Gaming Laptop Roundup

by Jarred Walton on August 29, 2008 5:00 AM EST

Battery Life, Power, and Noise

Cranking out the fastest performance in applications or games is one measure of a good notebook, but honestly it's not the standard by which many users select their laptops. For many, size and weight as well as battery life are going to be the more important areas when purchasing a laptop. You can probably guess that most of these gaming notebooks are going to offer dismal battery life, which is why the BinaryGFX on the Alienware m15x come into play. If you want good gaming performance as well as long battery life, the Alienware m15x is the first notebook we've tested that will satisfy your cravings. Of course, we should start seeing similar laptops as Centrino 2 supports the ability to switch between discrete and integrated graphics (apparently only with NVIDIA discrete graphics chips at this time).

Battery Life

For our battery life testing, we have now switched to running all laptops at around 100 nits brightness. Differences between displays and brightness adjustments mean we are not always at exactly 100 nits, but the range is 90-110 nits in all cases. If you choose to run your LCD at maximum brightness, you may lose anywhere from 10 to 60 minutes depending on the laptop - the latter is mostly for ultra-mobile options while the former is for gaming notebooks. We run for different battery life scenarios: Internet surfing (load several webpages using the wireless adapter every minute until the battery dies), DVD playback, x264 playback, and idle (maximum) battery life. For x264 playback, we copy a 720p file to the hard drive and loop playback using Windows Media Player Classic. We will also include battery life results for Blu-ray playback where applicable - as mentioned earlier, the Alienware m15x failed to function properly when trying to play a Blu-ray disc on battery power. We also tested the Alienware m15x using the optional battery in place of the Blu-ray drive, which significantly improves battery life.

Battery Life

Battery Life

Battery Life

Battery Life - Idle

The P-7811 offers very good battery life for a gaming notebook, easily surpassing all of the other laptops... until we switch the m15x to its integrated graphics and add the second battery. The DDR3 and 25W TDP processor definitely help the P-7811, but with two batteries offering 97Whr (compared to 87 Whr for the Gateway notebooks), the m15x does exceptionally well. For office use or Internet surfing, switching to the integrated graphics improves battery life by 40-60%. (We're not quite sure why the improvement varies that much; we would have retested, but time constraints prevented doing so.) Keep in mind that even light use of the laptop should reduce the battery life from our idle scenario, so it is purely a high water mark. The Sager of course offers rather dismal battery life, and it doesn't even seem to enable certain power saving features as idle battery life is barely longer than web surfing battery life.

Power Requirements

Power requirements when a laptop is plugged in don't necessarily reflect power requirements when a laptop is on battery power. In particular, it's important to note that all of these high-end NVIDIA GPUs run at lower maximum clock speed when using the battery power. For example, the Sager NP9262 on battery power ends up running slower than the other notebooks when they're plugged into the wall. Since most users will play games only on wall power, however, these power figures are worth a look.

System Power Requirements

System Power Requirements

System Power Requirements

Most of what we see here is a reflection of what we measured with every life. What's a little scary is just how much power the NP9262 can consume. It uses 108 W just idling at the desktop - and we're only running one hard drive. Load up again and it can easily begin to use more than 200 W of power. If you compare that to some of the gaming desktops we've tested recently, it still uses less power, but the difference between an 8800 GT SLI desktop and the Sager NP9262 isn't all that large. Perhaps that shouldn't be too surprising, considering this is a desktop replacement notebook in every sense.

Noise Levels

We also ran noise testing using an SPL meter at 24" under the same conditions as our power tests.

System Noise Levels

System Noise Levels

System Noise Levels

Somewhat of a surprise is the fact that the Sager isn't actually the loudest laptop of the bunch; in fact under full load it's the exact opposite. A lot of this can be attributed to the fact that it has four giant (relatively speaking) cooling fans, where is the other notebooks get by with two smaller fans that have to spin faster in order to move similar amounts of air. The large chassis on the Sager also helps with dissipating heat. The loudest laptop ends up being the Alienware m15x, which considering what we just said about the Sager does make some sort of sense. The Alienware is the only 15.4" gaming notebook of the bunch, and with a smaller chassis it will need to move that much more air in order to keep temperatures in check.

Speaking of temperatures, we didn't actually take any specific readings but we can say without a doubt that most of these notebooks become uncomfortably hot during extended use. The Alienware m15x is the only one that you might not mind having on your lap, and then only if the 8800M GTX is disabled and you're running on integrated graphics. The exhaust temperatures for all of these notebooks easily surpass 45°C while running games, so if you're wise you want to find a hard, flat surface to use during gaming sessions. Keyboard and palm rest temperatures on the other hand stay below ~35°C, even though we were testing during the summer, so at least your palms won't get burned.

General Application Performance Display Quality
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  • JarredWalton - Monday, September 1, 2008 - link

    We reviewed that http://www.anandtech.com/mobile/showdoc.aspx?i=324...">six months ago. Dell hasn't updated it to support the 9800M (yet?), but otherwise it would be very comparable in performance to the Sager unit. The Sager is still a bit faster because of the desktop CPU, and it consumes a bit more power and is a bit heavier. The Dell is also more expensive because of the cost of mobile CPUs, so if you want i.e. an X9000, it's over 3X the cost of an E9500. Since both weigh a lot and cost a lot, you might as well get the fractionally larger Sager/Clevo.
  • cheetah2k - Monday, September 1, 2008 - link

    I understand you reviewed the 1730 6+months ago (and I bought one based on that review with the extreme CPU and SLi 8800GTX's) however some of us would like to see how it still stacks up to the competition, and being a "round-up" and all, I think it makes sense to include it, even if its just for old time sake.

  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, September 2, 2008 - link

    I did mention the laptop, and there are a few games where we tested on both laptops. However, we don't generally get to hang onto $5000 laptops for a long time, so I can't just go back and retest the M1730. In terms of performance, the Sager is going to be slightly faster on the CPU, but overall gaming performance is a tie. If I were to pick between the two now, I would probably go with the Sager for the high-end, because price is a bit cheaper for the same level of performance. Plus you can run quad-core if you want (though that's not really useful for games). I'd be much more likely to go with the Gateway units for the price, but obviously the Dell and Sager are over twice as fast in most games.
  • SniperWulf - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    While I agree with you on the astetics of the P series, its price/performance ratio and upgradability are unmatched at the moment. A few months back, I picked up a 6860FX and have been nothing but pleased with it. I've replaced the CPU with a used X7800 ES, and swapped the hard drives for 2x Hitachi 200GBs in a Raid 0 array.

    I didn't do it all at the same time of course, but thats the beauty of it. Whenever you need a lil bit more horsepower, all you have to do is just shop around for parts
  • Kardax - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    I took a chance and got a P-7811 a couple weeks ago. Its stability has been rock-solid, even after hours of intense load.

    My only complaint would be that the keyboard has a Bluetooth enable/disable option, but there's apparently no Bluetooth hardware inside...
  • JarredWalton - Friday, August 29, 2008 - link

    Hi guys,

    I'm *sure* there are typos in the article (or errors in speech recognition). I've spent most of the past two days trying to finish all the writing and graphs, so go easy on me while I get some sleep. In the meantime, if you want to point out errors, reply to this post and we'll (eventually) correct them. Hopefully, none of the issues "ruin" the article for you or make it "unreadable". ;-)

    Good night,
    Jarred Walton
    Senior Editor

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