ASUS N90SV-A2

Wednesday, June 17, 2009 12:35
Posted in category Asus, Notebook

asus-n90svThe ASUS N90SV-A2 is an 18.4″ multimedia gaming notebook designed for people who might not need the power of a W90, or have the budget for one. Offering dual hard drives, NVIDIA Geforce GT 130M graphics, optional Blu-ray playing capabilities, and a FullHD 1080P display the N90 is perfect for someone who wants a true multimedia hub for their dorm room or office. With prices starting as low as $1,399 online depending on configuration, is this 18.4″ multimedia right worth it?

Build and Design

ASUS gave the N90SV a clean and sleek look with sharply defined contours and a classy pinstripe glossy black finish. When closed the N90 appears to be quite slim with a sharpened front edge that slowly expands out over the screen and gradually slims down again towards the rear. The exterior is tastefully finished with the glossy black plastic and a thin plate of chrome that connects the two screen hinges. While the ASUS logo is displayed front and center, it doesn’t appear to be too large or obscenely flashy.

Screen and Speakers

The 18.4″ FHD 1920×1080 display is above average in quality, with bright colors and very good contrast levels thanks to the glossy surface. For a small dorm room or office the screen is large enough to properly sit back and watch a movie with a few friends. Paired with the Blu-ray drive the movie experience is great compared to even tiny 15.4″ or 17″ notebooks. Viewing angles are average, with about 15 to 20 degrees of vertical viewing range before colors start to distort. Horizontal viewing angles span further, viewable to about 70 degrees before reflections off the glossy surface overpower the displayed images. Backlight brightness is fine for viewing the screen in a brightly lit room, but limit any outdoor use to a heavily shaded are.

The speakers are located below the display, underneath a thin plastic grill. The oddly small speakers feel misplaced on an 18.4″ multimedia notebook and sound underpowered. Peak volume levels were weak, and the speakers sounded very tinny at higher volume levels. Bass and midrange were lacking, leaving only higher frequencies to fill the room. For enjoying a quick movie or listening to streaming music they will probably be more than adequate, but for the best listening experience use the headphone jack or HDMI out for digital audio through a stereo.

Keyboard and Touchpad

ASUS was easily able to fit a full-size keyboard into the N90SV, with room to spare on each side. The keyboard is comfortable to type on once you get used to the keys, which are shaped different from more common keyboards. The keys are more squared off with sharper and more defined edges, and have less of a “cup” to the key surface. Once you get past the shape of the keys the typing surface feels great, with very good support under strong typing. Some flex was noticed under significant finger pressure, but it was minimal at worst. Individual key action was smooth, with a shallow press needed to activate it. Noise while typing wasn’t significant, with only a mild click when each key was pressed.

The N90 offers a large Synaptics touchpad that is a dream to use. Sensitivity is great and with a soft matte finish it is easy to flick your finger around the touchpad and accurately move in on your target. No lag was noticed during use, with my only complaint regarding the touchpad being the default settings. The sensitivity was set a little high, and it was easy to lurch the pointer across the screen by touching your palm to the side of the touchpad by accident. Some minor tweaking of the settings helped fix this, as well as just getting used to the large layout of the notebook. The touchpad button is a rocket style button, with a single solid bar for triggering the left and right button. Moderate pressure was required to activate the button, having shallow feedback and giving off a muted click when pressed.

Ports and features

Port selection on the N90SV is average compared to other notebooks we have reviewed, but it feels underutilized with the amount of open space around the sides of the notebook. The notebook offers four USB ports, VGA, HDMI, two headphone out, microphone in, and LAN. For expansion the it has an ExpressCard/54 slot and SDHC multi-card reader. One feature lacking that is very disappointing is eSATA, used for high speed external storage. This connection should have not been left out of an 18.4″ multimedia notebook. For HD movie playback, the N90SV-A2 sports a Blu-ray drive, which is nice if the notebook fill the role of multimedia hub in a home theater.

Performance and Benchmark

System performance with the Intel Core 2 Duo T9550 and NVIDIA GeForce GT 130M was excellent, showing little lag except under higher resolution gaming tests. The notebook flex through normal tasks such as web browsing, startup and shutdown, and playing HD movies with ease.

Gaming performance is slightly below full-on hardcore gaming notebooks, but still very respectable. In Call of Duty: World at War with high detail settings the notebook handled 1080P resolution at 16 to 20FPS. Lowering the resolution down to 720P, speed increased to25-30FPS. Bioshock varied more at 1080P resolution, going between 20-30FPs depending on the amount of action on the screen. Lowering the resolution to 720P, framerates sped up to 40-45FPS. Left 4 Dead was similar, going to 20-30FPs at 1080P, and 40-50FPS at 720P.

Heat and Noise

Thermal performance of the N90SV is excellent. The notebook barely breaks a sweat even after running benchmarks and games. The large surface area of the notebook helps dissipate heat quickly, and the end result is a very lap-friendly notebook. Cooling fan noise was also minimal, staying off most of the time, and when on it was very quiet.

Battery

Power consumption was oddly high with the SiS chipset, just like the F50SV we reviewed a while ago. During low activity the system idled at a high 26 watts, whereas slightly smaller sized and similarly equipped gaming notebooks might draw closer to 20 watts. Because of this our battery figures were below average. With the system set to “Balanced” mode, screen brightness set to 70%, and wireless active the N90SV stayed on for 2 hours and 9 minutes.

ASUS N90SV-A2 Specifications:

* Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 (64 bit)
* 2.66GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T9550 (1066MHz FSB, 6MB L2 Cache)
* Chipset: SiS 671DX+968
* 4GB PC2-6400 RAM (2GB x 2GB)
* 2 x 500GB Seagate 5400rpm
* NVIDIA GeForce GT 130M 1GB GDDR2 VRAM
* 18.4″ 1080P HD FHD LCD 1920×1080 (Glossy)
* Optical Drive: BD-ROM + DVDRW+/-
* Wireless: Atheros AR928x B/G/N Wifi and Bluetooth 2.0
* 8-cell 14.8V 4.4Ah 62Wh battery
* Dimensions: 18.4″ x 12.4″ x 1.8″
* Weight: 9lbs 8.3oz
* Warranty: 2-year global, 1-year accidental damage
* Price as configured: $1,799

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4 Responses to “ASUS N90SV-A2”

  1. Katy says:

    June 23rd, 2009 at 4:05 pm

    Pretty cool post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say
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  2. How I Make $5000 a Month Posting Links on Google says:

    June 25th, 2009 at 4:19 pm

    Loved your latest post, by the way.

  3. Steve says:

    July 3rd, 2009 at 10:20 am

    Strengths: Huge high-def screen, 1Tb hard-drive, cool case.
    Weaknesses: First one I received, Blu-ray drive buzzed and rattled, and Blu-ray software would not install. Called Asus tech support – they told me to call the reseller…sent it back. Second one arrived, same issue with the Blu-ray software. Had an I.T. professional look at it to no avail. Called Asus again and they would not talk to me because I am a “new purchase”. I give up, call me crazy but for $1700+ I expect a laptop to work!

    Overall Evaluation: Obviously, Asus has early production issues with this new model and is already tired of dealing with the support calls on it. Avoid the headache, just buy a Dell, Sony, or something from Best Buy…at least their products work out of the box, and they stand behind their products if you have a problem.

  4. Radigan says:

    October 20th, 2009 at 11:41 am

    Thank you and your site for your helping hand.

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