Final Words

Although there are a few shortcomings on the new for 2020 Acer Swift 3, overall the company has done an excellent job on a lot of the key areas of this notebook. Considering the price of just $649, including 8 GB of RAM and a 512 GB NVMe SSD is very welcome, and having a processor that offers as much performance as the AMD Ryzen 7 4700U is the icing on the cake. The fact that everything is wrapped up in an attractive, sturdy aluminum shell really lets the Swift 3 punch above its weight.

AMD’s Ryzen 7 4700U is likely to be one of the more popular offerings in notebooks, and AMD has delivered. The new Zen 2 cores are much more competitive, and AMD has crammed eight cores onto this 15-Watt CPU. It is only in the last couple of generations that we saw quad-core processors in the 15-Watt range, but AMD has proven that they can make eight work in a limited power window. And while Intel appears to have a single-threaded performance advantage with their Sunny Cove CPU architecture, AMD’s Renoir simply overpowers Ice Lake with the number of full cores available.

The GPU performance is also excellent, and despite AMD cutting back on the numbers of compute units included in Renoir, they’ve made up for it not only with GPU frequency, but also with CPU performance helping feed the GPU. In all cases, the new 7 CU GPU in Renoir was able to outperform the 11 CU GPU in Picasso. Generally, a wider, slower GPU is going to offer better efficiency, but AMD has delivered the performance.

That performance does come at a cost though, and that is heat. The Acer Swift 3 could not keep up with the demands of the Renoir APU at full blast, and there was significant throttling when running at the Best Performance level in Windows 10. That is disappointing, because it prevents this notebook from being able to get the most out of the APU inside. If you were hoping to use the integrated Vega graphics for light gaming, be aware that you may run into heat issues.

It almost goes without saying that the display quality is also lacking. To hit this kind of a price point, certain areas were cut, and one of them was the display. The Acer Swift 3 does offer a 1920x1080 IPS panel, but the poor backlighting, lack of sRGB coverage, and poor color accuracy all make it a very mediocre display. It is not unexpected in this price range, but is one of the areas that reminds you why this laptop is priced where it is.

Despite the negatives, Acer has still delivered a winning combination with the Swift 3. It offers the same look, feel, and portability of a much more expensive design. The 83% screen to body ratio is not industry leading, but does offer the modern look of a thin-bezel design, and manages to make this 14-inch laptop feel much more compact than it is. It is also very light, at 2.65 lbs, making it very easy to travel with, if we ever get to travel again.

At a $649 MSRP, Acer has delivered a very solid value, thanks to the AMD Ryzen 7 4700U, 8 GB of DDR4-3200, and a 512 GB PCIe SSD. The Ryzen platform offers the same Modern Standby resume features as Intel now, so wakeup is instant. Battery life was very solid, and Acer has included features like an integrated fingerprint reader making sign-in a breeze.

 

Acer has been a great partner for AMD, and the new Swift 3 punches well above its weight. It is easy to be distracted by some of the top-end notebooks on the market, but if your budget is not quite there, you get a lot of the same qualities, but at a price that is very reasonable. The Acer Swift 3 SF314-42 is set to available in the early part of this month, so it should be available to purchase very soon.

Wireless, Audio, Thermals, and Software
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  • Potatonoot - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    This integrated graphics is very impressive, and the performance is just amazing for a 650 USD laptop.

    It isnt intended for gaming tho, we all know that. I am mostly impressed that it is an 8 core laptop.

    I am mostly happy things are getting cheaper and more powerful.
  • Oxford Guy - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    Throttling a CPU to 8 watts is amazing? Not being able to cover the ancient sRGB color space with even somewhat-decent accuracy is amazing?
  • Oxford Guy - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    So, this laptop apparently doesn't show the performance of the AMD processor at all, because it has garbage cooling.

    "The laptop really struggled with its thermals, dropping the framerate into single digits often. The device attempted to run at around 18 Watts of power draw, slightly over the 15 Watt TDP, but in fact only averaged around 8 Watts during this run."

    8 watts versus Intel's 25?

    "performance here will be strongly impacted by the TDP as well as cooling of the systems. Both AMD parts are 15W TDP designs, while the Intel chip sustains 25W."

    Does it sustain 25 watts or is that merely the TDP? Knowing Intel, I assume it goes beyond that.

    "The generational improvements here aren’t enough to catch up to Intel’s Sunny Cove cores in the Ice Lake i7-1065G7. Although that core might be running at higher single-core TDPs and power consumption, it still makes for a big gap in some of the more instruction pressure and cache pressure high workloads such as 500.perlbench_r and 502.gcc_r where the Intel chip still has a considerable lead in."

    Might?
  • Oxford Guy - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    It seems that your "15W" information in the article graphic is inaccurate.

    Shouldn't it be 8+ watts?
  • mazz7 - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    What do you expect from 600ish dollars guys, cmon get reality check, this product is clearly punching above it's own weight.
  • Nikhil Reddy - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    What's the exact price of this thing in India? When it will be available?
  • Oingles - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    They have packed in a lot for the price, I would buy this if it had a much better display option. 16GB would be good too. Happy to pay more for that.
  • defaultluser - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    Does anyone know if this thing has a sodimm upgrade slot?

    8GB ram is so last-year for a $700 laptop (especially one where you have to share ram with the APU)!
  • Dug - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    Did you guys ever consider you got a bad unit?

    I don't see any of the issues you had in other reviews.
    If you did, it would be prudent to announce that at the beginning of a re-review.
  • zodiacfml - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    Forgot to leave a comment. This laptop is almost perfect for me, 8 core and I don't need discrete. But, the cooling is abysmal. It reaches 100 degrees and stays at 90C?! I have a cheaper Lenovo but its cooling is overkill for an Intel-U TDP SoC.

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