Last week, I purchased a refurbished "Scratch and Dent" Dell XPS-8300 from their Outlet site as a back-up unit to my Dell T3400 workstation.
I'm a big fan of the i7-2600 Intel CPU, and I was able to find several pages of these processors in the recently discontinued Dell XPS-8300 on Dell's Outlet site.
I paid $699 for my XPS-8300 + tax.
Free shipping.
My XPS-8300 came with the i7-2600 Intel CPU and a 1 Terabyte SATA-II Hard Drive at 7200 with 16mb of cache. It also came with a 16 DVD as well as a separate 6X BluRay read/write drive. The PSU is rated at 460 watts, with a nice strong 12v rail. Came with only 2 gigs of DDR3-SDRAM and no graphics card. But it did come with Windows 7 Ultimate (64-bit) as the operating system.
In any event, I bought a PNY-NVS300 graphics card for my x16-PCIe slot to support dual-monitors that support the Nvidia "NView" desktop software from New Egg for $115 and purchased 16 Gigs of DDR3 PC3-10600 unbuffered RAM from Crucial Memory for $92.
I also purchased Samsung's 64 GB Solid State HD for $89.95 from New Egg to use as my boot-drive. The reviews of this HD are stellar.
All in all, I probably saved nearly $400 from having to purchase a new unit. Even more important, was the fact that I was able to obtain a TON more flexibility in CONFIGURING my computer, given that Dell's brand new XPS-8500 essentially comes in 3 standard builds, with no option to add Windows 7 Pro, or additional memory.
And as far as the "Scratch & Dent" status of my XPS-8300 was concerned, I couldn't find any dents on arrival, and the scratches were only noticeable with a magnifying glass on the case. Also comes with the 1-year warranty, same as new.

I'm a big fan of the i7-2600 Intel CPU, and I was able to find several pages of these processors in the recently discontinued Dell XPS-8300 on Dell's Outlet site.
I paid $699 for my XPS-8300 + tax.
Free shipping.
My XPS-8300 came with the i7-2600 Intel CPU and a 1 Terabyte SATA-II Hard Drive at 7200 with 16mb of cache. It also came with a 16 DVD as well as a separate 6X BluRay read/write drive. The PSU is rated at 460 watts, with a nice strong 12v rail. Came with only 2 gigs of DDR3-SDRAM and no graphics card. But it did come with Windows 7 Ultimate (64-bit) as the operating system.
In any event, I bought a PNY-NVS300 graphics card for my x16-PCIe slot to support dual-monitors that support the Nvidia "NView" desktop software from New Egg for $115 and purchased 16 Gigs of DDR3 PC3-10600 unbuffered RAM from Crucial Memory for $92.
I also purchased Samsung's 64 GB Solid State HD for $89.95 from New Egg to use as my boot-drive. The reviews of this HD are stellar.
All in all, I probably saved nearly $400 from having to purchase a new unit. Even more important, was the fact that I was able to obtain a TON more flexibility in CONFIGURING my computer, given that Dell's brand new XPS-8500 essentially comes in 3 standard builds, with no option to add Windows 7 Pro, or additional memory.
And as far as the "Scratch & Dent" status of my XPS-8300 was concerned, I couldn't find any dents on arrival, and the scratches were only noticeable with a magnifying glass on the case. Also comes with the 1-year warranty, same as new.

