The choice of a 60GB SSD in place of a hard disk improves performance, but the choice of motherboard limits the Viper Carbon CS's potential for expansion
Written By
Published on 25 December 2011
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1 / 4
Our rating
Reviewed price £500 inc VAT
With hard disk prices through the roof currently, Yoyotech has taken a novel approach to building a budget PC: instead of fitting a hard disk, the firm has opted for a 60GB solid state disk (SSD). With Windows 7 installed, this leaves only about 18GB of free space for files, but it also improves performance, boosting the Viper Carbon CS’s 3.1GHz Core i3-2100 processor to the same level of performance as PCs using the 3.3GHz Core i3-2120.It also means that, once hard disk prices come back down, you’ll be able to add plenty of storage to the system and not have to worry about re-installing the operating system. However you’ll have to rely on external storage to get by until that time – portable USB disks haven’t yet increased in price too much. The Viper Carbon CS includes a rare FireWire port, which is mainly used to connect digital camcorders, but it also has eight USB ports, two of which support the faster USB3 standard.Inside the case, there’s limited room for upgrades. There are several free drive bays, each with a quick-release mechanism that makes adding disks and drives a breeze, but there are only two free SATA headers. You can add more via an expansion card, but there are only three free slots for this: one PCI and two PCI-E x1. One of the latter will be unusable if you fit a dedicated graphics card into the single PCI-E x16 slot.
On the outside, there are a few missing ports. The integrated graphics only has VGA and DVI outputs (no HDMI), and audio is limited to three 3.5mm minijacks. This isn’t ideal for connecting to a home cinema setup, but fine for standard PC surround sets. It’s a shame that Yoyotech hasn’t included a DVI cable in the box, given that the HannsG HH221DPB monitor has both VGA and DVI inputs. Image quality isn’t bad via VGA, although we noticed a red cast and contrast isn’t as good as on other budget monitors.
A Microsoft keyboard and mouse set complete the bundle. It’s Microsoft’s cheapest set, and while build quality is what you’d expect from Microsoft, the keys have little travel and are too bouncy. The mouse is lightweight but provides good feedback.
Performance, as we’ve mentioned, was improved by the SSD, but the overall score of 64 in our multimedia benchmarks is nothing special. It’s enough for undemanding users, but you can get better performance elsewhere for the same money. The same is true of 3D performance. The i3-2100’s integrated graphics chip can decode HD video content, but it could only manage 13fps in our DiRT 3 test.
We applaud Yoyotech’s brave decision to go with an SSD instead of a hard drive, setting the Viper Carbon CS up as a long-term investment to be upgraded at a later date, but sadly the choice of motherboard, with its limited expansion potential, undermines this philosophy somewhat. It’s not a bad PC, but it’s overshadowed by the Blu-ray-equipped Palicomp Hyper Flame.
Written by
Barry de la Rosa
Barry de la Rosa has written various articles on a range of topics covering everything from TVs to mobile phones.
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