The Acer Aspire TC-780-AMZKi5 is a solid budget desktop PC, with a speedy seventh-generation Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB of system memory, some room for expansion, and good connectivity options including Wi-Fi (a relative rarity among budget tower PCs). For a general-use PC, it has all the capabilities you need, plus extra features that make it a better choice for the long haul. It is a refreshing upgrade from last year’s Acer Aspire TC (ATC-780-AMZi5), although it still maintains the same great look and extra processing power. For all these reasons, it’s our Editors’ Choice budget desktop.
Design
If you have limited space on your office desk, the Aspire AMZKi5 is definitely what you’re looking for. Its midtower chassis measures 15.67 by 6.89 by 17.4 inches (HWD), weighs 18.4 pounds; meaning it can, most likely, fit anywhere. It inherits the black painted chassis with a hairline finish from its predecessor, with a top tray that comes handy when you need to charge or sync your smartphone from one of the USB 3.0 ports.
If you need to do a few upgrades here-and-there down the road, it has some real-estate that will allow for expansions. It has two memory slots, although one of them is occupied by an 8GB memory module, so you can throw in an extra 8GB, but each takes a maximum of 16GB. However, that may not be necessary since the system works well out of the box with the installed 8GB, which I assume will be enough for most users. You also have two M.2 slots, a free PCIe x1 slot and an available PCIe x16 graphics card slot, but as you think of adding one, ensure that you choose a midrange or lower graphics.
The system uses a 300-watt power supply, which is fine for a budget desktop. Other expansion options include a single optical drive and a single hard drive bay, so you’ll have to choose between the two, as you have only one SATA port to service an additional drive. Included in the package is a wired keyboard and mouse, you’ll have to buy a monitor separately, we tested it with our Editors’ Choice the Acer R240HY and the picture output was impressive.
Connectivity and Storage
Connectivity is excellent for a budget system. On the front upper-deck there’s a tray-loading DVD burner, which is integral in case you need to rip some CDs or install programs from DVDs, though most installations can be done online. You’ll also find two USB 3.0 ports, headphone and microphone jacks and an SD card reader on the top face of the system.
The backside has an audio line in/out port, an HDMI port, one USB 3.0 port and a VGA port for that old LCD you’ve always wanted to use. Internet connectivity comes via 802.11 ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0, alongside a Gigabit Ethernet port.
Thankfully, there’s a spacious 2TB (7200RPM SATA3) hard drive, so you’ll have tons of storage space out of the box for your movies, downloads, videos and other files. This is double the storage we’ve seen in most budget desktops, including the Acer Aspire ATC-780-UR61 and ASUS M32CD, both of which come with 1TB hard drive storage. Recently, we’ve seen SSDs and hybrid drives trickle into the desktop category, but for a budget PC they’d only serve to bump the price, so we’re just safe with the traditional rotating hard drives.
Performance
Performance is a highlight here, thanks to the system’s seventh-generation (Kaby Lake micro-architecture) Intel Core i5-7400 processor, 8GB system memory and Intel HD 630 graphics. This is a notable bump from last year’s Acer Aspire TC (ATC-780-AMZi5 that was outfitted with a Skylake Intel Core i5-6400U and Intel 530 graphics. This processor clocks 3.0GHz, but can hit 3.5GHz in turbo mode, which is just enough muscle to do some basic-medium multitasking without stuttering. Plus, it comes with Windows 10 Home (64-bit), a stable CPU and enough RAM that make it ideal for day-to-day computing. Essentially, you will be fine using the Aspire for at least the next five years for day-to-day tasks like editing in office apps, video conferencing, and web browsing.
In fact, it will give you better performance than Intel-equipped systems like the Dell Inspiron 3000 Series. As expected, you won’t be doing much of gaming here, since the Intel HD 630 graphics card won’t deliver much. Its 3D gaming score is lackluster compared with dedicated gaming PCs but you should be able to play games like Minecraft smoothly at lower resolution. If you need more than that, you’ll have to look upwards for a real gaming rig with a discrete graphics card, presumably the budget CyberpowerPC Gamer Ultra GUA3400A Gaming Desktop.
The Bottom Line
The Acer Aspire TC-780-AMZKi5 is a perfect choice for a budget desktop, especially if you want the option to upgrade in your PC in the future. It lacks a dedicated graphics card like the Lenovo Ideacentre 300, but the Acer model’s 2TB memory, Wi-Fi connectivity and seventh-generation Intel Core i5 processor makes up for that.
On just about all the other factors, the newer iteration and its predecessor, they are effectively equals, and the Wi-Fi means that both can be used in any room in your home with a Wi-Fi signal. That flexibility, versatility and real-estate to grow into something bigger through upgrades helps make the Acer Aspire TC-780-AMZKi5 our Editors’ Choice budget desktop PC.
Recommended Configuration
Acer Aspire TC-885-UA91 Desktop, 9th Gen Intel Core i3-9100, 8GB DDR4, 512GB SSD, 8X DVD, 802.11AC WiFi, USB 3.1 Type C, Windows 10 Home
3 used from $499.00
The Review
Acer Aspire TC-780-AMZKi5
The Acer Aspire TC-780-AMZKi5 packs an array of features that will keep basic PC users satisfied, and it throws into the mix extras like Wi-Fi, and ample expansion room for upgrades down the road.
PROS
- Solid performance numbers
- 8GB of memory
- Tons of storage
CONS
- The 300-watt power supply limits upgrades
Review Breakdown
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EDITORS RATING