Acer Aspire M3400 Closer Look

Well, we'll say this: the Acer Aspire M3400 is positively glowing—and no, it isn't pregnant, unless you count the blue LEDs adorning the top right corner of the face. The power button is on top of the tower as has become increasingly common, but it's part of what amounts to a glowing blue stripe on the corner that runs through the two optical drives before being buried in the case. It's not unattractive, but it sure is bright.

The two 5.25" drive bays are both hidden behind textured doors that blend with the face of the tower, but their ejection mechanisms are very, very odd. Most of us are probably used to pressing a button and having the drive eject, but the switches you see on the face aren't buttons. You actually slide down the small panels adjacent to the drive bays to eject the drive. It's an interesting design choice that doesn't really add or remove from the overall look of the case, but we have to wonder if a mechanism like this is going to wear out over time as opposed to just including a conventional button on the fascia.

Finishing off the face of the tower is the media reader, which we might have liked to see closer to the top instead of beneath the drive bays, but it doesn't look out of place. The single glossy black accent running down the right side is also attractive, and on the whole the boxy look of the Aspire M3400 works in its favor.

If we go up the face and back to the top of the tower, we find the massive power button sitting on the bottom right corner of a very glossy black plastic panel. Just above it are four USB 2.0 ports along with mic and headphone jacks, and then above those is a tray for loose CDs. The tray uses a matte plastic lid with the same texturing as the front of the tower, and it snaps open and closed reasonably easily. The sides of the Aspire M3400 are uneventful, with ventilation holes over the video card and processor on the left side of the tower along with an indented "Acer" logo.

When we get to the back of the machine, though, we find it curiously spare. It's true we're operating on a budget here, but the pickings on the M3400 are curiously lean. PS/2 ports are a cute idea, but this is a brand new computer that comes with a USB keyboard and mouse. It may be time to take Old PS/2 out back and put a bullet in his head once and for all. The port cluster is stunningly barren otherwise: take the PS/2 ports out of the equation, ignore the capped HDMI and VGA ports, what are you left with? Six USB 2.0 ports, a gigabit ethernet jack, and just three audio jacks. Even the most budget of motherboards these days comes with six for proper surround sound. The lack of an eSATA port is also felt pretty deeply, and then to make things seem even odder, there's a pair of USB ports mounted below the 80mm exhaust fan in their own custom slot. This was the most efficient design? At least there's a measure of room for expandability below the cluster, with the Radeon HD 5450 occupying just one of the PCI slots, leaving three open ones. So what can we do with them?

Popping inside the case of the Aspire M3400, we begin our journey into the true land of budget hardware and Acer's design continues to raise even more questions. As far as drive expansion goes, Acer specs for just two drive bays (which would leave just one available given the other is occupied by the hard drive), but eyeballing it shows we have two places we can add hard drives beyond the existing one: a second in the side-mounted hard drive tray, and a third below the media reader.

And here's where it gets confusing: the motherboard has the full monty of six SATA ports on it, the maximum available to the SB850 southbridge. But there isn't enough space in the tower to use all six unless you pull the media reader and replace it with another hard drive and let it sit sticking out of the face of the tower. You know what might have been wise? Pulling the bizarre USB daughter card from beneath the 80mm exhaust fan and replacing it with a single eSATA port. But let's not go using all the available room on the I/O panel for more ports!

The rest of the board is uneventful, with two PCIe 2.0 x1 slots and a single PCI slot at the bottom. But above the board is what's going to ultimately cripple the build and deny users much more in the way of expansion: a meager 300W generic power supply.  A visit to the Power Supply Calculator tells us that 300W LiteOn unit is already getting pushed about as far as it's willing to go with the hardware included in the Aspire M3400, so maybe the lack of expandability is by design. Power supplies are where factory machines tend to cut the sharpest corners, and nowhere is it more apparent than here. If you're interested in upgrading to a more potent GPU down the road, plan on swapping out the PSU as well for a slightly beefier unit. Thankfully, the PSU is a standard ATX 2.x design and you don't need to worry about proprietary plugs.

Acer Aspire M3400: How Much Does $649 Buy? Acer Aspire M3400 User Experience and Performance
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  • strikeback03 - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    My wife had a friend build her current desktop for her before I met her, one day last winter I upgraded her graphics drivers and was greeted by a message saying the 6-pin cable to her 8600GTS was not connected and graphics performance could be degraded until it was. The PSU had a 6-pin cable, the guy just didn't use it for some reason, but in everything she did with the system that configuration still worked.
  • Dustin Sklavos - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    I don't think your particular example of a power supply is a good one, though. Corsair's power supplies are notorious for being underrated and handling power draw well over spec.

    The power supply will age, and continuing to run it at an extreme load can substantially reduce its useful life. A 300W cheapo power supply like the unit used in the Acer doesn't have a whole lot of room to grow, is probably horribly inefficient, and with too much load placed on it will be liable to burn out...right after the warranty is up.
  • Dustin Sklavos - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    And as a sidenote, while it's true that I think hardware enthusiasts tend to grossly overshoot their recommendations for power supplies, decent power supplies for home machines pretty much start at 380W anymore. The power supply should have a little breathing room, room to grow. The 300W - again, not a decent power supply but a bargain bin one that couldn't hope to actually produce that much power under actual usage conditions - in the Acer is starting out bad and just going worse from there.
  • cjb110 - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    We all like to rag on the bloatware installed, and I've yet to find any one that's actually had a use for any of it. But does it actually harm? Is the performance actually degraded?

    Could be a basis for an article? esp if you can get the manufactures input as to why they bother? Do they actually recieve anything? Are their machines better recieved by the public? Does Norton/McAfee pay them? Does ebay pay just for an icon?
  • awaken688 - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    They did run a recent RAM used at startup. A clean Win 7 used like 750MB, but the other OEM machines were running 1GB+ from Dell, etc... It would be nice to see a benchmark though.
  • 7Enigma - Monday, August 9, 2010 - link

    One of the often overlooked things with systems that have a lot of bloat is the effect on power consumption of the system. Idle power consumption can be dramatically higher which can add to electricity/cooling costs while making the system more sluggish in general.
  • ImSpartacus - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    This is impressive, but the enthusiast can not be beaten.

    I got a similar build for under $500 (after rebates and shipping) with no OS, keyboard or mouse. I used Newegg to do it. It has 3 combos, 2 coupons and 4 rebates.

    Antec Nine Hundred (-$15 coupon) (-$20 rebate)
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...

    WD 640GB Caviar Black (-$20 coupon)
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...

    EVGA GTX 460 768MB
    OCZ 2x2GB 1600MHz DDR3 (-$20 rebate) (-$17 combo)
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboDealDetails.asp...

    OCZ Gamerstream 500W PSU (-$15 rebate)
    LITE-ON DVD Burner (-$20 combo)
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboDealDetails.asp...

    Intel i3 530
    Biostar TH55B HD H55 Motherboard (-$10 rebate) (-$49.98 combo)
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/ComboDealDetails.asp...

    Yes, that's a brand new GTX 460 768MB. You could save quite a bit if you cut that out, but I'm a gamer. If you desired, you could probably get a quad core CPU in there if you got a cheaper graphics card.

    And I understand this is an incredible hassle for such a deal. I know first hand. I purchased a Dell 7100 for my parents (before it was reviewed here) for $700 on sale just because it was convenient.

    Hurray for affordable computing!
  • silverblue - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    Nice build, but I'd go for the 1GB flavour of the GTX 460 - better chip, more memory. :)
  • ImSpartacus - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    LOL!

    You have to draw the line somewhere, eh?

    Oh and the build is under $600, not $500. Typo on my part.
  • JarredWalton - Friday, August 6, 2010 - link

    But you really do have to include OS for sure, and probably keyboard and mouse, if you want to be fair in the comparison. Sure, lots of people "have an OS lying around" (code for pirated software usually), but even if you really have a legit spare copy, that copy cost you money at some point. That's like saying, "Oh, I have a good case and PSU, so I can get the cost down to $400."

    Anyway, we'll see about getting a new budget guide up some time in the near future. I just need to ping a few cohorts and see who wants to write it. Maybe Dustin can do it.... :-)

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