Toshiba Portege R700—Battery, Heat, Noise

So, now for the real test. The R700 has some pretty great specs, but with the powerful Core i7 processor, how does it acquit itself versus the rest of the thin and light class with regards to battery life?

Battery Life—Idle

Battery Life—Internet

Battery Life—x264 720p

Relative Battery Life

Overall, pretty well. Toshiba claims 8 hours of runtime and we managed exactly that in our ideal battery usage scenario. In our more realistic internet browsing test, the R700 hit 5.5 hours, and just under 4 hours in our HD x264 playback test. So overall, given the specs, pretty solid. I’d expect the R705 to get better battery life in both the internet and x264 use cases, but not significantly more than 8 hours when completely idle. So where you’d get around 5.5-6 hours realtime usage out of the R700 test unit we have, the lower specced R700s and the R705 are probably closer to 6-6.5 hours of real world battery life.

Toshiba’s heat-dissipating aluminum honeycomb under the palmrest does it’s job quite well, and even during benchmarking and stress testing, the palmrests don’t get hot. However, the bottom of the computer gets pretty toasty, probably due to the powerful Core i7 processor being shoehorned into such a small enclosure. And when doing anything intensive, the fans definitely make themselves heard. It’s not particularly disturbing, but I will say that it’s kind of unnatural to hear the fans cranking at max speed but not feeling the heat at all in the top half of the chassis.

Toshiba Portege R700 - Performance Toshiba Portege R700 - LCD Analysis
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  • FH123 - Wednesday, September 8, 2010 - link

    Not so simple. I have a T410s. Yes, it's better in most regards, however the screen is actually worse. Yes, hard to believe though it is, notebookcheck.net have measured it at only 95:1 contrast and the vertical viewing angles are virtually non-existent. Does the T410 have a decent screen?
  • seanleeforever - Wednesday, September 8, 2010 - link

    yeap. the s is for slim, but you sacrifice the screen quality (not that they have good screen to begin with).
    bring back the IPS/AFFS flexview....while i appreciate my 400 nit outdoor IPS tablet, i can use a 15 inch with 1920*1200 resultion for my CAD work.
  • Belard - Friday, September 10, 2010 - link

    To me, the normal notebook (business) viewing angle is fairly straight on. Having others in a meeting having easier screen access is not my desire. We can't have everything... perhaps in 10 years, we can have screens that switch to narrow and wide view angles :)

    Here is my ThinkPad screen experience:
    I'm typing this on my R61 (R500 replaced it - then the Ls replaced Rs).
    I'm fine with its low-res screen (1280x800), its brighter and more colorful than the T61.

    The SL-500 looks better than the T61.
    The T410s looked okay to me.
    The T410 looked better than the SL510.

    In general, Glossy screens - by their nature, have higher contrast over most matter screens for notebooks and even many desktop screens.

    Theres a give and take going on here. Like many years ago, Anandtech would give a NEG to a mobo review for having the DIMM slots next to the PCIe slot... but if that problem wasn't there, it meant one less PCIe slot. I posted/email... you can't have it both ways ;) Then they started pointing this out ;)

    So can Lenovo go with a much better LCD screen? Yes... if they are even being made. but at what costs?

    We live in a time in which Notebooks costs $300 and up with a 15" screen. Unlike 10+ years ago when a ThinkPad went for $3000~6000!

    ThinkPads would be DEAD without some sacrifice.

    A: Glossy notebook for $600 vs:
    B: ThinkPad for $2000, both with same CPU/hardware stats.

    Almost nobody will buy the ThinkPAD! Sell it for $600~1000, its marketable.

    I paid $500 for my R61, new. Next to it in a store, an IDEA-PAD for $600.
    Mine came with the PDC @1.6Ghz / 1GB / 40GB HD / WinXP-Pro.
    The IdeaPAD had a C2D @ 2.2Ghz / 3GB / 100GB HD / Vista-Home / Camera.

    I was going to spend $100 for XP Pro for the IdeaPAD... the matte screen and stronger body sold me on the ThinkPad. Even thou the IdeaPAD was a "better" deal in many ways.

    My 3 year old ThinkPad has been upgraded to 2GB and runs Windows7 like a champ... it runs better than it ever did with XP.

    Using a friends T410, I love it.

    But I wouldn't recommend ANY 15" Thinkpad to anyone anymore... they are EXTRA-Widescreen. So the 14" is just as tall, screen wise and about 1.5 lbs lighter. Yep, the T410(s) screens are just as tall as my 3-year old's 15" screen. Hate these wide-wide screens.
  • I4U - Saturday, October 9, 2010 - link

    Dell proposed, some years ago, a display option to narrow the view angle.
  • QChronoD - Wednesday, September 8, 2010 - link

    Would it be possible for you guys to have a separate page on the site that gives a condensed breakdown of the major specs for the different laptops/cpus/ssd/etc that you are always comparing against. (tech-report had one a few years ago that I was always going back to for cpu reviews) It's been years since I've been able to figure out WTF Intel and AMD model numbers really mean since they change them so frequently.
    Also it would help when looking at the benchmark numbers for systems so we can focus on those with the specs/price we are most interested in.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    I use the following two web pages ALL the time:

    http://products.amd.com/en-ca/NotebookCPUResult.as...
    http://ark.intel.com/Default.aspx

    Wikipedia also has a good list of CPUs and chipsets (and a ton of other stuff as well). I've considered trying to get some sort of setup where users can click on a result to get the full laptop specs; maybe we'll try to do that when we do Mobile Bench.
  • BushLin - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    "The result is a notebook that is reportedly both lighter and stiffer than the previous Portege R500 and R600 notebooks"

    Sorry to urinate in your soup but the R700 is considerably heavier (in ultra-portable terms) than both the R500 and R600 models. This isn't surprising since the R700 has a larger screen and less compromise on rigidity in order to save weight. I look after my laptops and sad to see the R600 is now unavailable and doesn't have a direct replacement. There are no sub 1KG (2.2lbs) models from Toshiba currently.
  • Osamede - Thursday, September 9, 2010 - link

    When this Toshiba was announced a lot of people claimed it would be a Sony Z killer and I knew it wouldnt. Toshiba actually has the ultraportable heritage and pedigree but TODAY toshiba is no longer about making top notch products.

    Which is why they initiall fudged on the specs of the screen. I knew it would be a bottom-of-the-barrel 768p screen with low contrast - and so it is in the end.

    Why Toshiba would bother shouting about this laptop I dont know. Its actually heavier than the Sony Z and not as good all round, depsite having a lower res screen. Worse yet there are a million Acer and Acer models that provide better value and durability.

    A pointless product release. Toshiba should just quit this market and go home.
  • gescom - Friday, September 10, 2010 - link

    Sony Z12 = unbeatable machine!
    Period.
  • BrianTho2010 - Friday, September 10, 2010 - link

    Vivek,

    I can not stay for sure of the R700, but the R500 and R600 which have VERY similar designs have an all magnesium chassis. I would double check with Toshiba if in fact the R700 is using aluminum and not magnesium.

    -Brian

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