Asus Proart Station PD5レビュー:少なすぎる、遅すぎる

Asus ProArt Station PD5 review: Too little, too late

MSRP $1,700.00

Score Details

“Looks can't make up for the shortcomings of the Asus ProArt Station PD5.”

プロ

  • The case looks great
  • Solid GPU performance
  • ISV certification

短所

  • Loud and hot
  • Limited room for upgrades
  • Uses a last-gen processor
  • Underperforms compared to similarly priced PCs

The Asus ProArt Station PD5 is one of the first PCs that explicitly targets creators, as opposed to the barrage of video editing and streaming PCs that are really just gaming desktops. Unfortunately, the PD5 doesn’t make a strong argument for this segment due to its older Intel processor, high thermals, and loud fan noise.

コンテンツ

  • 設計
  • Specs and pricing
  • Internals and upgradability
  • パフォーマンス
  • Gaming performance
  • Software
  • Our take さらに2つのアイテムを表示します

Despite a sleek chassis worthy of our best desktop PC roundup, the PD5 is held back by a last-gen processor that massively underperforms compared to modern offerings. It’s missing many essential features that are available to creators today, all while selling for the same price as desktops with them.

## 設計

The ProArt Station PD5 looks great, but it doesn’t have a great design. Aesthetically, the narrow lines on the front of the case look fantastic, accented by thin LED strips that can show your CPU/GPU temperature, render times, and more. The ProArt branding is fantastic, and it makes the PD5 look like a truly unique PC.

Function over form has to come into play at some point, though, and the PD5 is dysfunctional. The PC almost seems intentionally designed to keep as much heat in as possible. The front intake vents are thin and don’t bring in enough air, and the exhaust is limited to an 80mm fan in the back and some vents on the side panel. The vast majority of this case is closed off to airflow, and that’s a problem.

It’s even more of a problem considering the components inside. The ProArt PD5 comes with one — count them, one — fan inside: an 80mm exhaust in the back of the case. Asus also uses a thin CPU cooler reminiscent of a stock cooler and a blower-style graphics card. From the case to the internals, the ProArt PD5 seems like it’s trying to be as hot as possible.

The ProArt PD5 looks great, and small touches like a lock on the power button are welcome. But the glitz washes away quickly when the PC sounds like (and gets as hot as) a proper workstation but doesn’t perform like one (read our Lenovo P620 review for a machine that does).

Specs and pricing

The ProArt Station PD5 can sport some serious hardware. You have access to up to a Core i9-11900 for the GPU, an RTX 3070 or RTX A2000 for the GPU, up to 128GB of DDR4-3200 memory, and up to 6TB of storage spread across an SSD and a spinning hard drive.

The problem is the CPU, which is a previous generation offering. Stepping back a generation isn’t great, but it’s worse considering Intel’s 11th-gen platform wasn’t exactly an update enthusiasts were hoping for.

CPU Intel Core i7-11700
GPU Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070
Motherboard Custom B560 mATX
Case Custom Asus ProArt PD5 mid-tower
Memory 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4-3200
Storage 1TB PCIe 3.0 NVMe SSD
Power supply 500W 80+ Gold
USB ports Front: 2x USB 3.2 Gen 1, 1x USB-C 3.2 Gen 1 / Rear: 4x USB 3.2 Gen 1, 2x USB 2.0
Networking Gigabit Ethernet, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2

Even the most expensive Core i9-11900 is an embarrassing CPU, so the ProArt Station PD5 left me scratching my head. AMD’s Ryzen 5000 options make more sense for creators, and they’re still among the best CPUs in 2022. It’s a missed opportunity considering Asus sells the ProArt X570 Creator Wi-Fi motherboard. What’s worse is that Intel’s 12th-gen platform is significantly faster, and it comes with better features for creators.

The main one is DDR5. DDR5 would have likely bloated the cost of the ProArt Station PD5, but it offers real advantages in creative apps like Adobe Premiere Pro. Even without DDR5, you’re locked into one of Intel’s worst platforms without the option to upgrade unless you rip the motherboard out.

It’s really hard to justify the PD5’s specs. You can pick up an identically configured Dell XPS Desktop 8950 with Intel’s 12th-gen i7 for less money than what Asus is charging for the PD5. My configuration clocks in at $2,000, though I’ve seen some for as low as $1,700.

I’m not sure how high the machine will scale because higher-end configurations aren’t available right now. I don’t imagine the machine will exceed $3,000, though. It’s not a bad price, but the PD5 is essentially a computer from 2021, not 2022, so modern PCs with a similar price range will always be a better deal.

That could change if Asus updates this machine with 12th-gen options, but at the time of writing, those aren’t available.

Internals and upgradability

The ProArt PD5 offers some room to grow, but not much. You can swap the GPU and RAM, and there are a couple of drive bays at the bottom of the machine. These are tool-less, which is a nice touch. Unfortunately, Asus doesn’t include cables already routed to the bay.

Inside, the case is remarkably small. Asus calls it a “full-sized ATX tower,” but that’s far from the case. You couldn’t even fit a standard ATX motherboard inside the case, and the power supply is shmushed up against the drive bay. There isn’t any room for fans, either, just the single 80mm fan in the back of the case.

Considering the case is one of the worst parts of the ProArt PD5, upgradability is a bit of a moot point. You can, technically, add some hardware to the machine. But you’re so limited by room and thermals that you probably shouldn’t. The machine is locked to Intel’s 11th-gen platform, too, which isn’t compatible with Intel’s modern CPUs.

## パフォーマンス

The ProArt PD5 would be a solid desktop if it was released a year ago. In 2022, it’s a disappointment. It underperforms across the board, hindered by the weaker eight-core Core i7-11700 that has been surpassed by Intel’s more recent 12th-gen offerings. I included a couple of machines for CPU reference below (even if the HP Omen 45L isn’t really competing with Asus’ machine).

| Asus ProArt PD5 (Core i7-11700) | Dell XPS Desktop 8950 (Core i5-12600K) | HP Omen 45L (Core i9-12900K) ---|---|---|---
Cinebench R23 multi-core | 8,866 | 16,798 | 23,068
Cinebench R23 single-core | 1,504 | 1,903 | 1,893
Geekbench 5 multi-core | 8,110 | 10,819 | 15,685
Geekbench 5 single-core | 1,639 | 1,829 | 1,910
PugetBench for Premiere Pro | 627 | 708 | 1,025
PCMark 10 | 6,822 | 7,633 | 9,034
Handbrake | 111 seconds | N/A | 51 seconds

The biggest issue for the ProArt Station PD5 is that it’s based on Intel’s 11th-gen platform. Asus announced the machine in September 2021, just a couple of months before Intel launched its 12th-gen Alder Lake platform. Despite that, machines only started showing up at the beginning of 2022.

The 32GB of DDR4 memory and RTX 3070 graphics card should make the PD5 a solid midrange creator PC, but the hardware is held back by the Core i7-11700. The Dell XPS Desktop 8950 shows that. Even with half of the RAM and a weaker video card (the RTX 3060 Ti), it outperforms the ProArt PD5 by nearly 13% in Premiere Pro and almost 12% in PCMark 10.

Intel’s 12th-gen chips are leaps and bounds ahead of the company’s previous offerings (you can read our Core i9-12900K review for the proof). It’s hard justifying a desktop with hardware that’s out of date, especially when that hardware so clearly underperforms compared to modern offerings.

It’s possible Asus will update the PD5 with the 12th-gen chip, though, which would improve the performance situation a lot. This could be an issue with supply shortages, and Asus could be planning to add 12th-gen options down the road.

Gaming performance

The ProArt PD5 is a creator-focused machine; but let’s be honest, it’d be a shame to not let an RTX 3070 rip through some games. Unfortunately, this machine isn’t the best setting for Nvidia’s GPU (which is among the best graphics cards you can buy). You can see the results I recorded from a few games at 1440p below. I used the highest preset for each game.

| Asus ProArt PD5 (RTX 3070) | MSI Aegis RS 12 (RTX 3070) | Dell XPS Desktop (RTX 3060 Ti) ---|---|---|---
3DMark Fire Strike | 22,862 | 28,511 | 24,019
3DMark Time Spy | 11,929 | 13,545 | 11,400
Red Dead Redemption 2 | 76 fps | 78 fps | 69 fps
Assassin’s Creed Valhalla | 71 fps | 76 fps | N/A
Forza Horizon 4 | 144 fps | N/A | 148 fps

Again, the Core i7-11700 is a hindrance. In a one-for-one against the MSI Aegis RS 12 with a Core i7-12700KF, the ProArt PD5 lags. It’s not too bad in GPU-limited titles like Assassin’s Creed Valhalla and Red Dead Redemption 2. The gap is a bit wider at 1080p, but the Asus machine only lagged by around 6% at most.

Forza Horizon 4, which is a little heavier on the CPU, shows a different side of the story. The Dell XPS Desktop 8950 managed to outperform the ProArt PD5 despite using a weaker GPU. Dell’s machine uses the Core i5-12600K, too, not the Core i7-12700K.

Outside of performance. I need to point out temperatures. During a run of Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, the GPU reached 84 degrees Celsius. That’s not a problem in isolation, but the card reached that temperature after about 30 seconds. For long rendering sessions, those kinds of temperatures could cause issues down the line. They’re safe, but you shouldn’t sustain them for hours on end.

Software

ASUSは一般的にBloatwareについて良いです - 例としてASUS ROG GA35DXレビューを読んでください - ProART PD5も例外ではありません。肥大化した場合、マシンにはMcAfee Internet Securityが付属しています。最初はあまり邪魔ではありませんでしたが、McAfeeのようなプログラムは、更新する時が来たら迷惑になる傾向があることに留意してください。

それ以外の場合、マシンにはMyasusが付属しており、サポートのためにProART Creator Hubがマシンをカスタマイズします。私はクリエイターのハブが好きです。システムのバイタルのしっかりした概要を提供し、PD5の前面のライトを調整して、残りのレンダリング時間を表示したり、CPU/GPU温度に関する警告を提供したりできます。

特に、ワークスマート機能が好きです。これにより、1回のクリックで起動できるアプリのグループを作成できます。私の唯一の問題は、ASUSがMyasus(タスクバーに固定されている)と同じようにProART Creator Hubを表面化しないことです。それ以外は、シンプルであったとしても素晴らしいソフトウェアです。

私たちのテイク

ASUS ProARTステーションPD5は、2022年のクリエイターにとって悪い選択です。サーマルとファンのノイズに問題がありましたが、実際のキラーはマシンの中心にある最後の世代のプロセッサです。 Asusは、Intelの次世代プロセッサが到着する前に2021年にこのマシンをリリースしたいと考えていましたが、遅延はマシンの不利益になりました。

選択肢はありますか?

ProArt Station PD5 - Your Creation Initiation | ASUS はい、しかし今のところ多くはありません。主な競合他社は、Intelの新しいプロセッサ、DDR5メモリ、より強力なGPUオプションで利用できるDell XPSデスクトップです。とはいえ、ISVの認定とNvidiaのワークステーションGPUへのアクセスがありません。

それはどのくらい続きますか?

Asus Proart Station PD5は数年続くはずですが、古いIntelプラットフォームと限られたケースルームは、すぐに歓迎されることを意味します。

あなたはそれを買うべきですか?

いいえ。ProARTステーションPD5は2021年にオプションだったかもしれませんが、2022年には、新しいハードウェア、より良いサーマル、ファンノイズの低下で同じ価格で販売されているマシンがあります。

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