Hi all, I received my Vortex a week ago and would like to share my experience with it so far. I'm a chef and have been super busy with work lately, but so far managed to have a play with it a bit. This is a replacement for my previous PCSpecialist Defiance I laptop, purchased in 2015. I'll be predominantly using this laptop to watch videos of cats and play minesweeper/ solitaire. Specs are as follows:
- Intel i7 9750H
- NVidia Geforce RTX 270 8GB
- 32GB DDR 3 2666MHZ
- 4K Glossy OLED Screen (3840x2160) (Samsung)
- 1TB Samsung Evo 970 SSD (I plan on adding another 1TB Evo 950 which I have in my old laptop)
- And of course the special thermal paste PCS sells for £9
Some photos:
And finally, a comparison next to my old Defiance I 15.6". The Vortex looks smaller thanks to the bezels. However, the Defiance is a thinner laptop. Overall I'm quite happy with the look of the laptop. The Defiance is ugly, especially with the strange diagonal corners around the chassis.
The Vortex is made of plastic, but I believe the top panel around the keyboard is aluminium. The chassis feels sturdy, but not perfect. One of the rubber feet underneath is attached to a removable panel. This makes a small clicking noise when weight is applied to this area (where the left hand rests). It's a bit annoying. Hinges feel nice, with good resistance to them. Hopefully they will last long.
Keyboard and Trackpad
Keyboard feels nice enough to type on. Similar to my 2015 defiance. I'm not too fussy in this area, as I've only been using laptops for the past 15 years. Not much flex. Nice clickity click sounds, but not too loud.
Trackpad is very nice and accurate. One of the best I've had so far. Also it's nice to have physical buttons. I can't stand crappy trackpads with no buttons, which cause the mouse to jiggle around the screen.
Speakers and fan noise
It's hard to describe unless you hear them for yourself. In short: they're alright. The volume is decent, but bass is lacking. I used to own an Asus laptop that had wonderful speakers which I dearly miss. However, this is far louder than my previous Defiance laptop - those speakers were just too quiet. You can somewhat hear the separation in the stereo configuration which is cool. I've posted a video to try and demonstrate how loud this thing is - by tapping a glass as a reference.
This video also demonstrates how loud the fans are. Yes, they are loud. Louder than my previous Defiance I. This is to be expected with such high specs. Playing new AAA games will max out the fan RPM. Older games, not so much.
Screen
The 4k AMOLED screen by Samsung is very nice. I tried to take a photo of it next to my Defiance, to at least show the difference, but gave up. It's not possible to show how nice it is without seeing it in person. Image is super crisp, and colours are brilliantly vibrant. I was a bit worried about scaling, as my previous OS was Windows 7, which does a really bad job at scaling things. Many programs had super tiny icons on the 3K screen I used to deal with. The current build of Windows 10 even scales programs from the early 1990s (in this case, it was an old game - Civilization II). So using a 4K screen on a 15.6" laptop is very usable.
I've made a video to show the viewing angle:
What does 1080p look like on a 4K screen?
This is a question I tried my best to search for online, but found no helpful answers. Mostly people who didn't own a 4k screen giving hypothetical answers, saying that 1080p will scale perfectly. This is actually not true. Allow me to demonstrate:
4K Native resolution:
1080p resolution:
Speaks for itself. It will scale just like any other flat panel screen does - badly. Blurriness is unavoidable. However, it is much less noticeable (if at all) in moving images such as games or videos. Gaming in 1080p still looks very nice, however this laptops GPU is able to do 4k gaming. Here is a quick video of MGS5, max settings and at 4K resolution. I used my camera again (instead of direct capture). At least it shows how well the speakers drown out the fans.
Not sure what the framerate was, but it ran smoothly and I didn't notice any drops. Video is limited by my camera's framerate of 25FPS
THERMAL PERFORMANCE
Followed in next post due to image limit
- Intel i7 9750H
- NVidia Geforce RTX 270 8GB
- 32GB DDR 3 2666MHZ
- 4K Glossy OLED Screen (3840x2160) (Samsung)
- 1TB Samsung Evo 970 SSD (I plan on adding another 1TB Evo 950 which I have in my old laptop)
- And of course the special thermal paste PCS sells for £9
Some photos:
And finally, a comparison next to my old Defiance I 15.6". The Vortex looks smaller thanks to the bezels. However, the Defiance is a thinner laptop. Overall I'm quite happy with the look of the laptop. The Defiance is ugly, especially with the strange diagonal corners around the chassis.
The Vortex is made of plastic, but I believe the top panel around the keyboard is aluminium. The chassis feels sturdy, but not perfect. One of the rubber feet underneath is attached to a removable panel. This makes a small clicking noise when weight is applied to this area (where the left hand rests). It's a bit annoying. Hinges feel nice, with good resistance to them. Hopefully they will last long.
Keyboard and Trackpad
Keyboard feels nice enough to type on. Similar to my 2015 defiance. I'm not too fussy in this area, as I've only been using laptops for the past 15 years. Not much flex. Nice clickity click sounds, but not too loud.
Trackpad is very nice and accurate. One of the best I've had so far. Also it's nice to have physical buttons. I can't stand crappy trackpads with no buttons, which cause the mouse to jiggle around the screen.
Speakers and fan noise
It's hard to describe unless you hear them for yourself. In short: they're alright. The volume is decent, but bass is lacking. I used to own an Asus laptop that had wonderful speakers which I dearly miss. However, this is far louder than my previous Defiance laptop - those speakers were just too quiet. You can somewhat hear the separation in the stereo configuration which is cool. I've posted a video to try and demonstrate how loud this thing is - by tapping a glass as a reference.
This video also demonstrates how loud the fans are. Yes, they are loud. Louder than my previous Defiance I. This is to be expected with such high specs. Playing new AAA games will max out the fan RPM. Older games, not so much.
Screen
The 4k AMOLED screen by Samsung is very nice. I tried to take a photo of it next to my Defiance, to at least show the difference, but gave up. It's not possible to show how nice it is without seeing it in person. Image is super crisp, and colours are brilliantly vibrant. I was a bit worried about scaling, as my previous OS was Windows 7, which does a really bad job at scaling things. Many programs had super tiny icons on the 3K screen I used to deal with. The current build of Windows 10 even scales programs from the early 1990s (in this case, it was an old game - Civilization II). So using a 4K screen on a 15.6" laptop is very usable.
I've made a video to show the viewing angle:
What does 1080p look like on a 4K screen?
This is a question I tried my best to search for online, but found no helpful answers. Mostly people who didn't own a 4k screen giving hypothetical answers, saying that 1080p will scale perfectly. This is actually not true. Allow me to demonstrate:
4K Native resolution:
1080p resolution:
Speaks for itself. It will scale just like any other flat panel screen does - badly. Blurriness is unavoidable. However, it is much less noticeable (if at all) in moving images such as games or videos. Gaming in 1080p still looks very nice, however this laptops GPU is able to do 4k gaming. Here is a quick video of MGS5, max settings and at 4K resolution. I used my camera again (instead of direct capture). At least it shows how well the speakers drown out the fans.
Not sure what the framerate was, but it ran smoothly and I didn't notice any drops. Video is limited by my camera's framerate of 25FPS
THERMAL PERFORMANCE
Followed in next post due to image limit
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