Battery Life

We've run our usual gamut of battery tests, and here the 5551G clearly falls short of the competition. Toshiba and HP both have AMD laptops with switchable graphics, and shutting off the HD 5650 dGPU on the Toshiba A660D looks to improve battery life by perhaps 18% in our best-case result. That's actually not as large a gap as we expected, but the results that really hurt AMD all come from Intel laptops—with or without dedicated graphics. Here's a look at some of the latest laptops and how they compare to the 5551G.

Battery Life - Idle

Battery Life - Internet

Battery Life - x264 720p

Relative Battery Life

Idle battery life is the optimal result you can get, and we've even removed "unnecessary" applications and utilities so we're running a clean setup with no firewall or anti-virus software. In such a configuration, the 5551G nets just over 3.5 hours of battery life. That's not horrible, considering the paltry (but typical) 48Wh battery, but the problem is with Internet usage—a far more realistic scenario. Here the 5551G drops to a bit more than 2.5 hours, and for movie playback it just misses the two hour mark. It's not the end of the world, but without the use of AMD's IGP we're certainly not going to catch Optimus-enabled laptops.

If we compare with the older Acer 5740G (which was likewise discontinued far too quickly for our likes!), battery life is generally a wash. The 5740G had slightly lower idle and Internet battery life but tied in x264 battery life. As another comparison point, Dell's Studio 14 with an Intel CPU and a discrete GPU (granted, it's a slower HD 5470 GPU) manages five hours of idle battery life and 4.5 hours of Internet use, though it also suffers in the x264 test with a result of just 2.5 hours. If we account for the larger 56Wh battery in the Studio 14, Intel's platform with HD5470 is still leading the AMD P520+5650 by 18-49% depending on workload. How much of that comes from the difference in GPU? It's tough to say for sure, but we suspect Dell may have spent a bit more time optimizing for battery life.

Ultimately, when we factor in the much higher CPU performance that Core 2010 offers relative to AMD's processors, it's easy to see why most laptop manufacturers aren't keen on shipping us AMD-based laptops. If you want performance, Intel's Core 2010 parts win easily; Intel also dominates in performance per watt (ULV) and pure battery life (Atom). But then, AMD wins with a better IGP and typically far more affordable prices (outside of Atom netbooks, which we're not too keen on anyway). Hopefully all this will change when we start to see the next generation CPUs from AMD—all those Bulldozer, Bobcat, Zacate, Brazos, Ontario, Llano, etc. codenames we periodically discuss. Where will those solutions fall in the pantheon of laptops? We'll have to wait and see, but with power gating and other enhancements we should see much better battery life from AMD next year.

Temperatures and Noise

Temperatures are quite good, with both the CPU and GPU topping out at around 65C—well within margins for mobile chips. The hard drive likewise stays at a consistent temperature. Again, we don't know exactly where HWMonitor gets the power information, but it's interesting to see a maximum power draw of 20W for the P520, with a minimum power draw of only 3.15W. That's quite good and would make for much better battery life; unfortunately, the chipset, discrete GPU, and other components appear to be consuming the lion's share of the power. At idle, the laptop bottoms out at around 13W of power use, which is almost 3W higher than the Dell XPS 15 with Optimus.

Noise levels are actually very good for a midrange 15.6" laptop—some of the lowest we've measured. Idle noise measures 33dB and load noise topped out at 55dB. Considering the temperatures, the low noise levels are even more impressive.

High Detail Gaming and 3DMarks The LCD: Yawn
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  • freespace303 - Sunday, November 28, 2010 - link

    Please review the HP Envy 14, and 17 3D!!!!
  • blackrook - Sunday, November 28, 2010 - link

    I don't think that's going to happen.
  • freespace303 - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    Why not? I"m about to just buy it myself and send it to Anand to review. Seriously! How can I get a hold of him or any of the Anandtech staff to do something like that?
  • JarredWalton - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    I believe Vivek has an Envy 14 from someone on loan (i.e. not from HP), and Dustin has an Envy 17... but not the 3D. Se la vi!
  • iamkyle - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    C'est la vie
  • JarredWalton - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    [Jarred hides his head in shame... teach me to try and write French....]
  • freespace303 - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    Is it true? Reviewing the 17? Interested in reviewing the 3D version?
  • JarredWalton - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    Dustin has the Envy 17 in his grubby little hands. Unfortunately, to quote him, "It looks like this one has been through quite a few reviewers already. It came in an Amazon box!" So, I don't know if it will be an up-to-date model or something made six months ago. As for Vivek, he has someone's Envy 14 with the Radiance display, which obviously isn't available from HP anymore. I suppose a few people are selling such laptops (used) on eBay, but I really hope HP finds a way to get more of the 900p Radiance panel in stock.
  • blackrook - Tuesday, November 30, 2010 - link

    HP reps are saying that they'll be back in stock sometime in December. Now to decide whether it's worth trusting them.
  • StrangerGuy - Monday, November 29, 2010 - link

    Why not bash Asus even more? Same mediocre LCDs, a lot more junk models (thousands of crappy 310m laptops, ULV CPU on the 14" in 2010), and they are way behind Acer in overall value for dollar if you ask me.

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