The Acer Nitro 5 Gaming Laptop Review: Absolutely AMD - Ryzen Plus Polaris
by Brett Howse on February 15, 2019 8:30 AM ESTIn the last year we’ve taken a look at a couple AMD Ryzen APU-powered (Raven Ridge) laptops, and while these laptops have had their ups and downs in terms of battery life, one area where AMD has never shied away from is total performance. Even in a mobile form factor, the Zen architecture is fast. And in AMD’s APUs, this also gets paired with AMD’s highly capable integrated Vega iGPU.
Overall a performant combination, a single APU is still at times limited – if not by its own innate performance than by the clockspeeds and total throughput the low-TDP part can sustain. So what do you if you need more performance, particularly GPU performance? As always, you go the tried and true route: you add a discrete GPU. Acer has done just this with their Nitro 5 laptop, which in the case of the model we're looking at today, pairs up a Ryzen APU with a Radeon RX 560X GPU in order to produce a thrifty, entry-level gaming laptop.
All told, the Acer Nitro 5 is one of the least expensive ways to get into laptop gaming. Acer offers several models, with the lowest cost offering coming in at just $669.99 MSRP, while the top of this range capping out at $999.99. Regardless of the price range you are looking at, all of the Acer Nitro 5 models offer pretty reasonable feature set, with a dGPU at least 8 GB of RAM, and other than the lowest-priced tiers, SSD storage as well. There’s a lot of laptop here for the price, and Acer has options for this entire end of the market with the Nitro 5.
The Nitro 5 can be had with either AMD or Intel offerings on the CPU, and AMD and NVIDIA GPU offerings as well, which is rare to see. AMD sent us the Nitro 5 AN515-42-R5GT model, featuring an AMD Ryzen 5 2500U processor, and the AMD Radeon RX 560X GPU, coupled with 8 GB of DDR4 and a 256 GB SSD. The AN515-42 also comes in a slightly less expensive model which foregoes the SSD for a 1 TB HDD. With the size of today’s games that might be tempting, but the everyday performance benefits of the SSD mean that it should be the default choice, especially since you can add the HDD later if necessary without having to reinstall the OS.
The dGPU coupled with the Ryzen CPU is the AMD Radeon RX 560X, which launched in April 2018. AMD hasn’t had a lot of traction in the laptop gaming market, and although they’ve moved to their latest Vega architecture on the desktop and integrated with Ryzen, the RX 560X is based on Polaris 11, built on Global Foundries’ 14nm node, and offering 16 CUs / 1024 Stream Processors coupled with 4 GB of GDDR5 in the Acer Nitro 5. Despite being an older architecture than the Vega GPU integrated with the Rzyen 5 2500U, there’s far more GPU available, so it’s still a significant boost in gaming performance over the integrated model.
Acer Nitro 5 - Model Tested AN515-42-R5GT | |||||
Models | AN515-42 Ryzen 5 2500U RX 560X | AN515-53 i5-8300H GTX 1050 | AN515-53 i5-8300H GTX 1050 Ti | AN515-53 i7-8750H GTX 1050 Ti | |
CPU | AMD Ryzen 5 2500U 4C / 8T 2.0 - 3.6 GHz 4MB Cache 15W Nominal TDP 12-25W Configurable TDP |
Intel Core i5-8300H 4C / 8T 2.3 - 4.0 GHz 8MB Cache 45W Nominal TDP 35W Configurable TDP |
Intel Core i5-8300H 4C / 8T 2.3 - 4.0 GHz 8MB Cache 45W Nominal TDP 35W Configurable TDP |
Intel Core i7-8750H 6C / 12T 2.2 - 4.1 GHz 9MB Cache 45W Nominal TDP 35W Configurable TDP |
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GPU | AMD Radeon RX 560X 1024 SP / 16 CU 16 ROPs 1275 MHz 4GB GDDR5 7Gbps Polaris 11 |
NVIDIA GTX 1050 640 CUDA Cores 16 ROPs 1493 MHz 4GB GDDR5 7Gbps GP107 |
NVIDIA GTX 1050 Ti 768 CUDA Cores 32 ROPs 1620 MHz 4GB GDDR5 7Gbps GP107 |
NVIDIA GTX 1050 Ti 768 CUDA Cores 32 ROPs 1620 MHz 4GB GDDR5 7Gbps GP107 |
|
RAM | 8GB Single Channel Two SO-DIMM Slots |
8GB Single Channel Two SO-DIMM Slots |
8GB Single Channel Two SO-DIMM Slots |
8GB - 12GB Two SO-DIMM Slots |
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Display | 15.6" 1920x1080 IPS Acer ComfyView |
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Storage | 1 TB HDD (AN515-42-R5ED) 256 GB SATA SSD (AN515-45-R5GT) |
1 TB HDD | 256 GB SATA SSD | 1 TB HDD + 16 GB Optane (AN515-53-70AQ) 128 GB SSD + 1 TB HDD (AN515-53-7366) |
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Network | 802.11ac 2x2:2 Gigabit Ethernet |
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I/O | 1 x USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-C 1 x USB 3.0 2 x USB 2.0 HDMI SD Reader Headset Jack |
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Battery | 47 Wh Li-Ion 135W AC Adapter |
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Dimensions | 391 x 267 x 28 mm 15.4 x 10.5 x 1.1 inches |
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Weight | 2.7 Kg / 5.95 lbs | ||||
MSRP | $669.99 AN515-42-R5ED $699.99 AN515-42-R5GT |
$749.99 | $849.99 | $949.99 AN515-53-70AQ $999.99 AN515-53-7366 |
The 15.6-inch laptop does offer a 1920x1080 IPS display, which is great to see, since gaming laptops can tend to gravitate to TN panels. These are useful if you want a high refresh rate, but are much less useful the rest of the time. The 8 GB of DDR4 is unfortunately single-channel, but this is less of an issue on this machine because the dGPU has its own 128-bit GDDR5 memory pool. The upside is that the RAM is also upgradeable and easy to access.
Wireless in the AMD version is based on the Qualcomm Atheros 2x2 802.11ac adapter, and the laptop offers plenty of I/O with two USB 2.0 ports, one USB 3.0 port, and even a USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-C port. The laptop also offers HDMI, and Ethernet.
To get to the price range, there’s definitely some corners cut, but lets take a look at the design and see how they did.
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PeachNCream - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
The 1060's showing inside the Surface Book makes it painfully obvious that Microsoft's cooling solution suffers from some pretty severe limitations. Granted, MS wasn't trying to make a gaming system, but something thin and light to compete in more or less the same category where Apple's laptops live so cooling is going to end up taking a backseat.Brett Howse - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
The Surface Book 2 is a 15W CPU and the XPS 15 is a 45W CPU, so in games that are CPU limited, the 1050 can outperform. Dota is a great example of this.29a - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
I would like to see benchmarks with a second piece of RAM also.Quad_Tube - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
I was also scratching my head when I saw it only had one-stick, albeit 8 GB capacity. Looking forward to seeing how it runs with two sticks (I think the difference would be huge).kpb321 - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
If they were actually using the integrated GPU it would be a huge issue as the integrated GPU is often very memory bandwidth starved but as the article mentions the single stick isn't really a big problem when you are running with a discrete gpu.GreenReaper - Monday, February 18, 2019 - link
It might potentially use more power and so run slower or louder, and for less time. Laptops are a trade-off. As others have mentioned the bandwidth isn't *as* much of an issue with a discrete GPU.Alexvrb - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
That doesn't apply to APUs when you're not even using the integrated graphics. Further, since it's a single CCX, RAM clocks don't even matter. Performance would barely budge if they were running 4 x 2. Margin of error difference.Rookierookie - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
The screen hinge design for these laptops from Acer has not changed in a while, and anecdotally it's pretty shoddy, prone to splitting open after a couple of years.Annnonymmous - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link
I own this laptop. The screen hinge is just fine.TheinsanegamerN - Sunday, February 17, 2019 - link
Are you from the future? Otherwise, how would you know if your hings will be fine after several years of operation.