Dell Inspiron 15 7000 2-in-1
A smart, mid-range 15.6in convertible with a focus on frill-free value and competency
PRICE £691 (£829 inc VAT) from dell.co.uk
The Inspiron 15 7000 is an uppermid-range 2-in-1 foldable 15.6in laptop that sits between Dell ’s workaday Inspiron 5000 series and the desirable but pricey XPS range. That’s not the most exciting introduction to a laptop review you’ll ever read, but it underscores what
Dell is punting here: frill-free value.
One sign that this is an Inspiron rather than an XPS laptop is its weight. At 1.73kg, it isn’t outrageously heavy for a 15.6in convertible (nor, at 354 x 238 x 17mm, is it unduly large) but if you’re used to sleek 13in ultraportables such as the XPS 13 then you’ll notice its bulk.
Still, on removing the Inspiron 15 7000 from its box, your first impressions will be of a stylish and well-made laptop. The underside panel and lid are made from plastic, rather than metal, but neither feels nor looks any the worse for that; there is flex to the lid, but you won’t notice this unless you apply deliberate twisting force. More importantly, a metal chassis ensures the main body is solid. On a practical note, the matte-silver paint job does a good job of keeping fingerprints at bay.
The two hinges that give this Dell its 360˚ screen flip are solid and squeak-free. Even if you regularly fold up the 7000, I suspect the hinges will stay tight. If you are hoping to use the 15 7000 in tablet mode then you’ll be pleased to hear that its ten-point capacitive touch support worked faultlessly, and note that Dell sells its Active Pen for only £27.
Back in normal laptop mode, if you push the lid past 90˚ then it levers up the back of the deck by just under 10mm to marginally improve the typing angle. The keyboard layout is spacious and the keys have a decent amount of travel, but it’s too bouncy for my liking. I’d describe it as middling rather than good. The trackpad could also be better, with a click action in the two lower corners that’s mushy and unsatisfying. I expected better from Dell.
Things improved when I examined the 1,920 x 1,080 IPS panel more closely, which is well up to par for a machine in this price range. It has a good peak brightness of 330cd/m² and lighting levels are uniform across the panel. sRGB coverage is strong at 97%, as is the contrast ratio of 1,003:1. Out of the box, its Delta E figure was a respectable 2.16. Note the panel is glossy rather than matte, so you may not find this the ideal laptop for use in an office with flourescent lighting.
The display isn’t helped by a 10mm black border at the top, 5mm down the sides and 15mm at the bottom. For the more security conscious, there’s a shutter to mask the 720p webcam. You’ll find a pair of downward-firing speakers tucked below the palmrest; these are loud and detailed, but they could use more bass.
Spread across the two edges, you’ll find a DC power jack, one full-size HDMI 2 output and two USB-A 3.2 ports, as well as a USB-C connector that supports Thunderbolt 4, power delivery and DisplayPort, and a 3.5mm audio jack. There’s an SD card reader too, but it’s rather slow and half the card always sticks out.
“The Inspiron 15 7000 offers a compelling combination of value for money, convenience, power and style”
Undo eight small Philips screws and the bottom panel can be removed, giving access to the Wi-Fi 6 card (an Intel AX201 2x2), SSD and two SODIMM memory slots. The rat-and-tail power supply that Dell includes is a functional black affair that can recharge the 53Wh battery from flat in less than two hours.
Battery life? It’s best described as middling, with a run time of 8hrs 20mins in our videorundown test. Not bad for a 15.6in Windows laptop, but far from class-leading.
You should be happy with the laptop’s speed, however, with Intel’s 11th-generation Core chips on duty. My review sample included the 4-core i5-1135G7 with a burst speed of up to 4.2GHz. Coupled with 12GB (8GB+4GB) of DDR4-3200 memory, it scored a commendable 119 in our benchmarks. If you want more power, consider the all-black version of the 7000 2-in-1, which costs £1,299 and includes a Core i7-1165G7, 16GB of RAM and a 1TB NVMe SSD.
Here, storage comes in the form of a 32GB+512GB Intel Optane H10 SSD. It’s not the fastest, recording 1,022MB/sec reads and 699MB/sec writes in AS SSD’s sequential transfer test, but the relative tardiness has no significant real-world implications.
Graphics are handled by the Intel Iris Xe Graphics – arguably the first Intel integrated graphics chip that you won’t mind being foisted on you. For instance, the Dell can play Doom at 40fps-plus, as long as you knock the resolution down to
1,280 x 720.
One final note: put the Inspiron 15 7000 2-in-1 under heavy stress and things can get hot. You can prevent this using Dell’s Power Manager control panel, which offers various trade-offs between performance, heat and fan operation. The fan is loud at full speed, mind you.
Dell has hit a solid boundary with the Inspiron 15 7000. The less-thanperfect trackpad and keyboard are blots, but it offers a compelling combination of value, convenience, power and style. The easily accessible internals and flexible USB-C port are key selling points.
Four-core 2.4GHz (4.2GHz burst) Intel Core i5-1135G7 processor Intel Xe graphics 12GB DDR-3200 RAM 15.6in IPS touchscreen, 1,920 x 1,080 resolution 512GB M.2 PCIe SSD
2x2 Wi-Fi 6 Bluetooth 5 Thunderbolt 4 2 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 HDMI 1.4 SD card reader 3.5mm jack 720p webcam 53Wh battery Windows 10 Home 356 x 238 x 17.9mm
(WDH) 1.78kg 1yr C&R warranty