Consumer

Dell Precision 5690 Review

The Dell Precision 5690 laptop is surprisingly lightweight but packs a powerful punch, our review unit includes a NVIDIA RTX 5000 Ada GPU.

Dell’s most portable 16-inch workstation, the Precision 5690, features Intel’s AI-centric Core Ultra processor, an OLED screen, and professional NVIDIA Ada Generation graphics.

This Precision’s audience is power users who require a balance of portability and performance. The upstream Precision 7680 offers more performance from its Core HX-class processors but is considerably heavier and thicker even in its “thin” chassis configuration. (The Precision 5690 is 0.87 x 13.92 x 9.46 inches (HWD) and 4.46 pounds versus the Precision 7680 Thin’s 0.98 x 14.02 x 10.18 inches and 5.75 pounds.)

The Precision 5690 uses Intel’s new Core Ultra H-class processor (codename Meteor Lake) with a built-in Neural Processing Unit (NPU) that Intel calls AI Boost. Dell implemented these chips rated at 45 watts of processor base power, an important distinction as the H-class chips can also be rated at 28 watts.

Other specifications include soldered LPDDR5-7467 RAM (64GB max), two Gen4 M.2 2280 slots, and an Intel WiFi 7 BE200 wireless card with Bluetooth 5.4. Graphics start with the Intel Arc Pro integrated solution and scale to the extremely expensive NVIDIA RTX 5000 Ada Generation GPU. Overall, the Precision 5690 meets expectations for a thin-and-light mobile workstation.

The Precision 5690’s full specifications are as follows:

Processor Options
  • Intel® Core™ Ultra 5 135H vPro® Enterprise (18 MB cache, 14 cores, up to 4.60 GHz, 45W)
  • Intel® Core™ Ultra 7 155H vPro® Essentials (24 MB cache, 16 cores, up to 4.80 GHz, 45W)
  • Intel® Core™ Ultra 7 165H vPro® Enterprise (24 MB cache, 16 cores, up to 5 GHz, 45W)
  • Intel® Core™ Ultra 9 185H vPro® Enterprise (24 MB cache, 16 cores, up to 5.10 GHz, 45W)
Operating System
  • Windows 11 Home, 64-bit
  • Windows 11 Pro, 64-bit
  • Ubuntu 22.04 RHEL
Memory Options
  • 16GB, LPDDR5x, 7467 MT/s, integrated, dual-channel
  • 32GB, LPDDR5x, 7467 MT/s, integrated, dual-channel
  • 64GB, LPDDR5x, 7467 MT/s, integrated, dual-channel
Graphics
  • Intel Integrated Graphics UMA
  • NVIDIA RTX 1000 Ada Generation, 6GB GDDR6
  • NVIDIA RTX 2000, Ada Generation DDR6, 8GB memory
  • NVIDIA RTX 3500 Ada Generation DDR6, 12GB memory
  • NVIDIA RTX 4000 Ada Generation DDR6, 12 GB memory
  • NVIDIA RTX 5000 Ada Generation DDR6, 16 GB memory
Storage Options
  • M.2 2230, 256GB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 35 SSD
  • M.2 2280, 512 GB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 40 SSD
  • M.2 2280, 1TB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 40 SSD
  • M.2 2280, 2TB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 40 SSD
  • M.2 2280, 4TB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 40 SSD
  • M.2 2280, 512GB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 40 SSD, self-encrypting drive
  • M.2 2280, 1TB, PCIe NVMe Gen4 x4, Class 40 SSD, self-encrypting drive
Dimensions and Weight
  • 0.87 x 13.92 x 9.46 inches (HWD)
  • 4.46 pounds (minimum)
Wireless Intel® Wi-Fi 7 BE200, 2×2, 802.11be, MU-MIMO, Bluetooth® 5.4 wireless card
Battery Options
  • 6-cell (99.5Whr) Lithium-Ion polymer battery with Express Charge Boost
  • Long life cycle battery option
Display Options
  • 16” FHD+ Non-touch, 1920 x 1200, 60Hz, 500 nits, IPS, 100% DCI-P3, Low Blue Light, IR Camera and Mic
  • 16” OLED touch, 3840 x 2400, 60Hz, 400 nits, 100% DCI-P3, LBL, IR Camera & Mic with HDR
Camera FHD IR camera with HDR, Clover Falls+ presence detection sensor, ambient light sensor, Windows Hello compliance
Ports and Slots
  • (2) ThunderBolt™ 4 ports with PowerDelivery
  • USB Type-C™/ Display port alt
  • Universal audio jack
  • SD-card slot
  • Wedge-shaped lock slot
  • Optional Smart Card Reader
  • HDMI 2.1
  • Ships with a USB-C to USB-A dongle
Sensors
  • Ambient light sensor
  • Windows auto brightness
  • IR proximity sensor
  • Accelerometer for adaptive thermal
  • Gyro + Accelerometer
  • Hall effect sensor
  • Sensor hub
Productivity Software
  • Dell Auto Bluetooth Pairing
  • Meeting Ready Apps
  • Play Ready 3.0
  • Dell Support Assist
  • Dell Developed Recovery Environment (DDRE)
  • Dell Optimizer for Precision
  • Dell Support Center
  • Intel® WiFi Direct
Security Software
  • Intel Platform Trust Technology (PTT)
  • Intel Boot Guard
  • Intel BIOS Guard
  • Intel Trusted Execution Technology (TXT)
  • ADL- Hypervisor Linear Address Translation (HLAT)
  • Intel Total Memory Encryption Multi-Key TME
  • D-Pedigree (Secure Supply Chain Functionality)
  • Dell Digital Device ID: TPM Platform Root Key Provisioning
  • Dell Trusted Device Agent Validation
  • VMware Workspace ONE
  • Absolute® Endpoint Visibility and Control Netskope
  • Dell Supply Chain Defense
Systems Management
  • Dell Client Command Suite: Streamline how you deploy drivers, configure BIOS, monitor devices, and manage updates.
  • Dell Trusted Update Experience: Simplify how you update your endpoints with the latest BIOS, drivers, and firmware versions.

Dell Precision 5690 Build and Design

Precision laptops have a reputation for being the highest quality, and the Precision 5690 doesn’t disappoint. Its aluminum exterior exhibits almost no flex, making it a solid laptop. We imagine it will stand up to travel reasonably well.

The dark chassis color works well in professional environments, not standing out like a gaming laptop or a huge desktop replacement workstation. Given its 16-inch screen, the Precision 5690 is reasonably portable at 0.87 x 13.92 x 9.46 inches (HWD). It starts at 4.46 pounds with integrated graphics; our review model is probably a few tenths of a pound heavier to accommodate its dedicated NVIDIA RTX 5000 Ada Generation GPU and cooling solution. Packing all this performance in a less than one-inch thin chassis is impressive.

Our unit’s optional 3840×2160 OLED touchscreen is a sight to behold. We’re convinced nothing can look bad on this screen, even plain old office work. Dell rates it for 400 nits of brightness, which is suitable for an OLED panel, and 100% of DCI-P3 coverage ought to bode well for any color-sensitive work. The base 1920×1200 IPS screen probably isn’t bad either, but if your software scales properly in Windows 11, we highly recommend springing for this OLED panel.

The left port selection includes HDMI 2.1 video output, a 3.5mm universal audio jack, and two Thunderbolt 4 (USB Type-C connector) ports. Our unit also has the optional SmartCard reader. The 165-watt power adapter connects to either Thunderbolt 4 port.

The right edge of the unit includes USB-C ports, a DisplayPort video output, and a wedge lock slot. Our unit doesn’t have the optional SD card reader, which would go towards the front edge.

Not having any USB Type-A ports is disappointing, as clearly, the laptop appears thick enough to accommodate one or two, but Dell does ship a USB-A to USB-C dongle in the box.

The Precision’s island-style keyboard has a shallow but direct feel and is pleasant for long typing sessions. The white backlighting stands out nicely against the black keys. The power button at the top right corner doubles as a fingerprint reader. The FHD webcam over the display, which has an infrared sensor, can also be used for biometric sign-ins.

There’s a Copilot key next to the right Alt key, a new feature on many Core Ultra-equipped laptops. Dell’s choice of half-height up and down arrow keys sandwiched between full-size left and right keys is a regrettable layout choice and an easy way to make typos. Unfortunately, page up and page down are Fn-key pairings with the up and down arrow keys. At least the dedicated Home and End keys live on the top row.

The Precision’s touchpad, meanwhile, has a luxuriously large surface and makes multi-finger gestures a breeze. The feedback is haptic-driven.

With this much power, users should expect the fans to kick on pretty regularly. They’re clearly audible under load but not distracting and they do well to cool the system, even when heavily tasked with rendering or other GPU-heavy workloads.

Dell Precision 5690 Upgradeability

Servicing the Precision 5690 requires removing the bottom panel, which is secured by Torx screws. Once the screws are loosened, the easiest way to pop the panel is to start at the back with a plastic pry tool or credit card and pry around the edges until the panel pops free. The panel is hinged at the front edge.

The two M.2 2280 SSDs are visible just below the cooling fans. The massive 6-cell 100Whr battery pack takes up about half the chassis.

The big heatsink in the center reveals the GPU on the left and the CPU on the right. The RAM in this laptop is soldered and can’t be upgraded later. The RAM modules are the two chips located directly above the silver-outlined CPU on the right side. The CPU and GPU have dedicated fans.

Dell Precision 5690 Performance

Our Precision 5690 review unit has the following specifications:

  • Intel Core Ultra 9 185H (16 cores, 22 threads, up to 5.1GHz, 45W) w/ vPro Enterprise
  • Windows 11 Pro
  • 32GB LPDDR5-7467
  • NVIDIA RTX 5000 Ada 16GB GDDR6
  • 16-inch OLED 3840×2160 touch
  • 2x 512GB Gen4 SSD RAID 0
  • Intel WiFi 7 BE200 2×2
  • 6-cell 100Whr battery
  • 165-watt power adapter
  • Three years ProSupport next business day warranty

This unit is a whopping $6,501 through Dell.com, though that’s the single-unit price and probably not what you’d pay as an enterprise or business customer. (Dell continually reminds us that a single-digit percentage of its business machines are sold through its site.)

The base model starts with a Core Ultra 5 135H (14 cores, 18 threads), 16GB of RAM, Intel Arc Pro integrated graphics, a 16-inch 1920×1200 non-touch IPS screen, and a 256GB SSD. In our view, it doesn’t qualify as a workstation because it has integrated graphics. We’d also highly recommend 32GB of RAM since it isn’t upgradeable (being the soldered LPDDR5 variety), so you’re stuck with what comes out of the factory. Stepping up to the Core Ultra 7 155H would also be a good idea, considering it has the same number of cores and threads as the Core Ultra 9 185H but with a lower price point. Only select CPUs support Intel vPro Enterprise, and the Core Ultra 7 155H isn’t one of them.

Now, onto our performance comparisons. We’re pitting the new Precision 5690 against its predecessor, the Precision 5680, outfitted with a Core i9-13900H but otherwise similar hardware, including 32GB of RAM, 2x 512GB Gen4 SSD in RAID 0, and RTX 5000 Ada Generation GPU.

SPECviewperf 2020

Our first test is SPECviewperf 2020, the worldwide standard for measuring graphics performance of professional applications under the OpenGL and Direct X application programming interfaces. The viewsets (or benchmarks) represent graphics content and behavior from actual applications without having to install the applications themselves. The newest version of this benchmark went through significant updates late last year, including new viewsets taken from traces of the latest versions of 3ds Max, Catia, Maya, and Solidworks applications. In addition, they added support within all viewsets for both 2K and 4K resolution displays.

The two Precisions’ numbers were sometimes close, with a few wild anomalies (Creo-03 and Medical-03), but the older Precision was faster overall. (See Maya-06, Snx-04, and Sw-05.) Some differences could be attributed to drivers, but we can’t say.

SPECviewperf2020 Viewsets (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada)
3dsmax-07 94.02 96.07
Catia-06 64.05 68.55
Creo-03 61.44 120.86
Energy-03 37.71 38.66
Maya-06 194.64 220.76
Medical-03 56.34 32.91
Snx-04 210.14 263.76
Sw-05 126.95 133.43

Luxmark

Another 3D benchmark we will look at is LuxMark, an OpenCL GPU benchmarking utility. Here again, the newer Precision was a little off the pace set by the previous-generation model.

Luxmark (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada)
Hallbench 20,507 21,105
food 7,680 7,878

ESRI

Next up is the Environmental Systems Research Institute (Esri) benchmark. Esri is a supplier of Geographic Information System (GIS) software. Esri’s Performance Team designed their PerfTool add-in scripts to launch the ArcGIS Pro automatically. This application uses a “ZoomToBookmarks” function to browse various predefined bookmarks and create a log file with all the key data points required to predict the user experience. The script automatically loops the bookmarks three times to account for caching (memory and disk cache). In other words, this benchmark simulates heavy graphical use that one might see through Esri’s ArcGIS Pro software.

The tests consist of three primary datasets. Two are 3-D city views of Philadelphia, PA, and Montreal, QC. These city views contain textured 3-D multipatch buildings draped on a terrain model and draped aerial images. The third dataset is a 2-D map view of the Portland, OR region. This data contains detailed information for roads, land use parcels, parks and schools, rivers, lakes, and hill-shaded terrain.

The Precision 5690 finally achieves victories over its predecessor here, coming out well ahead in all tests.

First up is the Montreal model.

ESRI ArcGIS Pro 2.3 Montreal
Average FPS Average
Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) 135.57
Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada) 108.22
Minimum FPS Average
Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) 69.40
Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada) 44.86

Next up is Philly.

ESRI ArcGIS Pro 2.3 Philly
Average FPS Average
Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) 121.30
Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada) 111.37
Minimum FPS Average
Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) 74.41
Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada) 52.35

Last is the Portland model.

ESRI ArcGIS Pro 2.3 Portland
Average FPS Average
Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) 150.51
Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada) 132.68
Minimum FPS Average
Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) 108.41
Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada) 93.01

OctaneBench

Next, we look at OctaneBench, a benchmarking utility for OctaneRender, another 3D renderer with RTX support similar to V-Ray. The Precision 5690 again improved over the Precision 5680, with higher numbers in almost every test.

OctaneBench (Score, higher is better) Kernel Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada)
Interior Info channels 21.78 20.38
Interior Direct lighting 64.66 63.04
Interior Path tracing 80.02 75.75
Idea Info channels 12.74 11.78
Idea Direct lighting 49.92 48.23
Idea Path tracing 60.05 58.89
ATV Info channels 32.32 30.64
ATV Direct lighting 65.83 64.19
ATV Path tracing 83.07 80.33
Box Info channels 17.30 16.29
Box Direct lighting 60.13 61.83
Box Path tracing 66.19 66.23

Blackmagic RAW Speed Test

We have also started running Blackmagic’s RAW speed test, which tests video playback. The CPU test results were a draw, but the Precision 5690 handily outperformed the older model in the CUDA test.

Blackmagic RAW Speed Test (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada)
8K CPU 67 fps 68 fps
8K CUDA 97 fps 89 fps

7-Zip Compression

The built-in memory benchmark in the popular 7-Zip utility shows the Precision 5690 doing reasonably better than the Precision 5680, especially if we look at the decompression numbers. It’s a sold generation on generation gain.

7-Zip Compression Benchmark (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada) Dell Precision 5680 (Core i9-13900H, RTX 5000 Ada)
Current CPU Usage 1085% 863%
Current Rating/Usage 7.424 GIPS 9.330 GIPS
Current Rating 80.578 GIPS 80.486 GIPS
Resulting CPU Usage 943% 875%
Resulting Rating/Usage 8.771 GIPS 9.352 GIPS
Resulting Rating 82.378 GIPS 81.748 GIPS
Decompressing
Current CPU Usage 1830% 1870%
Current Rating/Usage 5.322 GIPS 5.054 GIPS
Current Rating 97.395 GIPS 94.481 GIPS
Resulting CPU Usage 1796% 1845%
Resulting Rating/Usage 5.414 GIPS 5.091 GIPS
Resulting Rating 97.205 GIPS 93.878 GIPS
Total Rating
Total CPU Usage 1369% 1360%
Total Rating/Usage 7.093 GIPS 7.221 GIPS
Total Rating 89.972 GIPS 87.813 GIPS

Blackmagic Disk Speed Test

We run the popular Blackmagic Disk Speed Test against the system’s primary storage drive. The dual Gen4 RAID 0 drives in the Precision 5690 produced highly respectable numbers.

UL Procyon AI Inference

UL’s Procyon estimates a workstation’s performance for professional apps. We ran the test on each system, once on the CPU and once on the GPU, with TensorRT. The CPU isn’t a great device for this kind of work based on the numbers versus the GPU, but the Precision 5690’s Core Ultra 9 chip just didn’t impress here, falling far behind the Precision 5680’s Core i9 by about a factor of two in each test. The Precision 5690’s GPU scores also trailed for reasons we can’t definitively explain; perhaps they were brought down by the lesser CPU performance.

UL Procyon Average Inference Times (Lower is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H) Dell Precision 5690 (RTX 5000 Ada) Dell Precision 5680 (Intel Core i9-13900H) Dell Precision 5680 (RTX 5000 Ada)
MobileNet V3 3.12 ms 0.78 ms 1.69 ms 0.62 ms
ResNet 50 34.87 ms 1.83 ms 15.23 ms 1.69 ms
Inception V4 106.26 ms 5.68 ms 46.06 ms 5.20 ms
DeepLab V3 100.03 ms 6.53 ms 51.84 ms 4.84 ms
YOLO V3 237.69 ms 5.81 ms 107.40 ms 5.20 ms
Real-ESRGAN 8,052.84 ms 154.32 ms 4,825.08 ms 145.23 ms

y-cruncher

y-cruncher is a multi-threaded and scalable program that can compute Pi and other mathematical constants to trillions of digits. Since its launch in 2009, it has become a popular benchmarking and stress-testing application for overclockers and hardware enthusiasts. We only have numbers for the Precision 5690 in this test.

y-cruncher (Total Computation time) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada)
1 billion digits 33.703 seconds
2.5 billion 99.282 seconds
5 billion 220.540 seconds

Geekbench 6

Geekbench 6 is a cross-platform benchmark that measures overall system performance. You can find comparisons to any system you want in the Geekbench Browser. We also only have numbers for the Precision 5690 in this test.

Geekbench 6 (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada)
CPU Single-Core 2,479
CPU Multi-Core 14,279
GPU (RTX 5000 Ada) 157,861
GPU (Arc integrated GPU) 36,929

Cinebench R23

This benchmark uses all CPU cores and threads to generate an overall score. This is another newer test we run where we only have numbers for the Precision 5690.

Cinebench R23 (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada)
Multi-Core 18,507
Single-Core 1,817

Cinebench 2024

We also started running the latest Cinebench test. Likewise, we only have numbers for the Precision 5690.

Cinebench R23 (Higher is better) Dell Precision 5690 (Core Ultra 9 185H, RTX 5000 Ada)
Multi-Core 1,030
Single-Core 108
GPU 16,394

Conclusion

Dell’s Precision 5690 impressed us. Its metal design is very well put together and looks professional anywhere it goes. We were pretty taken aback by its beautiful 3840×2160 OLED touchscreen. Its input devices are also solid.

The Dell Precision 5690 laptop is surprisingly lightweight but packs a powerful punch, as expected. Our review unit’s NVIDIA RTX 5000 Ada Generation GPU is quite expensive but provides incredible capability in this form factor. However, we were less impressed with the Core Ultra 9 185H processor, as it often didn’t offer much advantage over the previous-generation Core i9-13900H in the Precision 5680. It’s not a step backward, though; we expect software to take more advantage of Core Ultra’s AI Boost engine.

The wonderful display and dedicated Ada graphics do bump the price up substantially in this unit, but if your work can benefit from these tools the Precision 5690 does not disappoint.

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Charles P. Jefferies

I'm a lifelong technology enthusiast and have been reviewing consumer and enterprise technology since 2005. I specialize in laptops, tablets, and enterprise hardware. I'm a graduate of Rochester Institute of Technology. Outside of work, I love the gym, reading, and photography.

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