Dell Precision 14" 3490 Review

The Dell Precision 3490 packs workstation CPU power into a light body, but you'll have to live with a mediocre screen and a high price tag.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 155H
RAM 16 GB
Storage 512 GB
Screen 14" 1920x1080
GPU Intel Arc Graphics
OS Windows 11 Pro
Weight 1.4 kg
Battery 54 Wh
Dell Precision 14" 3490 laptop
62.3 総合スコア

Overview

The Dell Precision 3490 is a 14-inch mobile workstation that tries to pack professional-grade power into a surprisingly light 1.4kg frame. For around $1701, you're getting an Intel 155H 16-core processor, 16GB of DDR5 RAM, and a 512GB SSD, all running Windows 11 Pro. It's a laptop built for engineers, architects, or data analysts who need a portable machine for CAD, simulation, or coding, not for gamers. People often ask, 'Is this good for students?' The scores suggest it's okay, but its real purpose is more for technical work on the go.

Performance

The 16-core Intel 155H CPU lands in the 70th percentile, which is solid. For CPU-heavy tasks like compiling code, running simulations, or complex calculations, this thing will handle it well. The integrated Intel Arc Graphics with 16GB of VRAM is an interesting choice. It scores in the 59th percentile for GPU tasks, which means it's fine for light 3D modeling or driving multiple monitors, but it's not a dedicated workstation GPU. The 16GB of RAM is average, and the 512GB SSD is on the smaller side for a workstation. Don't expect to game on it, as the scores confirm it's terrible for that.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 76.1
GPU 64.8
RAM 59.4
Ports 76.4
Screen 25.4
Portability 80.2
Storage 57.2
Reliability 29.4

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Very portable and light for a workstation at 1.4kg. 80th
  • Strong 16-core CPU performance for professional applications. 76th
  • Integrated GPU has a large 16GB VRAM buffer for certain workloads. 76th
  • Includes Windows 11 Pro and a backlit keyboard.
  • WiFi 6E and modern connectivity like HDMI 2.1.

Cons

  • The 1080p 60Hz screen is very basic, scoring in the bottom 16th percentile. 25th
  • Battery life is likely limited by the 54Wh capacity and powerful CPU. 29th
  • 512GB storage is tight for professional projects and software.
  • Reliability score is low at the 27th percentile, which is a concern.
  • Not suitable for any kind of gaming or graphically intensive creative work.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 155H
Cores 16
Frequency 1.4 GHz
L3 Cache 24 MB

Graphics

GPU Arc Graphics
Type integrated
VRAM 16 GB
VRAM Type Shared

Memory & Storage

RAM 16 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Display

Size 14"
Resolution 1920 (Full HD)
Panel LCD
Refresh Rate 60 Hz

Connectivity

Thunderbolt Thunderbolt 4
HDMI 1x HDMI 2.1 Output
Wi-Fi WiFi 6E
Bluetooth Yes

Physical

Weight 1.4 kg / 3.1 lbs
Battery 54 Wh
OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

At $1701, the Precision 3490 sits in a tricky spot. You're paying a premium for the 'Precision' workstation branding and that Intel 155H CPU in a light chassis. However, you make big compromises on the screen, storage, and implied reliability. For similar money, you could get a much more powerful consumer laptop or a better-equipped business ultrabook. Its value is really only clear if your specific software needs that CPU power and your absolute top priority is keeping the weight under 1.5kg.

Price History

$1,680 $1,690 $1,700 $1,710 $1,720 2月18日3月21日 $1,701

vs Competition

Let's name some names. The Apple MacBook Pro 14-inch with an M4 chip is in another league for battery life and screen quality, but it's a different ecosystem. The ASUS Zenbook Duo offers wild dual-screen productivity for creatives. For raw power, the Lenovo Legion Pro 7i or MSI Vector gaming laptops will demolish this Dell in both CPU and GPU tasks for less money, but they're heavier. The Dell's main trick is being lighter than those gaming beasts while having a more professional CPU than the Zenbook. You trade screen quality and reliability to get there.

Verdict

Should you buy the Dell Precision 3490? Only in a very specific scenario. If you are a professional who needs a portable workstation for CPU-intensive engineering or development software, and you cannot tolerate a heavier laptop, this is one of the few options. For almost everyone else—students, general professionals, creatives—the compromises are too great. The poor screen, questionable reliability score, and high price for the specs make it hard to recommend broadly. Look at business ultrabooks or more powerful gaming laptops instead, unless that specific blend of light weight and core count is your exact requirement.