Let’s See the Benchmarks

Many of our tests should be familiar by now, as we’ve just updated a few items along with switching to an almost completely new gaming suite. All of the benchmarks we use are now the latest versions, which is some cases makes the results slightly different from earlier versions (e.g. PCMark 7 may be up to 5% faster/slower now compared to the original release). Here’s the short list of application and gaming results; the full suite is visible in Mobile Bench, and as we review more laptops with the new test suite we’ll include the UX51VZ in the charts.

ASUS Zenbook UX51VZ General Performance
PCMark 7 (2013) PCMark Overall Score 5327
Cinebench R11.5 Single-Threaded (FPS) 1.28
Cinebench R11.5 Multi-Threaded (FPS) 5.62
x264 HD 5.x Pass One (FPS) 54.89
x264 HD 5.x Pass Two (FPS) 10.56
3DMark (2013) Fire Strike 1571
3DMark (2013) Cloud Gate 9155
3DMark (2013) Ice Storm 59686
3DMark 11 Performance 2346
Battery Life 2013 Light Use (Minutes) 295
Battery Life 2013 Moderate Use (Minutes) 259
LCD Contrast Ratio 838:1
LCD White Level (nits) 302
LCD Black Level (nits) 0.36
LCD DeltaE 2.72
LCD Color Gamut (%AdobeRGB) 64.8%

Starting with the general performance, there’s really nothing particularly surprising to report. The quad-core i7-3612QM delivers performance that will be plenty fast for all but the most demanding users. Yes, it’s a bit slower than the standard voltage quad-core parts, but the UX51VZ seems to cool well enough that maximum Turbo Boost is usually in effect. As for the graphics scores, the only thing I have to go on right now are iGPU results from Ultrabooks, and the 2x-3x performance gap is about what you’d expect from GT 650M vs. ULV HD 4000. This is one area where Haswell may not make as big of a dent in the lead as I’d like, as the TDP on the ULV parts means even if GT3 is present, it’s likely to run into throttling situations, so dGPUs will be desirable for anyone serious about gaming.

Speaking of which, here are the gaming results—we’ll be adding GRID 2 and Metro: Last Light to our gaming suite when those launch, so for now we have five titles to work with. Skyrim is the sole holdover of our last suite, mostly because we couldn’t find an RPG we felt was a better option (and MMORPGs tend to introduce too many variables to make them good benchmarks). Keep in mind that this list is for laptop only, where gaming performance is merely one of numerous elements we test.

Also of interest is that our current gaming suite has three AMD Gaming Evolved titles (and GRID 2 will make a fourth) while the only NVIDIA The Way It’s Meant to Be Played title will be Metro: Last Light—Skyrim and StarCraft II remain DX9 games that are GPU vendor agnostic. We tried to stick to games that were well received and if possible both demanding on the hardware and easy for us to benchmark. The second aspect is why Crysis 3 and Far Cry 3 didn’t make our list, and we figured at seven titles (with four already being FPS/shooters) we could skip adding two more. If you’d like to see more GPU comparisons with games, please refer to our GPU benchmarks where we have ten titles and at present three overlap our mobile test suite.

ASUS Zenbook UX51VZ Gaming Performance(FPS)
Bioshock Infinite - Value 81.9
Bioshock Infinite - Mainstream 34.1
Bioshock Infinite - Enthusiast 19.4
Elder Scrolls: Skyrim - Value 88.2
Elder Scrolls: Skyrim - Mainstream 60.5
Elder Scrolls: Skyrim - Enthusiast 37.6
Sleeping Dogs - Value 72.4
Sleeping Dogs - Mainstream 44.9
Sleeping Dogs - Enthusiast 19.1
StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm - Value 55.2
StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm - Mainstream 44.4
StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm - Enthusiast 28.1
Tomb Raider - Value 74.8
Tomb Raider - Mainstream 40.7
Tomb Raider - Enthusiast 11.6

Gaming performance on the GT 650M is decent but not exceptional. In most instances, High detail settings at 1080p are playable, but typically not with antialiasing. Our Enthusiast settings meanwhile prove too much for the GPU in four of the five games, with Skyrim being the only passing grade. Based on their predecessors (Metro 2033 and DiRT: Showdown), I’m betting our Enthusiast settings will likely prove unplayable on most laptops for the time being.

ASUS Zenbook UX51VZ Closing Thoughts and Other Items
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  • JarredWalton - Friday, May 3, 2013 - link

    The measurements are from the ASUS specifications (http://www.asus.com/us/Notebooks_Ultrabooks/UX51VZ... That said, the chassis is definitely less than an inch thick. If you include the feet, it might be a bit closer to 1", but not much (and few if any manufacturers include the height of the feet, since they're not really part of the chassis -- they could be removed). Besides, Intel has certified this as an Ultrabook, which means at 15.6" it needs to be less than 21mm.
  • Younes - Friday, May 3, 2013 - link

    Thank you for your response, Jarred. On Asus' notebook website, it seems they have two measurements for the weight, one with the HDD and one without, I suppose they're indicating the notebook has an SSD already but if you were to add an HDD, it will weigh 120 grams more?
  • colinmollenhour - Tuesday, May 7, 2013 - link

    Are you 100% sure this thing has Mini-DisplayPort? The port looks extremely similar, but the connector on the VGA adapter that is included looks a little different than MiniDP connectors. Also the Asus specs don't mention anything about MiniDP..
  • Zoolookuk - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    I am looking to switch from a MBP back to a Windows machine, and this looks promising, although I have been considering the HP Elitebook too. I currently have an i7 2.66ghz machine, 8GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. I want something of similar size and build quality as the MBP, but with a Quad Core and better GPU.
  • Zenzei - Saturday, June 22, 2013 - link

    I recently acquired the Zenbook and was loving it until I started to run into issues with the power management. Over the last month or so the Zenbook has been having increasing difficulty coming out of hibernate/sleep. In many cases I have to charge the power to full and play with opening the lid, taking the power out, etc until it decides to let me turn it on. Right now, I am writing this on my iPad since the Asus has turned into a brick and completely refuses to turn on.

    A quick search of the forums, youtube, etc has surfaced a number of similar complaints. Asus support is clueless on this. So my recommendation is to stay away from this brand and model until the power problems are acknowledged and resolved by Asus,
  • nicolaim - Wednesday, July 3, 2013 - link

    I'd like to know if all the UX51VZ models have the space and connector inside for a hard drive. In other words, can I add a hard drive to an SSD-only UX51VZ?
  • TimRyanTechnicare - Sunday, July 28, 2013 - link

    I have had one since April, the 2x256GB version, I am in the photography business and IMHO this is the best photographers laptop I have ever seen! Scorching performance on CS6 and Premiere Pro, I calibrate the screen with an Xrite I1DisplayPro and while the gamut boundary is not as large as the Lacie 724 on my desktop machine, this is certainly the best laptop display I have ever seen, and in my opinion head to head with the MBP.

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