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4.1 out of 5 stars

Razer Core X Aluminum GPU Enclosure

$299.99
$375.99 20% off Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Mercury White
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Top positive review
25 people found this helpful
Awesome solution for Macbook Pro users with a minor caveat.
By JP on Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2020
Like every Razer item I've purchased, it's top notch quality products and the best bang for the buck. The Razer Core X eGPU seemed quite expensive at first but if you factor in power supply, control board, and quality; it's a great bargain. I've assembled every Win PC gaming rig that I've owned and use Macbook Pros for work. I recently upgraded to 2x BenQ 4K displays since the price was right and the WFH situation made it the right time... which is how I discovered the Razer Core X / eGPUs. My Macbook Pro (15" mid 2015) is "kind of" capable of running 2 4K monitors but noticed performance issues when the 4K resolution is scaled to 1440p. macOS shows a warning for this under display settings when changing the resolution. It's either 1080p or 4K where it doesn't bog down. Well, we all know 4K on a 27" monitor is going to make everything very tiny and the 1080p resolution is going to be in yo face but the picture quality is amazing. I prefer the 1440p with the better image quality reason I went 4K rather than native 1440p. 5K is just still super expensive. Some folks will probably be like why dual 4K?! I'm a software engineer so the extra real estate for the IDE / Text Editor on one screen and the rest on the other is what I've always preferred. The 1440p in high def makes the text look amazing. I know, I know... folks be like, you got a 4K for TEXT and 2 of them?! ... Yes, my eyes are not the same as they were over a decade ago when I started my software development career. Anyway, back to how I got here. The MBP was sluggish due to the GPU. My specific model is described to work with 1 5K external monitor. Makes sense, it's a 5 year old laptop GPU powering dual 4K. I needed to upgrade my GPU and researched some solutions. I was disappointed finding out there's no native macOS support for Thunderbolt 2 and eGPUs but I found purge-wrangler.sh. After following the basic instructions from the purge-wrangler github page, it was plug and play. I installed an AMD RX580... YES, an AMD... I have not purchased a desktop AMD card ever since the whole Bitcoin mining phase, people were forced to turn to NVIDIA cards. It all works great on my MBP. Also, I have this connected to a 4 port DisplayPort KVM for dual monitors. It works, make sure to buy the official Apple TB3 to TB2 since it's bidirectional and get a TB certified cable to plug into the adapter. # Pros - Quality packaging as always (stickers swag) 👏 - Quality product, paint, mesh, design, etc. 🙌 - Works with MBP (15" mid 2015, and a 13" MB Air 2012) TB2 (with install scripts) - Apple's limitation 🤦‍♂️ - macOS detected my monitors supported HDR and displayed an enable/disable checkbox in the display settings where as before it didn't 🤔 - Might have the highest wattage support compared to other competitors at the time of this review. Can support most high end GPUs but double check the dimensions and power requirements! 🥇 - The swivel / lock handle design - 👌 - It can play games with the RX580 but nowhere close to what my 1070Ti on the PC can do. I'm upgrading to a 5700XT since I got a Prime Day deal on it. - Can play fortnite, cs:go, left4dead, etc. I suggest a better card since the Razer X is designed for some serious gaming GPUs. The RX580 is an insult for what this eGPU enclosure can support. However, if you don't care about gaming in high/ultra settings, software & web development, CAD, video editing etc. then a RX580 paired with this enclosure is a great upgrade. # Cons - Leaving idle state, the fans spin quickly causing some fan noise. It's only like a second or two. Not that big of a deal. Might be the GPU + Enclosure combo. Will find out with the 5700XT swap. # Neutral - Ventilation - can be used as a mini space heater for the winter by playing games at ultra settings. Not sure how much the office will warm up during the summer. It's fall. - Some people complained theirs "didn't power on". You have to plug in a TB3 cable. Most people will assume they would see some kind of light or power when flipping the PSU switch. Wasn't the case and it left me scratching my head a bit. My situation with purge-wrangler had me connect the cable during script install. Razers instructions were to plug in the TB cable THEN flip the PSU switch. - Wish it came with a longer TB3 cable but they sell longer TB cables separately. That's how they can keep the price low b/c a 6.6 FT TB2 cable cost me $45 so be glad it came with one.
Top critical review
393 people found this helpful
Don't contact support; just return it
By AE on Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2019
If you are looking at this for its built-in ethernet NIC, look elsewhere. This uses the ASIX AX88179 ethernet chip, which is very finicky and will not work with many configurations. Unfortunately, I did not know this at the time of purchase. Fortunately, my wireless works well, so I don't strictly *need* ethernet support--it's just a nice-to-have feature that sets the Core X Chroma off from its less-expensive competition. This review is more about Razer's support practices: Razer practically begs you in all of its documentation to contact Razer support instead of returning the product if you have problems. Ignore them and just return it. If you contact Razer, they will spend time "troubleshooting" your problem just long enough for Amazon's return window to close, then find a way to drop you and say it isn't their fault. In my case, Razer "support" ran through the usual troubleshooting steps: Power cycle. Install updates. Reinstall the ethernet driver. Reinstall the thunderbolt driver. Plug the ethernet into a different port on the router. Plug the ethernet directly into the modem. Etc. Finally, just as Amazon's return window closed, they hit me with what I thought was just another troubleshooting step: Try to borrow a different laptop to try it with. Seemed like an innocent troubleshooting step to me: we're just trying to isolate the problem to software or configuration and rule out a hardware problem, right? Nope. As soon as I informed them that the ethernet works well with a borrowed laptop, they dropped me saying the Core X Chroma is working "as advertised", it is not their problem, and I should contact the manufacturer of my laptop. Seriously. Razer is a system manufacturer, so they know as well as anybody that no system manufacturer EVER provides support for third-party peripherals. It is clear all Razer "support" was doing was stringing me along until Amazon's return window closed. So now I'm stuck with a device whose major "feature" setting it off from its cheaper competition doesn't work. Learn from my experience: Just return it. Never, ever contact Razer "support."

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