Acer Swift 3 SF316 Review – A 16 inch ‘Ultrabook’
Acer offers a kind of 16″ Ultrabook for 850 euros. With 1645 grams, it is a relatively light laptop that is equipped with a 35W Intel processor. This makes the Swift smoother than most Intel chips in Ultrabooks with a 15W TDP However, there are AMD laptops that are a lot smoother, and that applies to more parts in the Swift 3. The screen and battery life are not bad, but also not special and the laptop does not distinguish itself by, for example, extensive upgrade options. relatively lightweight with the tdp makes this laptop distinctive, but we wonder if that’s enough to attract buyers.
Pros
- Relatively low weight
- 35W Intel processor
Cons
- Tight numeric keypad
- Speakers are quite weak
- No card reader
You may have never noticed, but laptops with an ‘inefficient’ processor without an external video card are rare. A fast processor, that includes a fast video card, people seem to think. Laptops with a fast processor are therefore automatically heavy. That extra video card doesn’t even add that much weight, but the whole thing has to be cooled and extra aluminum and copper is needed for that. It can of course also be different, especially now that the internal GPU of the Intel processors in particular is no longer inferior to the slower individual Nvidia cards. Acer is a manufacturer that does things differently, with the Swift 3 SF316, which is equipped with an 11th-generation Core i5 processor with a TDP of 35 watts.
Acer has been selling the Swift 3 series in various guises for years and those laptops usually have screen diagonals of 13.3 and 14″. The Swift laptops differ from Acer’s ‘regular’ Aspire laptops by their relatively thin and light housing and with the SF316 – it’s in the name – makes Acer a foray into 16″. For a laptop with such a screen diagonal, the SF316 is quite compact and the weight of 1645 grams is also not that bad. The SF316, therefore, seems to be a kind of faster and larger Ultrabook and in this review we see whether it really is.
If we want to put the SF316 along the Ultrabook bar, we start with looking at the outside of the laptop. You can expect a sturdy housing from an Ultrabook and the Swift 3 largely lives up to that. Only the B-cover, so the part that frames the screen, is made of plastic and the rest is a metal housing. It feels quite sturdy, as you would expect from a laptop of 850 euros. You can press parts of the housing, for example above the F8 key, but that is not dramatic and you clearly notice the difference with a laptop of roughly 500 euros.
You also see that pressing the housing somewhat happens when you work on the keyboard and that is a shame. The keyboard has a numeric keypad on the right, which has rather narrow buttons. As far as we’re concerned, Acer would have been better off choosing to mount a real keypad, with normal-sized buttons, or omit the block. Then perhaps speakers could have been mounted on either side of the keyboard, because they are now at the bottom and produce relatively little sound; enough in a quiet room, but not when there is a lot of noise.
Acer supplies a regular charger with the SF316, but the laptop can also be charged via USB-C. That port also has support for Thunderbolt 4 and can therefore be used to connect external screens. That is also possible on the HDMI 2.0 connection, which is next to it. Furthermore, USB-A connections have been placed on both sides and that’s it. We would have liked to have seen a card reader, but it is missing.
Benchmarks
We run some benchmarks to see how fast the 11300H processor in the Swift 3 is. We do this to start with using Cinebench, which only looks at the speed of the cpu, and with 3DMark, which looks at cpu and gpu.