Wi-Fi

Acer equipped the R 13 with the Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 7265 networking adapter. This is a very popular choice and one that we have seen in many devices at this point. It was launched in Q3 of 2014 as a lower power version of the 7260 adapter which preceded it. I had seen some connection issues on some of the earliest versions, but later driver revisions have cleaned that up and it is a capable dependable adapter at this point. It is a 2x2:2 card with a maximum connection of 866 Mbps.

WiFi Performance - TCP

The 7265 seems to always come in right around 400 Mbps on 802.11ac, so it is not the highest performing adapter out there (that goes to Broadcom right now) but performance is pretty good. I have no complaints about the wireless in this Aspire.

Speakers

The Acer Aspire R 13 features two speakers, and like many Ultrabooks the actual speakers are down-firing. Acer has put some large grilles over the speakers to help get the sound out. On the software side, Acer has went with Dolby Digital Plus Home Theatre which gives a choice of several pre-set equalizer levels. Some of the useful features are the volume leveler and dialogue enhancer which can help when watching movies in less than ideal locations.

To test the speakers output, we use a sound meter and test the output over the range of human hearing (20-20000Hz).

The audio output is quite loud, with an overall SPL of about 86 dB (A) playing music. Looking at the chart though, you can see that the output is quite peaky with a real jump at 1000 Hz or so. The low end is pretty much non-existent and there is a definite drop in mid-range. My advice with notebooks seems to be to find a good set of headphones.

Fan And System Noise

Looking at the actual device’s sound levels shows that the cooling system tries to keep the volume levels of the fan down, with no fan noise at all during most tasks, and the first step from the fans only adds a couple of dB to the overall experience. My room has a noise floor of around 35 dB, and the Acer stays around 35-37 for most operations. Pushing the device hard will make the fans ramp up to about 42 dB. None of this is overly hard on your ears. What is hard on your ears though is that there is definite coil whine from under the keyboard when the keyboard backlighting is on, and when it is at maximum it is very it is clearly audible. When the backlighting is on, there is a 4 dB gain with the coil whine going up to 40 dB. Unlike the fan noise which doesn’t really bother your ears, this sound is a much higher frequency and very annoying.

Miscellaneous

I have to commend Acer on one thing that many manufacturers still do not get right: Pre-loaded software. When you start a Surface for the first time, you can count the pieces of software in Installed Programs in one hand. Other devices can have dozens of applications pre-installed and you have to scroll the list to even see them all. Acer has certainly taken a light-handed approach here, and the result is an almost clean install. Basically there are just a couple of Acer utilities including the user manual, and a recovery tool which lets you re-install drivers or reset the device. These are useful and it would be hard to fault them by including them.

With most devices now coming with pretty consistent hardware, software is one way in with manufacturers can try to differentiate the experience. As we have seen with smartphones, this does not always result in a better experience for the user though. Acer has done a great job here by only including a few of their own utilities which supplement built in ones, as well as software add-ons like the Dolby Digital suite to provide a great way to control the audio.

Battery Life and Charging Time Final Words
Comments Locked

25 Comments

View All Comments

  • Gigaplex - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    Writing off the hardware due to bloatware isn't always the right approach, especially when you can just blow the default install away and install a fresh copy of the OS.
  • meacupla - Thursday, June 18, 2015 - link

    The thing I hate most about lenovo is their customer service.
    followed closely by their super cheap TN panels that have the worst viewing angles ever.

    If you want a good product and a company that stands behind it, surprisingly enough, Microsoft is the only company worth looking at.
  • snolepard - Saturday, October 24, 2015 - link

    What about the HP spectre x360 - 12h battery life, 3/4in-thin - better than even the new yoga 3 (yoga 700/900). Similar class are also the Dell inspiron 7000 and lenovo miix 700. Interesting 12in'ers are the HP x2 and Dell xps 12. Wish they'd all have narrow bezels ala xps13.
    Actually, given the minimal size difference, I'm considering the new skylake r14 R5-471T convertible (although the r13's ezel mode is uniquely compact on my lap when i'm viewing a textbook (or having a meal) on the table.
  • Terry Suave - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    "Also, since the touch keyboard will not operate in either of these two unique modes, it really makes it hard to use either of them"

    Perhaps I'm missing something, but on touch devices with Windows, isn't there always a little button next to the tray for pulling the touch keyboard up?
  • Brett Howse - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    I don't mean on the desktop I mean in touch apps, like, Modern IE, system login, that kind of thing.
  • Terry Suave - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    Oh, that's interesting. I wonder why it doesn't.
  • Brett Howse - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    I asked Acer about it and was told to reset it to factory, which I did, and it still does it. There's a hardware switch somewhere that's not set correctly.
  • 2disbetter - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    You are correct, and if it's not there, you can right click on the taskbar, go to Toolbars, and then select Touch Keyboard to put it there. (On Windows 8 that is)
  • edirolx - Monday, June 15, 2015 - link

    The i5 5th Gen, 128GB, 1080p model is currently selling at the Microsoft Canada Store for $699 and includes the Acer Active Pen. It's a pretty good deal at this price point.
  • FlushedBubblyJock - Tuesday, June 16, 2015 - link

    Way too much money for that thing.
    I see all the whining on video card prices, but there should be a lot more whining on the gigantic markups they all do on these notebooks.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now