PC Specialist UltraNote X15 review
With a powerful processor and a Full HD screen for under £500, this laptop means business
PC Specialist is best known as a maker of desktop PCs, but has recently branched out into producing laptops. Although the UltraNote X15 is based on an off-the-peg chassis from barebones laptop maker Clevo, it’s a surprisingly sturdy and attractive general-purpose laptop. We were particularly impressed by the 15.6in screen, which has a Full HD resolution of 1,920×1,080. It’s a matt rather than glossy display, so will suffer less from distracting reflections than a screen with a glossy finish.
The display is also of a better quality than most laptop screens. Our calibration device showed it to have a contrast ratio of 907:1, and able to display 68.1% of the sRGB colour gamut. There was plenty of detail in our low-contrast test images and, although the colour gamut coverage is poor by the standards of current desktop monitors, it’s good for a laptop and colours looked accurate to our eyes. We did notice a slightly warm yellow tint on some images, but it wasn’t so marked as to noticeably affect our plain white test image.
If you want to connect the screen to an external display, there are both VGA and HDMI outputs available. The chassis also has four USB ports, two of which are USB3, 3.5mm mic and headphone ports, a memory card slot and a DVD-RW drive. There’s also a Gigabit Ethernet port, something that laptops of this price often lack, as well as standard-issue 802.11n Wi-Fi.
The laptop is equipped with a 500GB hard disk, which gives you a decent amount of storage for software and data. The built-in speakers are positioned on the underside of the laptop. They put out a reasonable amount of volume without distorting, but there’s no bass to speak of and the mid-range is a bit fuzzy. You’ll want to connect external speakers for music, as these speakers are only really up to playing system sounds and the odd YouTube video.
The keyboard is acceptable but is a long way from being the best we’ve encountered on a laptop. It’s laid out comfortably and has a full numeric keypad, but the square, flat keys don’t have much travel, which can make them uncomfortable to use, particularly if you tend to hit the keys hard when typing. The entire chassis also makes a dull clunking sound if you make hard keystrokes. To its credit, though, we were able to accurately touch-type on the keyboard within minutes of beginning to use it.
The laptop has a small touchpad, which we nevertheless found accurate and comfortable to use, even though the wrist rest on either side becomes surprisingly warm after the laptop has been in use for an hour or so. It’s also positioned rather too far to the left of the laptop for our tastes.
This version of the UltraNote X15 is equipped with a 2.5GHz Intel Core i3-3210 processor, making it one of the more powerful sub-£500 laptops we’ve seen lately. It did well in our benchmark tests, producing an overall score of 44; that’s enough to run any standard desktop application and keep multiple programs and tabs open without any perceptible slow-down or loss of performance. Even though it only has two cores, the chip even did well in our multitasking test, with a strong score of 41. The laptop has 4GB of RAM, which can be upgraded to a maximum of 16GB.
The X15 isn’t built for gaming, though, with only an Intel HD Graphics 2500 on-chip GPU. While our standard laptop game test, Dirt Showdown at a resolution of 1,280×720, 4x AA and High quality, only ran at 15.3fps, dropping the quality to Ultra Low brought that up to 39.6fps. The game isn’t as pretty at detail settings this low, but it shows you’ll be able to run older titles.
While most laptops come with one-year return to base (RTB) warranty, the X15 has PC Specialist’s standard Silver warranty, which gives you one year’s collect-and-return warranty inclusive of both parts and labour, plus an extra two years’ labour-only RTB coverage. It’s an impressive warranty.
Apart from the slightly unresponsive keyboard, our only real complaint about the X15 is that it has somewhat poor battery life. It only lasted for four hours and 24 minutes in our light use test. This, along with its relatively large size, makes it better suited to being used around the home rather than for computing on the move. If you want something that gives you more working time away from mains power, the Best Buy winning Toshiba Satellite C50-A-156 is similarly powerful, significantly cheaper and has a longer battery life, although it can’t match the UltraNote X15’s Full HD display.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Rating | **** |
Processor | Intel Core i3-3210 |
Processor clock speed | 2.5GHz |
Memory | 4.00GB |
Memory slots | 2 |
Memory slots free | 1 |
Maximum memory | 16GB |
Size | 30x375x525mm |
Weight | 2.2kg |
Sound | VIA HD Audio |
Pointing device | touchpad |
Display | |
Viewable size | 15.6 in |
Native resolution | 1,920×1,080 |
Graphics Processor | Intel HD Graphics 2500 |
Graphics/video ports | VGA, HDMI |
Graphics Memory | 256MB |
Storage | |
Total storage capacity | 500GB |
Optical drive type | DVD+/-RW +/-DL |
Ports and Expansion | |
USB ports | 4 |
Bluetooth | yes |
Wired network ports | 1x 10/100/1000 |
Wireless networking support | 802.11n |
PC Card slots | none |
Supported memory cards | SDXC, Memory Stick Pro Duo, MMC |
Other ports | 2x USB3, headphone, microphone |
Miscellaneous | |
Carrying case | No |
Operating system | Windows 8 |
Operating system restore option | restore partition |
Software included | none |
Optional extras | none |
Buying Information | |
Warranty | three years RTB (one year collect and return, one year parts, three years labour) |
Price | £499 |
Details | www.pcspecialist.co.uk |
Supplier | http://www.pcspecialist.co.uk |