with integrated fingerprint. Officially, the fingerprint recognition function logo is affixed on the side of the power button in the upper right corner of the keyboard.

1639795042763029.jpg 

Screen

With the physical size of the B-side of the 7760, switching to a 16:10 ratio screen is actually completely stress-free.

However, compared with the previous generation, the screen of the 7760 has been improved. This 7760 is equipped with the highest gear 4K 120Hz screen. The detailed technical parameters are as follows: Option three in the chart: Brightness up to 500nits, The contrast ratio is 1200:1, the color gamut is 100% Adobe, the refresh rate is 120Hz, and the power consumption is also the highest of the three, with a peak value of 12.2 watts.

Compared with the top-mounted screen of the previous generation 7750, the refresh rate has been increased from 60Hz to 120Hz, and the peak power consumption has been slightly increased from 12 watts to 12.2 watts.

1639795042506264.jpg 

The author will use SpyderX Elite to measure it according to the usual practice, and the test results will be issued in subsequent serials.

1639795042520384.jpg 

Upgrade

The detailed configuration of the 7760 I chose this time is shown in the following chart: The yellow font in the figure is two 32GB DDR4 3200 memory, a 2TB Samsung 980Pro SSD and two 128GB Samsung SM951 SSD hard drives that I have replaced by myself.

The official configuration price is about ¥46,000, plus the self-upgrading parts, the total price is about ¥51,000.

1639795042150763.jpg 

In order to replace the memory and install the hard disk, it is necessary to disassemble the machine.

The disassembly of the 7760 is exactly the same as that of the 7750, and the bottom is fixed with 8 screws.

1639795042193497.jpg 

The bottom cover uses a large number of copper heat sinks in the parts corresponding to the three main hard disk bays, wireless network cards and wireless wide area cards.

1639795042169914.jpg 

The official factory-equipped hard disk is installed in the position of the secondary hard disk that supports quick release close to the wireless network card:

1639795042331488.jpg 

Take it apart and take a look, the model is Micron 2300:

1639795042519449.jpg 

I tested the three main hard disk locations one by one, and found that none of them support M.2 SATA SSD

1639795043316231.jpg

the reason seems to be that the factory default BIOS of the 7760 is RAID On, and the new platform uses the Intel VMD controller- ---intel VMD (Volume Management Device) is a deployment solution launched by a new generation of storage, which supports hot upgrade and replacement of NVMe SSDs from the PCIe bus without shutting down the system.

As for the 4 hard disk locations of the 7760, which one or all support PCIe 4.0, the author will conduct actual testing in the follow-up.

1639795043473797.jpg

By the way, the interface of the UEFI/BIOS Steup of the 7760 is also refreshed, and the viewing operation is more comfortable and convenient than the previous generation.

1639795043537494.jpg 

A single 8GB memory pre-installed at the factory, installed in slot C under the keyboard:

1639795214600312.jpg 

So I had to start disassembling the keyboard on the C side:

 1639795214765154.jpg

Replaced with two 32GB DDR4 3200 SK hynix memory. In fact, the 7760 official also supports DDR4 3466 memory, but unfortunately it cannot be selected when placing an order, and it is not available on the market.

1639795214808624.jpg 

After changing the memory, a warning appears when the 7760 starts up, and the onboard diagnostic system prompts that the system memory has changed. At this time, you can choose to continue, enter the BIOS Setup, or diagnose:

1639795214816804.jpg 

After the diagnosis, everything went well, and the 64GB memory accurately identified:

1639795215855124.jpg 

After completing the above disassembly and assembly process, the author found that the four antennas of the WWAN card pre-installed on this 7760 factory, the installation also has the problem of irregular operation by the production line employees: the bottom of the figure below is the author installed the WWAN card on the 7750 last year. In the picture, the official standard installation position of the WWAN antenna should be inside the cable management slot, and the 4 WWAN antennas above the 7760, whose bending and turning parts are no longer in the cable management slot, fortunately there is still space on the bottom cover of the 7760. Otherwise, under such circumstances, the two parts must be squeezed when installing the bottom cover, causing undue deformation.

1639795215165896.jpg 

In addition, although the above disassembly and assembly do not have a heat dissipation part, it is impossible to fully observe the full picture of the new generation NVIDIA graphics card used in the 7760, but through comparison, the author still found that the 7760 DGFF graphics card this time has some changes: the silver white rectangular connection of the 7760 The number of filters becomes two groups.

1639795216334964.jpg  

The left side of the picture below is 7760, and the right side is 7750. It can be seen that the number of silver-white rectangular connectors of 7760 in the yellow box is two groups, which is three groups less than the number of 7750 in the red box.

However, on the motherboard, both maintain an idle FPC beam connector position.

1639795217187558.jpg

 

Expect

In summary, the appearance and internal structure of the 7760, compared with the previous generation 7750, can be said to be completely the same. This is the origin of the subtitle "DELL Old Bottle" in this article.

However, in this "old bottle", DELL of course poured in "new wine"-this 7760 uses the new Intel 11th generation mobile standard version of the CPU i9-11950H, Nvidia's new generation of laptop version of the professional graphics card RTX A5000 , 4K screen with 120Hz refresh rate, support for PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD, Thunderbolt 4 blessing, HDMI minor upgrade to 2.1, etc. All of these still make the author very much looking forward to the performance of the 7760!

1639795217888398.jpg 

DELL Precision 7760 evaluation serial 1 ends here, serial 2:


Stay tuned!


Post your Opinion

There are 0 comments