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The Dell Precision 5550 spec sheet that appears in the teamduval.org listing — claiming a 10th‑generation Intel Core i7‑10850H, 32 GB RAM, 1 TB NVMe SSD, NVIDIA Quadro T1000 and Windows 11 Professional in a 15.6‑inch mobile workstation chassis — largely matches configurations Dell offered for the Precision 5550 when it launched, but the marketplace details (price, condition, and seller identity) in that listing raise credible red flags and deserve careful verification before any purchase. The underlying hardware is real and capable: the Precision 5550 is a thin‑and‑light 15.6‑inch mobile workstation Dell released in 2020 with 10th‑gen H‑series CPUs and Quadro mobile GPUs available, and refurbished/used units with the exact spec bundle you saw do exist across multiple resellers — but pricing and warranty conditions vary dramatically. (notebookcheck.net)

A Dell laptop displaying a blue 3D CAD model on the screen.Background / Overview​

The Precision 5550 is Dell’s compact 15‑inch mobile workstation built on an XPS‑derived chassis and marketed at professionals who need ISV‑certified stability in a premium, portable package. Dell’s official product documentation lists the Precision 5550 as an offering introduced in mid‑2020 and specifies 10th‑generation Intel H‑series processors (including the Core i7‑10850H), discrete NVIDIA Quadro T1000 and T2000 mobile GPUs, up to 64 GB of DDR4 RAM, and a range of M.2 NVMe storage options. That official spec sheet confirms the core components in the teamduval listing, including the i7‑10850H CPU and Quadro T1000 option. Independent reviews and workstation tests from professional reviewers also examined Precision 5550 configurations around the same time and ran benchmarks showing workstation‑class performance consistent with the listed parts — notably that the Quadro T1000 is a capable mid‑range professional GPU for CAD and DCC work (and roughly comparable in gaming terms to an upper‑entry GeForce), and the i7‑10850H is a 6‑core, 12‑thread 45 W H‑series chip with turbo speeds up to ~5.1 GHz in Dell’s thermal envelope. These third‑party assessments align with Dell’s published technical data. (techpowerup.com)

What the teamduval.org listing says (summary)​

  • Model: Dell Precision 5550 (referred to in the listing and product metadata).
  • Processor: Intel Core i7‑10850H (2.7 GHz base, up to ~5.1 GHz turbo — 6 cores / 12 threads).
  • Memory: 32 GB (presumably 2 × 16 GB DDR4 DIMMs, typical for the model).
  • Storage: 1 TB NVMe SSD (M.2 PCIe NVMe drive).
  • GPU: NVIDIA Quadro T1000 (mobile, 4 GB).
  • OS: Windows 11 Professional (the listing claims Windows 11 Pro).
  • Extras / SKU data: product code PL 1055220, “10th Generation Release Date” language, and store SKU numbers visible in the listing copy.
The listing text also references a Precision 3551 model variant elsewhere in the copy — a likely copy‑paste or listing error — which suggests sloppy editing or automated template use by the seller. That detail alone is an immediate signal to verify specifics with the seller before purchase.

Verifying the hardware: what’s factual and what needs checking​

CPU — Intel Core i7‑10850H​

  • The i7‑10850H is a 10th‑generation H‑series CPU with six cores and a 45 W TDP, commonly offered in the Precision 5550 lineup from Dell’s official configs. This aligns with the listing’s specification.

GPU — NVIDIA Quadro T1000 (mobile)​

  • The Quadro T1000 mobile is a Turing‑based professional GPU with 4 GB of memory (GDDR5 or GDDR6 variants exist depending on OEM implementation). It is a mid‑tier workstation GPU intended for CAD, 3D visualization and professional drivers (ISV), and was offered on Precision 5550 SKUs. For compute and CAD workloads it is solid for moderate scenes; for very large datasets or GPU‑heavy render tasks you’ll notice limits versus higher‑tier Quadro/RTX parts. (notebookcheck.net)

Memory and storage​

  • Dell’s official options for the 5550 included up to 64 GB DDR4 (2 SODIMM slots) and multiple M.2 NVMe SSD capacities up to 2 TB — so 32 GB + 1 TB is a factory or common reseller configuration and is fully plausible. Confirm the RAM is dual‑channel (2×16 GB) and the SSD speed/class if performance matters.

Display, chassis, ports and battery​

  • The Precision 5550 had both FHD+ (1920×1200) and UHD+ (3840×2400) InfinityEdge display options, Thunderbolt 3‑capable USB‑C ports, SD card slot, and 56 Wh / 86 Wh battery choices depending on configuration. If the listing asserts a 4K touch panel or a specific battery size, verify images and service tag to confirm.

Operating System (Windows 11 Professional)​

  • Dell originally shipped many Precision 5550 units with Windows 10 Pro and later provided Windows 11 upgrade paths; some refurbishers and resellers preinstall Windows 11 Pro on restored units. The presence of Windows 11 in the listing is plausible but should be verified by asking the seller for proof of a genuine Windows license (and the unit’s activation status). If the seller does not provide activation or a valid license, that is a major concern. (amazon.com)

Cross‑references and facts checked (two or more sources where useful)​

  • Dell’s official spec page for the Precision 5550 lists the i7‑10850H as one of the supported CPUs and shows Quadro T1000 / T2000 options, memory and storage ranges, display options, ports and battery choices — this aligns strongly with the teamduval listing’s hardware claims.
  • NotebookCheck’s Precision 5550 workstation review and performance testing confirm real‑world benchmarks and thermal behavior for 5550 configurations with Turing Quadro GPUs and 10th‑gen Intel H‑series CPUs. Their analysis is useful for understanding expected performance and thermal/noise behavior in sustained workloads.
  • NVIDIA / GPU databases (TechPowerUp, NotebookCheck GPU pages) provide technical details for the Quadro T1000 mobile GPU (core counts, memory type, TDP and relative performance), which helps set realistic expectations for both professional apps and gaming comparisons. (notebookcheck.net)
  • Marketplace evidence: refurbished and renewed Precision 5550 systems with similar configurations appear on established refurbishers and marketplaces (Amazon Renewed, PCPartsPros, eBay listings), but asking prices and final sale prices vary widely — from several hundreds to over a thousand USD depending on condition, warranty and seller trustworthiness. That price variance is material to any buyer considering the $449 listing you presented. (pcpartspros.com, techpowerup.com, amazon.com, amazon.com, ebay.com, amazon.com)
  • If you see a $400–$500 “buy it now” listing, treat it as an outlier and follow the verification checklist above; cheap prices frequently reflect: (a) missing or invalid Windows license, (b) defective components, (c) aggressive used pricing to clear inventory, or (d) misleading spec claims.

If the listing is legitimate: expected real‑world performance and use cases​

  • CAD and 3D modeling: The Quadro T1000 is optimized for viewport performance and certified drivers in many ISV apps; it will handle moderate CAD assemblies and day‑to‑day modeling tasks well. For very large assemblies or GPU raytraced rendering workflows, a higher‑end GPU or a desktop workstation is a better match.
  • Video editing and color work: A 32 GB RAM + 1 TB NVMe configuration with the i7‑10850H is a solid mobile editing machine for 1080p and many 4K workflows. The display variant (FHD+ vs UHD+) will affect color grading and preview fidelity; verify panel type if color accuracy matters.
  • Development, virtualization, and general productivity: 32 GB of RAM and six CPU cores deliver robust multitasking and the ability to run multiple VMs or heavier local servers for development. Thermal limits will still affect long‑running CPU‑bound jobs.

Recommended negotiation and redress steps​

  • Never send funds outside of a secure marketplace or payment method that offers buyer protection (pay with credit card, PayPal Goods & Services, or the platform’s escrow).
  • Ask for an unconditional short return window (at least 14 days) where you can boot and inspect the machine. If the seller refuses returns on an unusually low price, proceed only with extreme caution.
  • If you pay on a marketplace that offers “refurbished” or “renewed” badges (Amazon Renewed, eBay Refurbished), confirm what that badge covers — sometimes it includes a minimum 90‑day warranty or a guarantee that the OS is legitimately licensed. (ebay.com)

Final assessment and recommendation​

The hardware specifications claimed in the teamduval.org listing — Dell Precision 5550, Intel Core i7‑10850H, 32 GB, 1 TB SSD, NVIDIA Quadro T1000, Windows 11 Professional — are plausible and correspond to genuine Precision 5550 configurations Dell sold or refurbishers resold. Dell’s official specification page and independent reviews confirm these parts were offered together in real builds and perform credibly for professional workloads. (notebookcheck.net)
However, the listing’s presentation (mixed model names, unusual SKU labeling, and a very low price if $449 is accurate in the live ad) is a significant warning sign: it could indicate a template‑generated listing, inaccurate specs, absence of a valid Windows license, or a unit sold “as‑is” with defects. Before purchasing, insist on a Dell service tag lookup, clear proof of Windows activation, photos of the actual hardware and BIOS, and a reputable payment/return method. If any of those verification steps are refused or incomplete, treat the listing as high risk and either walk away or opt for a verified refurbished seller with warranty coverage. (amazon.com)

The Precision 5550 with i7‑10850H and Quadro T1000 is a capable, compact mobile workstation for professionals, but in the used/refurb market you’ll pay for assurance — warranty, verified refurbisher status, and clear component proof — not just the hardware label. Verify the service tag and seller documentation first; the rest is negotiable. (techpowerup.com, https://www.teamduval.org/Core-I7-10850H-2-7GHz-32GB-1TB-SSD-Nvidia-Quadro-T1000-Windows-1003298/
 

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