Maximum PC

Corsair One Pro

System integrator Corsair. Wait—what?

- –BO MOORE

CORSAIR HAS LONG BEEN a trusted brand in the PC building world, known for its quality and high-end components and peripheral­s. If you’ve built a PC in the last two decades, it’s likely you’ve used at least one Corsair product. But, until recently, the company hadn’t jumped into offering complete, prebuilt systems in the same way as the likes of MSI, Asus, and Gigabyte do.

With the One, Corsair has clearly establishe­d itself as a true pre-built system manufactur­er, setting itself up with a strong foundation in this machine. It’s a triumph of clean design, excellent performanc­e, and small-form-factor engineerin­g. Measuring 7.9 x 6.9 x 14.9 inches, the One stands only a few inches taller than a Mac Pro, but has a look that’s more reminiscen­t of Tron than the Mac Pro’s glorified dustbin appearance.

One of the more impressive features is its cooling solution. Both the CPU and GPU are cooled by their own individual 240mm radiator each. But rather than outfitting each of those with their own fans, the entire system is cooled by a single 140mm maglev fan up top that through convection, draws cold air in through the radiators and exhausts it out the top. The result is a wellcooled system with a minimal footprint that runs whisper quiet.

The overall design is impressive­ly compact. There’s no doubt that you could build and even buy Mini-ITX systems that are smaller than this beast, but Corsair utilizes every internal square inch of the One to full effect. There’s no wasted space, and no add-ons just for the sake of having frills. The One takes the best that Corsair has to offer, and distills things down into a very svelte machine. And did we mention it’s powerful?

PACKAGE OF POWER Packed inside is an Intel Core i7 processor, an Nvidia 10-series GPU, as well as plenty of storage, varying by tier—the One starts at $1,800 for an i7-7700, GTX 1070, 240GB SSD and 1TB HDD, and goes up from there. The “Pro” unit we tested featured an i77700K, GTX 1080, and 960GB SSD, for a retail price of $2,300.

The Corsair One punches out some serious performanc­e, too, hot on the heels of much larger, beefier systems. Gaming performanc­e fell short of setups with dualGPU loadouts, but the One’s single GTX 1080 beat almost all of the other singlecard systems we’ve tested in the last year, losing out to a GTX Titan X machine we tested late in 2016.

The Corsair One more than delivers on the promise of excellent gaming performanc­e in a small package. Even better, it does so without relying on large, loud fans to keep everything cool. For most small form factor systems, heat management is often their Achilles’ heel. Not so with the One: Performanc­e remained stable even after running our high-load benchmarks simultaneo­usly.

Of course, pre-built systems are well known for adding a small price premium over the cost of building the rig yourself. However, if you add together the individual cost of everything packed inside the One, you reach a price not much cheaper than the cost of the complete system, especially when you add in Windows and the time it takes to build it. Either way, Corsair brings a lot to the table here. For one, small form factor systems are especially tough to build inside, and the innards of the One are manicured with precision. Similarly, the One’s custom chassis isn’t the kind of thing you can easily recreate yourself. There’s also the added benefit of a manufactur­er’s warranty—the One comes with two years of parts and labor covered. But, most of all, it’s the ease of having a plug-andplay gaming system that looks great and performs even better—and, for some, that’s priceless.

The One is nothing short of a major milestone for Corsair. Having made components and accessorie­s for decades, the company is now in a position to fuse all of its strengths together into one beautifull­y designed tower of power.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States