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B07MP4LK82

Alienware M15 Thin and Light 15" Gaming Laptop i7-8750H, GTX 1070 Max Q, 128GB NVMe SSD + 1TB SSHD, 16GB DDR4 2666Mhz, 17.9mm Thick & 4.78lbs, Magnesium Alloy Chassis

$75960
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Hard Drive128 GB 128GB PCIe M.2 SSD + 1TB (+8GB SSHD) Hybrid Drive Processor4.1 GHz Core i7 8750H Processor BrandIntel
This fits your .
Make sure this fits by entering your model number. Display: 15.6" FHD, Ultra Thin Bezel - Anti Glare IPS Processor: New Intel Core i7-8750H 2.2 - 4.1GHz (6 Cores) Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 8GB GDDR5 RAM & Storage: 16GB DDR4 2666 Mhz, 128GB PCIE M.2 SSD + 1TB SSHD Operating System: Windows 10
3.8
3.8 out of 5
Reviews: 20
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Sanpete
4
Comment
The m15 puts the power of Alienware gaming laptops in a smaller package, with a few losses that may not matter much to you. The main differences between the m15 and the current iteration of Alienwares older line of mainstream gaming laptops, the 15 R4 (often just called 15 at the Dell website), are: -- Roughly 1/8" thinner, 1" less wide, 1-1/8" less deep = .96" (with the feet) x 14.3" x 10.8", with much thinner side bezels. -- About 3 lbs lighter = a little under 5 lbs for this configuration. -- Optional new RTX GPU chips, more powerful for ray-tracing graphics. -- Keyboard with 4-zone RGB lighting instead of per-key, brighter backlight, now has (skinny) number pad, half-size cursor keys, chiclet keys with 30% shorter travel. -- Touchpad 35% larger but with no mouse buttons, no longer illuminated. -- Optional 144Hz FHD (1920x1080) screen. -- Optional 240Hz FHD (1920x1080) screen. -- Optional 60Hz UHD (4K) OLED screen. -- No option for G-Sync screen (helps eliminate tearing at cost of battery life--you can still use G-Sync on external screens). -- Two PCIe M.2 slots (for SSDs) plus 2.5" SATA-3 bay (for HDD or SSD), but SATA bay only available with the 60Wh battery (90W also available). 15 R4 has all three slots even with larger battery. -- An additional USB-A 3.1 port (3 total) instead of a dedicated USB-C (now only USB-C is the Thunderbolt 3 port). -- Lighter 180W power supply = 1.6 lbs (15 R4 uses 240W, 1.8 lbs). -- Easier access to internals (no longer have to remove motherboard). -- No illuminated racing stripes on the sides, logo below screen not backlit. The differences between this 1070 GPU configuration and the base (cheapest) configuration of the m15 are: -- GTX 1070 Max Q GPU with 8GB VRAM instead of 1060 with 6GB, for a 25-35% or more increase in graphics performance. -- 16GB RAM instead of 8. -- 128GB SSD in addition to the base 1TB HDD hybrid (with 8GB SSD). According to user reports, if you dont get this with an SSD in one of the M.2 slots you dont get a heat sink for that area either. For a couple weeks there was conflicting information in the description of the 1070 configuration offered here about whether the screen was 144Hz or 60Hz. That seems to have been cleared up: the description only mentions 60 Hz now. You can easily upgrade the RAM, SSD or HDD at home with a screwdriver, and it doesnt affect your warranty. There was supposed to be a base model with an i5 CPU, but that doesnt seem to be currently offered. More features, personal reactions Update April 11: Ill give details at the end of the review for those who want them, but the upshot is that I had to get my battery replaced. It took 7 business days after I shipped the prepaid box to them. (It took about three weeks for the entire process due to delays that most people shouldnt have trouble with.) The repair itself seems to have gone well, and Im back to using my machine as before. This is surprisingly light for such a burly-looking machine, less than a half-pound heavier than my XPS 9570, not hard to carry around. Its solidly put together, no flexing in the base. The lid and its hinges are suitably stiff, dont flop, wiggle or creak when I shake the machine with the screen at a reasonable angle. Dont know if the hinges will loosen up later. I dont do much gaming (though I did some gaming benchmark tests for this review, see below), but the same things that make this a good gaming setup also make it great for other processor-intensive tasks like photo and video editing, VMs and so on. Its significantly more powerful for some professional tasks than most "pro" laptops like the XPS or MacBook Pro. (Whether the appearance is pro depends on what your profession is.) There are a bunch of screen options for this model, of which this configuration has the cheapest. Here are the options from cheapest to most expensive (with the amount extra from base): FHD (1080p) 60Hz FHD 144Hz (+100) FHD 240Hz (+150) UHD (4K) 60Hz (+250) UHD 60Hz OLED (+350) The FHD 60Hz has its advantages for mobile gaming, since it requires the least processing and battery power to operate at its normal settings. The 144Hz and 240Hz options will offer smoother motion, and even though the 4K options will look better for much material, some will still prefer the higher refresh rates for serious gaming. Video editors, on the other hand, may want one of those 4K screens if thats the resolution theyll be working in. According to Notebook Check, the base FHD 60Hz screen has about an average response time (assuming its the same as for the same screen on the 15 R4), measured at 24ms, on the slow side for gaming. Thats about half as fast as the 144Hz option, which is advertised by Dell as 7ms but measured by Notebook Check at 12ms. The screen is anti-glare, which I prefer. Glossy looks nice until theres a glare issue, and then the matte finish saves eye strain and battery life, since you dont have to turn it up as bright to see. I almost always use laptops plugged in, and performance suffers when unplugged anyway (30% or more performance hit), so the small battery isnt a big deal for me. But if you need it, the 60Wh lasts about 4 hours doing light work or web browsing, screen set low (I usually have it at minimum brightness indoors). Takes a little over an hour to recharge to 90%, about 1:25 for a full charge. Thats while still using it. The 90Wh option naturally gives more time, but it fills up the space for the 2.5" SATA 3 bay. Some of the ports are on the back: power, AGA (see below), Thunderbolt 3 (USB-C), Mini-Display Port, and HDMI. Some people prefer back ports, but I find it easier to use side ports in tight spaces and my lap, and theyre easier to get at in general. The Alienware Graphics Amplifier (AGA) port is a proprietary connection for Alienwares proprietary eGPU system (proprietary here meaning you cant use it with non-Alienware computers). Its a few years old now, and it has its quirks, such as not quite fitting some cards and requiring a computer restart when you want to use it, but its still quite capable, more than Thunderbolt 3 eGPU systems, and its fairly cheap. The idea of hooking up a laptop designed for portability to a device roughly 16 x 7 x 6 inches and weighing over 8 pounds with a card is peculiar on its face, but people have their reasons, and if youre one of those people, the port is ready. Since I dont have a desktop, but I do have a 4K TV, I can imagine some use for it someday. The speakers are on the side edges near the front. (The grills above the keyboard must be for cooling.) They benefit from the machine being on a sound-reflective surface. Theyre OK, adequately but not very loud, lacking bass. The headphone jack works fine, and the USB ports have enough juice for my FiiO E10K DAC/amp and moderately demanding Beyerdynamic headphones. This isnt great as a lap laptop unless you have a flat platform to set it on because the main air intake vents are on the bottom. It helps to put something under the back to lift it up a little for better ventilation. I usually use the power cord choke (that little cylinder), which also helps keep cord yanking from damaging the power port. Fan noise isnt too bad. Most of the time I dont hear it, though the left (CPU) fan runs most of the time. When both fans are spinning at 100% its definitely audible but its fairly white noise and not too bothersome unless youre at church or something. The fans dont only spin up in gaming and other intense operations. When I have a dozen tabs open in Firefox, depending on what they are, the fans can also spin up full speed for a few seconds now and then, and sometimes go on for a while at audible levels. That very rarely happens with my 2016 MacBook Pro 15 on which I routinely have 40 or so similar tabs open in Safari with no fan noise. That might be a Firefox or Windows thing, though. The fans dont come on as much when youre operating on battery, no doubt due to the performance limits. The keyboard feels great to me, but Im used to the MBP keyboard, which many people hate. Good travel and feedback, quiet, though the space bar clacks a little. The RGB backlight for the keyboard is very bright. I like it on the lowest of 11 settings that can be controlled with the function keys. I chose white in the color settings, but it retains a slight greenish-blue tint. People in the forums say you cant get it pure white. The light doesnt leak much until you get at a low angle to the keyboard. The keyboard backlight color and numerous other settings including fans and overclocking are controllable, or supposed to be, in the Alienware Command Center program. Its still a work in progress. Ive been able to adjust some things but not others. The program continually calls for the same updates but wont accept them. These are known issues, mostly from before the m15. The surface around the trackpad and below the keyboard has a rubberized feel. It attracts fingerprints (though not as badly as the XPS does). The glossy part above the keyboard shows them even more. A soft cloth removes them. Sleep issue Though theres been less talk about it, the m15 seems to share a sleep issue that has received a fair amount of attention for its Dell sibling XPS 9570. Instead of old-fashioned sleep where the laptop was basically dead to the world until you hit a key or open the lid, these newer Dells use "modern" or "connected" standby, which stays awake enough to receive updates while sleeping. Unfortunately, this kind of sleep also uses more power (1% or more of battery capacity per hour) and the machine sometimes wakes up when you may not want it to, such as when its in a sleeve or backpack. There have been numerous reports of the 9570 being found extremely hot with fans going 100% trying to cool off inside backpacks, though I havent seen any reports of that about the m15, of which there are a lot fewer sold. I have heard my m15 spin up its fans while it was supposedly sleeping, fortunately not in a confined space. If you put your laptop in a backpack or the like, the surest way to prevent this problem is to disable sleep in the settings and use hibernation instead. Hibernation takes longer to wake up, 10-20 seconds, and wont receive updates while asleep, but it uses very little energy and wont wake up unless you make it in the usual ways. Benchmarks and such I ran a bunch of benchmarks so people can more easily compare to other machines. Theyre all free tests you can run on your own machine. I havent altered the processor settings or done a repaste or anything else that would alter performance. These are stock results. In general this machine is fully capable of playing games and doing other processor-intensive tasks at a high level for a laptop. The cooling system is efficient enough to get above-average scores for the processors in some tests. This seems to be (as Notebook Check has suggested) because it handles speed turbo boosting better, despite being smaller than most. The first ones are general performance tests. (PCMark 10s Video score is oddly low, which also pulls down the overall score a little. Ive read that its video test interacts unpredictably with different chip combinations.) Geekbench 4 -- CPU Single-Core: 4948 -- CPU Multi-Core: 21985 -- OpenCL for the 1070 Max Q: 139960 PCMark 10 -- Overall 5338 -- Essentials 8739 -- Productivity 7720 -- Digital Content Creation 6120 -- Apps 11354 -- Chat 7195 -- Web 8171 -- Spreadsheet 10046 -- Writing 5933 -- Photo 8354 -- Rendering 8116 -- Video 3382 Some tests for video and other graphics: Cinebench R15 -- OpenGL 109.92 fps V-Ray -- CPU 1:53 -- GPU 1:28 Octane 4 -- 126.51 Here are some gaming benchmarks. These tests ran the GPU at or near full capacity, 95-100%, but GPU temperatures remained at 70C or below and processor speed remained near 1.5GHz, plus or minus. CPU behavior was sometimes more erratic but still fairly good. For Final Fantasy, with usage mostly between 30 and 50%, higher in a fight scene, the temperature was mostly in the 70s with split-second spikes up to 100C, and processor GHz mostly in the 3s, sometimes dipping to the 2s. The CPU speed didnt seem to correlate with the temperature, but some kind of throttling seems to have been going on. For World of Tanks enCore the CPU was steady at 3.88GHz with about 25% usage. (I didnt get the info for Superposition.) Final Fantasy XV Benchmark -- 1920x1080 High Quality: 6236 The website offers this interpretation of the score: "6000 to 8999. High. You can expect the game to run comfortably. It should run smoothly, even at higher graphics settings." The average reported score for the 1070 Max Q GPU is 5436, the average for 1080 Max Q is 6253. World of Tanks enCore -- 1920x1080 with max settings: 21821 "High performance" Unigine Superposition (2017) -- 1920x1080 High, DirectX: 8001 -- 1920x1080 Extreme, DirectX: 3130 The average frames per second for high quality was 59.84, with minimum 48.6 and maximum 75.23fps. The fps for extreme quality was low, 23.41 average, but it actually looked surprisingly good, with some tearing. Service episode I noticed my touchpad had become hard to use, often a sign of a swollen battery. Sure enough, there was a gap open at the front edge near the touchpad indicating swelling. Hovering over the battery icon showed 33% charge, plugged in but not charging, which isnt normal. I called the Alienware Service number (different from the general Dell number). I had put off my registration to only a couple days before and it hadnt yet taken effect (takes up to a week or so), and there were email problems on their end (they wanted me to send photos while on the call), which together made it a long call, over an hour. The rep suggested I send it in for service, saying it would probably take about 5 business days to get back, though he mentioned 5-8 too. He didnt mention the option of having someone come to my house to fix it, which is something they offer as part of their regular service. When I brought that up, he said they were better equipped to replace the battery at the service center, though he didnt insist it be done that way. Ive read a couple stories of people having trouble getting Dell to come out to replace batteries, with long waits, so I decided to take the reps advice and send it in. He told me a prepaid shipping box would arrive at my door probably the next day. As it turned out, they had trouble registering my machine (probably because its a special case when you get it for review), and their problem receiving my emails persisted, so I didnt actually get a box until 9 business days after I called. Most people wont have either of those issues, and things should go faster. The same rep kept me posted on what was happening throughout. Once I got the box, things went fine. The instructions for packing the machine didnt quite match the padding they sent, but I figured something out, called FedEx the next morning to schedule a pickup, and they picked it up the day after that. I got an email that it had arrived at Dell 3 business days later. I didnt receive any other notices from Dell, but the machine showed up at my door 7 business days after I sent back the box. Altogether it took about three weeks due to the unusual delays, but again most people wont have those issues. The repair itself seems to have been well done. The battery works as expected. The trackpad is back to normal. I havent found any scratches or even fingerprints. There were no issues with data loss or the like.
Aydan
3
Comment
As I write this, I am still debating keeping the laptop or not. Ill boil down my pros and cons so people know what they are getting into when considering the Alienware m15 2019 edition. Pros: - Purchased on a daily deal sale! 20% off. For the specs this was a very good price - Dual Channel Ram. Quite a few laptop makers are using single-stick RAM even though in-game testing by multiple outlets has shown that dual channel RAM can be a real performance boost - Alienware suite. Alienware bundles their computers with a very simple-to-use, but helpful GUI for tracking hardware components and setting profiles for games. Plus the bloatware included was pretty non-existent compared to many other vendors. - Chassis build. Its a solid hunk of mostly-aluminum that offers very little flex (this is a good thing) and plenty of stability. Plus...to me it just looks nice. - Easy to upgrade. Unlike several laptops with a flipped motherboard (making upgrades extremely challenging), the Alienware m15 puts its components within easy reach. Undo 8 little screws, gently pry off the back panel, and youll have access to the RAM, M.2 slots and battery. - The keyboard. Key travel is decent and the keyboard is sufficient size for all but the meatiest fingers. Backlighting is GREAT. There are six RGB zones if youre into that sort of thing too. - Its Merican. Hey, Alienware is an American company (owned by Dell now). Support the home team! Even if these are built in China anyways :( Cons - HEATING. Big con here, folks. While the i7-8750H included is rated to a max temperature of 100 degrees, this pushes far too close to that threshold too often. Moreover, after a session of intense gaming, the Alienware logo button (on/off) can become exceedingly hot. As I captured in Shadow of the Tomb Raider, this laptop gets great FPS on a very demanding game but at quite the heat cost. This might degrade the laptop over time. - Screen backlight bleeding. Unfortunately this is a common issue with many laptop makers. The backlight bleeding is "just acceptable" enough to me that I hesitate to return the laptop as the screen itself has no noticeable dead pixels yet. - Fingerprint magnet. Holy crap...whatever rubberized finish they placed for the wrist-rest, and the vents directly above the CPU/GPU, it must be a forensic scientists dream. Overall, the Alienware m15 performs as expected for its terrific specs. SoTTR on "Highest" settings easily tops 60+ FPS in every scene and 90+ in most. In other, less demanding games like Fortnite or Apex Legends, a user will see the true benefit of the 144hz display. A few problems keep it from being a sure-fire win and this is a very crowded thin-and-light category. If not for the terrific sale price, I would not recommend this over any of the numerous similar machines such as the Lenovo Legion Y740, the Acer Triton 500 or the HP Omen 15t.
Y. F. Wong
5
Comment
Super fast Wifi, super smooth for Total War games. HDMI2 output 4K to my LG 4K monitor very well. The same configuration would be $1900 on Dell.com. Cancelled my order from Dell.com and reorder it on Amazon.com. Plus getting 3% back using Amazon Prime card.
Amazon Customer
5
Comment
This laptop is great for gaming and doing other type of work. The battery life is great. Gotta tweak a few things here and there to get it up to speed. UPDATE THE DRIVERS ANF BIOS.
Rodell Pascua
2
Comment
So the laptop has amazing build quality graphics are good 110+FPS in 1080P but the Screen is only a 60HZ display but ok for traveling but my main issue why I’m giving a 2 stars is that the backlight keyboard has stop working and the AlienFX software is very buggy and crashes I contacted DELL and they did updates and reinstall software but no luck and they told me to send to laptop back for repair and for a laptop I only have for 4 days kinda ridiculous why not just exchange it but whatever I update this review when I get the laptop back
JohnY
3
Comment
Pros: Great for only gaming, good framerates, with a slight underclock it had good temps like every laptop with an i7 8750H ->The NMVE SSD is really quick and snappy ->The screen quality is good, great IPS screen. ->Quick Wlan ->The keyboard is fine, Ive used better ones but this one is fine Con: Not for regular work outside, I will elaborate in the points below ->Fan never turns off (even in light use, browsing etc) -I underclocked the laptop to 1ghz with throttle stop. Raised laptop 1 inch off the table for good air flow. I turned the fans to the lowest possible in the Alienware control center software (I uninstalled, with removing registry info and reinstalled it 3x, as well because I had lighting issues with Alienware keyboard lighting) and still didnt work. I updated all of the drivers and bios and nothing changed. I eventually got the temp went down to 38C in the CPU and GPU. One fan turned off because the laptop was cool enough but the 2nd fan kept going. The 2nd fan stayed on and never turned off. Never. Its always on. It is a constant swooshing sound thats very clearly audible in a quiet room. So if youre doing anything other than gaming in a quiet room and you dont want to here a constant swoosh while just browsing or checking your email this is not the right laptop for you. This is the things that made me return the laptop. I am sure a bios update and a software update might fix it. But this thing has been out since mid-2018. I honestly dont expect it will change. ->Battery life is bad if you get the smaller battery (which I had) -But I thought the advantage, was that instead there was space for a 2.5" HDD, and I already owned a 2.5 SSD. But it turns out its near impossible to get it working. See below. ->Does NOT come with a 2.5" HDD caddy or wire and no extra screw for extra M.2 and no heatshield -Want to upgrade your laptop with a 2.5" HDD? = There is nothing to keep it stable and screwed into the chassis -Want to just tape the 2.5" HDD with really strong tape into the laptop and forget about the screws? = There is no wire to connect it to the motherboard and its a proprietary wire. -Want to upgrade with an M.2 instead? = There is no screw or heatshield to hold in place or keep it cool -Want to buy the separate pieces (HDD caddy, HDD cable to motherboard, screws, heatshield)? = DELL DOES NOT sell them, they say they can only give me the part numbers, Ive even read on forums people not getting the part numbers from the Dell customer service. -Want to buy the parts online from ebay or any other online store with the part numbers? = No One Sell Them... near impossible to find, I couldnt find them anywhere. -> I did not like the mouse pad, it was small and felt like plastic and honestly a bad build for a high priced premium laptop. Also, when pushing down lightly on the mouse pad with the finger, you would get a creaking noise. This was light pressure, not enough pressure to get full click put a bit stronger than a tap. I am not the only that had this problem, it seems to be a design flaw. You could live with it if youre not a perfectionist but its not nice. ->The bezel around the laptop is unnecessarily big. Especially for the price. This laptop sells close to the prices of the MSI GS65, ASUS Zephyrus, and the Gigabyte aero and all of them are smaller in form factor. ->The size and weight of the whole laptop is relatively large compared to the other options. -> The Alienware control centre was buggy with me, with issues with the lighting of the keyboard and the alienware sign even after uninstalling and installing it. Conclusion: why did I give it three stars? Honestly, if you only game on it, its a fine laptop. It gives high FPS, I use an external mouse, screen is fine, load times are fine, I dont mind the fan sound when I was gaming because its actually cooling the laptop and most people have a headset on. The problem for me is I wanted a laptop I could use for light use at home, email, and browsing and not making constant fine noises. I also wanted a laptop that I could take with me to work or study outside and this is not that laptop. It literally didnt fit in my backpack laptop pouch because it was just too large. The thing that bothered me the most were the fans that were literally always on, even if you cool it to the point that it does not need the fans to be on anymore. Also, the price was too much for a laptop that was heavier and bigger than its competitors. with more flaws. This laptop sells close to the prices of the MSI GS65, ASUS Zephyrus, and the Gigabyte aero and all of them are smaller in form factor and do everything better than the Alienware laptop. I am sad to say this but there is literally no reason to buy this with the alternatives around. I tried my best to like it and I didnt give up easily but it just didnt work out. Its sad because for gaming it was great but thats where it ended for me.
Jacky
1
Comment
When I played PUBG, It turned off by itself everytime
Peter Daley
1
Comment
The parcel as delivered contained the computer and the power cables. And thats all. There were no setup or operating procedures in the box. I have many years experience with using laptops so I could manage but this sort of poor customer support needs correction.
Amazon Customer
5
Comment
Im gonna start things off with saying that the negative reviews are a little too harsh on this gaming laptop. I was skeptical when i bought it, but it did not disappoint. It looks great, and feels great, and i had no problem with the laptop overheating or the fan sounding too loud. Its pretty easy to adjust the laptop to your liking too. It has all sorts of different colors you can pick for the keyboard lighting and alienware logo, which was a nice feature. You can change fan speed etc etc. It has tons of ports for you to use. The touchpad is out of this world amazing. The keyboard feels good. The screen looks great. Ive only had this laptop for 2 days, but my first impression is that i love it. Like i said, i was skeptical because of the reviews on here, but it turned out to be a top end, powerful, gaming laptop. I will keep this review updated if i run into any issues. With that being said, there may be better options for the price (Lenova Legion Y740, as mentioned in a seperate comment) but this laptop will not disappoint. If you end up buying this laptop, you will have made a good choice. Alienware is known to be expensive for the hardware that you buy, but Dell is reptiable brand that has been around for awhile, and im assuming that theyd have good customer service if there was an issue
kelly
3
Comment
First of all, this laptop is one of the sleekest, most streamlined gaming notebooks Ive ever seen. It feels solid and the screen, keyboard, and overall aesthetics are brilliant. The fans can be a bit loud when the system is under load but that is to be expected with any gaming laptop. Be aware of Windows Updates pushing firmware (BIOS) updates - while performing a "Windows" update, my computer hung during a BIOS update causing the fans to not run and the power button (even holding down for 7-10 seconds) to not respond. I had to (with Alienware/Dell tech support on the phone), remove the bottom cover and disconnect the battery. We were able to get it properly updated but we aware. I will post more as I own it longer than 10 hours.
  CODE RAM Processor Availability Price  
B07MP4LK82
16 GB DDR4 4.1 GHz Core i7 8750H
In stock
$75960
+
Brand Name
Dell
Graphics Coprocessor
NVIDIA GeForce
Hard Drive
128 GB 128GB PCIe M.2 SSD + 1TB (+8GB SSHD) Hybrid Drive
Item Dimensions
10.8 x 14.3 x 0.7 inches
Item model number
AWm15-7861SLV-PUS
Item Weight
4.78 pounds
Operating System
  • Windows 10 Home
RAM
16 GB DDR4
Series
Alienware M15
Processor
Processor
4.1 GHz Core i7 8750H
Processor Brand
Intel
Processor Count
6
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