Wireless

Huawei has outfitted the MateBook X Pro with the Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 8275 NIC, which is a 2x2:2 solution with 80 MHz channel support and Bluetooth 4.2. Over the last couple of years, the Intel wireless solutions have offered the best reliability in our testing, and with the latest couple of generations Intel has added MU-MIMO support and increased performance as well.

WiFi Performance - TCP

Performance of the MateBook X Pro in outright bandwidth wasn’t the highest we’ve ever seen, but it could still hit over 500 Mbps.

For those that are eagle-eyed, they may have spotted that this is the Intel 8275 and not the 8265 which we’re more familiar with. The 8275 version is not an M.2 card, and is directly soldered onto the motherboard, so it’s a good thing they’ve chosen a quality unit. Not once in our testing did the Wi-Fi give even a hint of trouble.

Speakers

The MateBook X Pro features four speakers in total with Dolby Atmos support. As with all Ultrabooks, the low end of the spectrum is always going to be lacking due to the inability for such small speakers to produce low frequencies.

There’s two speakers on the top by the keyboard, and two additional speakers downward firing in enclosures at the front.

Sound quality is quite good, with decent lows and highs. The sound isn’t exceptionally loud at just around 80 dB(A) measured over the trackpad, but for a small laptop, it’s pretty solid.

You can also customize the Dolby Atmos using the application to set your EQ levels, sound type, and more.

Thermals

Any thin and light laptop is going to throttle at some point, but the question is generally where did the manufacturer try to strike a balance. Huawei has also stuffed in a GPU which is also going to need proper cooling in order to not throttle too badly.

To first check the CPU situation out, we ran a stress test using Intel’s Extreme Overclocking Utility to monitor temps and power usage. Huawei has been fairly conservative here targeting a CPU temp of around 70°C, so the CPU power limits to slightly under the 15-Watt TDP in order to achieve that target. During the stress test, the CPU bounced between 11-Watts and 14-Watts to keep the temperatures at 70°, but even with all four cores running at 100%, the CPU was still able to turbo up to between 2.2 and 2.7 GHz during the test, which is well over the 1.8 GHz base clock.

To test the GPU, we ran the system on Tomb Raider at the medium settings to load up the GPU but still keep the framerate up at a playable level of around 60 FPS. The GPU temperatures peaked at 83°C and the GPU was able to maintain generally between 1000 MHz and 1050 MHz for the duration. Once it got up to its peak, the MateBook X Pro was able to maintain those temperatures indefinitely.

At full load, the internal fans can get fairly loud at about 50.5 dB(A) measured just over the trackpad, which is to be expected when gaming. The laptop also gets quite warm, with a surface temperature close to 50°C so you’d not want to be doing this in your lap if you could help it.

The cooling system will run completely silently though at low loads, and if you adjust the power slider to best battery life, you’ll rarely hear the fans unless you’re doing something with a very high demand.

The MateBook X Pro delivers fairly good cooling considering the inclusion of a discrete GPU, and there’s no sign of thermal runaway that would force the CPU or GPU to significantly reduce the frequency and voltage to compensate.

Software

Huawei ships the MateBook X Pro with a very clean install of Windows, with really the only additional software being the Huawei PC Manager application.

The tool lets you check for driver updates, run diagnostics, as well as connect to your phone. It’s simple enough to use, and Huawei has made it fit in well with the design of Windows 10. The app sits by the notification status icon waiting for use. You can of course remove the shortcut if you prefer.

Battery Life and Charge Time Final Words
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  • Brett Howse - Thursday, July 5, 2018 - link

    It does have Touch support. Sorry I meant to have that listed in the spec table. I've added it now.
  • dr.denton - Wednesday, July 11, 2018 - link

    Did I just miss it, or was there no mention of the inherent differences between a fully integrated APU and a CPU+GPU+dedicated graphics memory? To be honest, I don't find it particularly impressive to outperform a 15W R7 with a setup that surely is allowed more power budget, has more memory bandwidth and, I assume, is more expensive to manufacture.
  • s.yu - Saturday, July 21, 2018 - link

    Yup, this review is fairly disappointing, it's not as detailed as Notebookcheck's. Sometimes Anandtech does a better job but not this time.
  • s.yu - Saturday, July 21, 2018 - link

    This feels like an ad, why on earth is the base model's $1500 "undeniable value", as an ultrabook there's hardly anything of note besides the screen's brightness and resolution(sRGB coverage is basically standard for any ultrabook other than the cheapest, touch is also pretty common). The SSD is triple sourced and you can bet on the other variants to be slower, this speed is typically only seen in mid-high tier Samsungs, I've never seen Toshibas reach this speed for example. The thunderbolt is only two lanes, old problem, while Dell is already moving to fix that. Overall lack of ports for what's supposed to be a more pro-oriented model (they added the MX150, if only the slow version). No Windows hello? Xiaomi's new notebook among others are priced much more competitively for the specs.

    And the design is really mediocre, the up and down arrow keys for example should be full size, or the left and right should be half sized, as of now the pressure points of the side keys and the down key aren't in a straight line, I've tried such a keyboard before and was very annoyed by the differently sized arrow keys. The webcam placement is downplayed but its angle is even worse than the XPS solution, because it's closer to the user, also because it would be completely unusable on a stand/base commonly used to increase the number of ports and/or improve typing and screen-viewing comfort. From an aesthetic point of view it's also mediocre, choosing a somewhat dated roundish Macbook design (the recent design trend goes bolder, not only the Macbooks but also new XPSs and the new Blade follow this trend, even Xiaomi) and slapping a Huawei logo onto it.
  • RaymondIT - Tuesday, July 24, 2018 - link

    I still don't see why a higher end system like this is using slower memory that takes more power. LPDDR4 or even DDR4 would be a better choice. LPDDR4 uses 40% less power??
  • Joiiyrancher - Monday, October 8, 2018 - link

    Did you guys ever look into the reports that the thunderbolt 3 ports only provided 2 Lane support and therefore significantly compromised eGPU p performance? I think notebookcheck wrote about it. If that isn't the case I would buy one today.

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