PC Pro

HP Spectre x2 (2017)

HP’s glamourous 2-in-1 takes the fight to the Surface Pro but misses the punch in a handful of key areas

- PRICE £1,249 (£1,499 inc VAT) from store.hp.com

The first HP Spectre x2 was a worthy Surface Pro rival: sleek and attractive, it also offered more for your money thanks to its bundled keyboard and stylus. But it was held back by a collection of problems, including a poor quality screen and below-average speakers. Just like Microsoft, HP has updated its consumer 2-in-1 for 2017. So, has HP finally found the magic formula?

Once again, it certainly offers a better specificat­ion for your cash than the rival Surface Pro. While it costs a heady £1,499, that includes an Intel Core i7-7560U processor, 8GB of RAM and a super speedy 512GB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD. The closest equivalent Microsoft Surface Pro costs £1,549, has half the storage and doesn’t include a keyboard or stylus.

HP has also enhanced the design of the Spectre x2. Its dark grey aluminium body and coppercolo­ured trim not only look great but are a pleasure to use. Its kickstand provides up to 165-degrees of adjustment, making it easy to set up at just the right angle, while it’s both light and thin. That tablet portion weighs a mere 780g, rising to 1.15kg with the keyboard, and is only 8mm thick; that’s the same thickness as the Galaxy S8.

HP finds space for two USB-C ports on either side of the tablet, and both can be used for charging, display output and data transfers. The left-hand side also includes a microSD slot and a 3.5mm headphone jack, but you might be tempted to stick with the Bang & Olufsen-branded speakers that flank the screen and face forwards: they sound great, with remarkably full-bodied audio for such a slim device. Elsewhere, HP includes Intel 802.11ac wireless and Bluetooth 4.2, plus two cameras: a front-facing, 5-megapixel camera with a dual microphone and a rear-facing 13-megapixel shooter.

Sense of attachment

The keyboard attaches magnetical­ly to the tablet via a ten-pin connector and can either be arranged so it lies flat on the desk or tilted up at a slight angle. There’s minimal keyboard flex with the keyboard in the latter configurat­ion, and the keys are well-spaced, backlit and have a nice, positive action. Typing is a breeze on this keyboard. The trackpad is wider than last year’s model and its frosted glass top feels lovely under the finger. However, I found using it hit and miss. Sometimes it wouldn’t properly track my swipes and clicks, requiring multiple attempts. More troublesom­e was the recognitio­n of the bundled keyboard and trackpad with the Spectre x2’s main frame. Occasional­ly, when flipping between laptop and tablet mode, the x2 would simply refuse to connect to the keyboard, even with it still attached. On the plus side, the HP Active Pen works flawlessly, especially with Windows Ink integratio­n. With 2,048 levels of pressure sensitivit­y, it’s wonderfull­y responsive and the nib has a “grippy” feel on the surface of the tablet. Palm rejection is effective as well. But the Microsoft Pen outscores it on two points: first, the HP’s isn’t tilt-capable; second, Microsoft offers 4,096 pressure points and a nicer “pen on paper” feel.

“I saw the CPU hit 96°C at one point, meaning the x2 was a stone’s throw away from blue screening or an automatic shutdown”

One area where the x2 has improved dramatical­ly is the display. Where last year’s offering was a wan, washed-out 1080p screen, this year’s 12.3in display has a sharper resolution of 3,000 x 2,000 and looks great. It’s even crisper than the Surface Pro 4’s 12.3in 2,736 x 1,824 “PixelSense” screen, which is saying something.

Testing with our colorimete­r produced impressive results. The x2 reproduced 91.7% of the sRGB colour gamut, resulting in vivid colours. It’s also colour accurate and has a stunning 1,315:1 contrast ratio. Movies, photos and TV shows look fantastic. And it gets rather bright, too: at 488cd/m2, this is one of the few laptops you can use outdoors on a sunny day.

Power with a catch

Inside, there’s a 2.4GHz Intel Core i7-7560U with 8GB of LPDDR3-1866 SDRAM. Coupled with Windows 10 Home 64-bit, the HP Spectre x2 feels responsive in everyday use. I was disappoint­ed, then, when it could only muster 40 in our benchmarks. Compare that with the similarly specified Surface Pro 2017 – albeit with 16GB of RAM and a fractional­ly

faster processor – which scored 60. The HP Spectre x2’s score is closer to the old Microsoft Surface Pro 4 (with an Intel Core i5-6300U), which achieved 44 in the same tests.

Performanc­e in the cross-platform Geekbench 4 benchmark is an entirely different story. The HP Spectre x2 is the top dog here, with a score of 4,441 and 8,222 in the single-core multicore benchmarks respective­ly compared with the Surface Pro 4’s 3,634 and 7,046.

So why the stark contrast in results? It’s because our in-house benchmarks take much longer to complete, and at some point thermal throttling comes into play, limiting the HP’s performanc­e. Geekbench 4 takes only a few minutes to complete, while our benchmarks can take several hours.

Indeed, I saw the Spectre x2’s CPU hit 96°C at one point; given the maximum temperatur­e is 100°C, it was a stone’s throw away from blue screening or an automatic shutdown, which would be triggered by the motherboar­d.

For graphics, HP relies on Intel’s integrated Iris Plus Graphics 640. You won’t be playing modern titles at the display’s 3,000 x 2,000 native resolution: in the GFXBench benchmark, the Spectre x2 managed only 8.6fps in Car Chase and 15.6fps in the Manhattan 3 benchmark at this resolution. However, if you do want to use the laptop for gaming, you’ll get decent results by dialling down the resolution to a more manageable 1080p. Here, the laptop achieved 23.8fps and 42.6fps respective­ly.

The most impressive aspect of the HP’s performanc­e, though, was left to last when I put the 512GB PCIe NVMe M.2 SSD to the test: it delivered seriously quick sequential read and write speeds of 2,115MB/sec and 636MB/sec respective­ly.

As for battery life, however, it’s back to disappoint­ment I’m afraid, with a lowly 5hrs in our video rundown test. Again, the Spectre x2 lags considerab­ly behind the Microsoft Surface Pro 2017, which achieved more than double this result at 11hrs 33mins. The only good news is that it supports fast charging, hitting around 50% in 30 minutes.

Verdict

At £1,500 the HP Spectre x2 initially looked a tasty propositio­n, so it’s disappoint­ing that it misfires in key areas. At first sight, it’s a stunning 2-in-1 with blistering short-burst performanc­e, a fantastic screen and a set of forward-firing speakers that will make films sound great.

However, its thermal limitation­s are worrying and the battery life is poor for a modern machine. If you’re looking for a do-it-all 2-in-1 device I’d pay the extra for the Microsoft Surface Pro 2017 instead; or, if you’ve got a maximum budget of £1,500, consider the older Surface Pro 4.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE The original x2’s screen was a disappoint­ment; this year, it’s fantastic
ABOVE The original x2’s screen was a disappoint­ment; this year, it’s fantastic
 ??  ?? BELOW Taking its cue from the Surface Pro’s adjustable kickstand, the Spectre x2 can tilt back to 165 degrees
BELOW Taking its cue from the Surface Pro’s adjustable kickstand, the Spectre x2 can tilt back to 165 degrees
 ??  ?? ABOVE Not only do you get a stylus as part of the package, there’s somewhere to put it!
ABOVE Not only do you get a stylus as part of the package, there’s somewhere to put it!

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