Wireless

As we’ve seen in several laptops over the last year, the Acer Nitro 5 features a Qualcomm Atheros QCA61x4a wireless card, which offers 2x2:2 and 802.11ac. It also offers a Realtek Gigabit Ethernet connection if you’ve got access to wired networking.

WiFi Performance - TCP

The performance of the Qualcomm adapter is decent. It doesn’t offer the much faster connections that are typical of the latest Intel wireless adapters, but it gets the job done. Reliability also seemed to be quite good, and there were no disconnects or other abnormal behaviour detected.

Audio

With just two stereo speakers and no subwoofer that you sometimes see on this size of system, expectations weren’t high, but despite only hitting about 75 dB(A) on our test track, the Acer delivered solid, crisp sound, with more dynamic range than expected. For software, Acer offers their Dolby Audio Premium software which works when using the headset jack.

Thermals

Acer outfits the Nitro 5 with Acer’s CoolBoost, which features two fans which draw air from the bottom and expel it out the back of the system. There’s also a software toggle to kick up the speed for maximum cooling if necessary, although in our testing it certainly was not necessary.

To test the thermals we ran Shadow of the Tomb Raider for just over an hour, measuring the GPU and CPU temperatures for the duration. The thermal performance of the Acer Nitro 5 was excellent, with no degradation in performance found, and quite low temperatures on the components. The GPU only went up to 71°C, with the CPU just under that at 68.9°C peak. Power draw on the GPU peaked at 72.5 Watts, and the GPU frequency was locked in at 1275 MHz with no deviation detected at all. Fan speeds were only at 35% as well, which kept the noise down to just about 46 dB(A) measured one inch over the trackpad.

Neither the AMD Ryzen 5 processor, nor the RX 560X, are too power hungry in a system of this size, but even so, the Nitro 5 does a great job of keeping everything cool without getting loud.

Software

As a value product, Acer has turned to offering some pre-installed software to help with margins, which is a practice we’ve seen less and less of by OEMs, which is ironic since Microsoft is now tapping that same well for Windows itself. The Acer Nitro 5 ships with Norton Antivirus, as well as an “Acer Collection” which opens to several Store apps. There’s nothing here too exciting.

The Acer Care software is something most manufactures offer now, with a single pane of glass to manage support, updates, and more, and unlike the other software that’s installed, is probably useful for almost anyone.

The laptop also comes with Acer NitroSense, which allows you to customize the fan profiles, set the power plan, and monitor the CPU, GPU, and fan speeds.

The software is simple to use, and works well. There's no macro support or anything that you might see on a higher priced gaming laptop, but for monitoring, it does the job well.

Battery Life and Charge Time Final Words
Comments Locked

90 Comments

View All Comments

  • zmatt - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    Acer ComfyView is the best name for a display ever. Get comfy lads.
  • 29a - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    "doing its best impression of Hawaii"

    What does that mean? I've never heard that expression.
  • Midwayman - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    I'm guessing its supposed to be "Paint of map of hawaii" Which would sort of make sense, but maybe didn't make it past editorial?
  • Ryan Smith - Saturday, February 16, 2019 - link

    The blue point is off the sRGB gamut triangle, well off to the southwest by itself. So it's like the state of Hawaii; this island far away from the continent.

    It's easier to see in the full size version of that graph: https://images.anandtech.com/doci/13957/Gamut.png

    (It's also a poke at AMD code names)
  • GreenReaper - Monday, February 18, 2019 - link

    I didn't get this either. The best I could come up with was "it's the colour of the ocean near Hawai'i".
  • Fulkrum - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    Sorry but you comparing 17 w tdp CPU vs 35-45 w and conclude that it's not that fast but it's not bad. Ridiculous.
  • GreenReaper - Monday, February 18, 2019 - link

    Well . . . it is? They need to work on being able to reliably enable all the power saving features of the chip, though. Could be it's a case of having to flip the kill-bit on that because it resulted in deadlocks.
  • piroroadkill - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    Sorry, but Acer will always mean cheap and nasty.
  • Annnonymmous - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    I bought one of these and couldn't be happier. It runs dead silent for me (though I don't play a lot of high end games). Also, it runs everything just fine. If you put the settings to medium/high most games will run at 1080/60 I'm sure.

    I added an SSD and a stick of RAM. I admit the screen isn't great, but it's good enough. Also, I plug it into another screen when I'm desktoping.

    Nvidia/Intel run louder/hotter. IMHO. This is a perfect budget gaming laptop.
  • Annnonymmous - Friday, February 15, 2019 - link

    I'm downloading 3Dmark to give results in Dual channel. Will update in a few hours hopefully.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now