The new Alienware Area-51 Threadripper Edition shares the Triad chassis design that previous generation Area-51 systems were built upon. From a design and stylistic standpoint, we really like the look of Dell's case, but we've gotten feedback that it's kind of a love or or hate it affair. We'd sit firmly in the "love-it" column, and we can tell you that mechanically and thermally, the design works exceptionally well. Cool air is drawn in from the front of the chassis, where there are top and bottom mounted intake fans pushing air into the case. The rear of the chassis has an opposite configuration, with the PSU fan and CPU radiator fan pulling warm air out of the rear of the chassis. It's a mechanical design implementation that just works and for a 16-core/32-thread beast with a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti on board, it's very quiet system as well.We should note that this is afrom Alienware, however, so things could change a bit. Regardless, here's a quick guided video tour of the beastly new Dell-Alienware Area-51 Threadripper Edition, along with a benchmark run or two. Then we'll finish-up with a gallery of high res centerfold shots to get you steamed-up, along with some benchmark screen grabs...

AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X 16-Core Processor 3.4/4GHz



16GB DDR4-2666MHz DRAM System Memory



NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti GPU With 11GB GDDR5X



512GB M.2 NVMe PCI Express Solid State Drive



1TB 7200 RPM HDD



Pricing TBD







Again, the Area-51 chassis itself hasn't changed much from previous versions of the Alienware flagship gaming desktop, but clearly Dell and Alienware had to engineer a more robust AIO liquid cooling solution for AMD's Threadripper 1950X 16-core beast of a CPU. What's interesting is that you'll notice that the Ryzen Threadripper's CPU cooler mounting posts are offset slightly around the socket area, with a larger spread between them on one side of the socket versus the other. Side note: we were itching to pull off Alienware's pump and cold plate to pull out the Threadripper chip underneath it, but we decided to come back to that another day, after a few more benchmark runs are cataloged on this currently rare other-worldly machine.



The Dell

The Dell Alienware Area-51 Threadripper Edition also brings back a couple of tried and true Alienware custom design features, like the back side storage mounting area with cages for both 2.5-inch and up to three 3.5-inch hard drives. Our system was outfitted with a 1TB Toshiba 7200 RPM SATA drive for bulk storage, but as you can see, there's an M.2 NVMe SSD populated in a motherboard socket as well, for blazing-fast OS boot drive storage. Finally, though only one NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti graphics card occupies the first slot, as you can see, the Area-51's custom GPU card cage and retainer brackets have slots for another two GPUs, for tri-SLI or Crossfire, if that's your thing. We're considering dropping in another GTX 1080 Ti, just for grins, in the weeks ahead.

AMD Ryzen Threadripper 1950X Benchmarks (Cinebench R15)

For now, this is about all we can show you for benchmarks with this savage, many-core Alien machine, though we promise to return in short order with copious amounts of benchmark data to pour through...



