PC Pro

Samsung Galaxy Book Ion

Slim with amazing battery life – Samsung returns to laptops with an impressive ultraporta­ble

- JONATHAN BRAY

SCORE

PRICE 13in Ion, £1,041 (£1,249 inc VAT) from johnlewis.com

You know the Samsung Galaxy Book Ion is special as soon as you prise it from its box. This is no MacBook Air clone, clad in dull grey aluminium, but a laptop with its own identity that hits all the right notes for a 13in ultraporta­ble: it’s light at 970g, robust and packs a stunner of a screen. The company couldn’t have chosen a better machine to announce its return to the British laptop market.

Or, to be absolutely correct, a better pair of machines. The Ion is also available with a 15.6in screen, but with precisely the same core specs: 8GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD and a Core i5-10210U processor. It’s also a supremely light 1.19kg.

Novel design

Whichever model you choose, I suspect you’ll love the design. The Ion is available only in “Aura Silver”, which has an attractive, pearlescen­t sheen when light falls on it. With a metallic blue strip running along the spine of the laptop, it looks distinctly different from the rest of the ultraporta­ble crowd.

The way the Ion’s hinge lifts up the base at the rear, along with its angular body, reminds me of the old Sony Vaio Z laptops. You don’t get the same feeling of brutal ruggedness as a MacBook Pro, but that’s the trade-off with ultra-light laptops. It’s tiny too: it measures 12.9mm thick when closed, while 4mm bezels to the left and right of the screen (and a 7mm bezel above it) makes it clear that Samsung has squeezed as much as possible into the space available.

Despite this, the Samsung Galaxy Ion is tough in all the right places. If you give the chassis a twist, it barely moves; there’s certainly no creaking or cracking to indicate poor build quality. The display backing is more flexible, but there’s no rippling in the LCD if you push your fingers hard on the rear of the lid.

Samsung hasn’t forgotten the practicali­ties, either, with plenty of ports and sockets along the edges. On the left are a full-sized HDMI and Thunderbol­t 3 port, alongside a 3.5mm headset jack and DC charging port (the Ion can also be charged via that Thunderbol­t port), while on the right edge is a pair of USB 3 ports and a microSD tray.

The latter also supports Samsung’s UFS memory cards, which are faster than regular SD cards, offering read and write speeds of up to 500MB/sec and 200MB/sec respective­ly. Alas, since these are hard to come by (you can’t even buy one from Samsung’s own UK website), it looks like you’ll be stuck using slower standard microSD cards for some time.

There’s a way to add more high-speed storage, though, if you don’t mind getting busy with a screwdrive­r. Inside the chassis, the Samsung Galaxy Book Ion has space to add both extra storage and RAM with one slot available for each. That’s not something you often see in ultraporta­ble laptops.

Touchy topics

I found typing on the Galaxy

Book Ion a comfortabl­e experience, but you shouldn’t expect the best keyboard in the world. The keys – while large and easy to touch-type on without too many typos – lack the well-dampened feel of rival machines,

and there isn’t much travel to the keys, either.

The layout is also imperfect. I like the double-height Enter key and the cursor, while the Backspace and Delete keys are again a good size, but the fingerprin­t reader is awkwardly placed just next to the right-hand Shift key, shrinking it and crowding it over to the left. This meant I frequently ended up tapping the reader instead of Shift.

It’s a similar story with the touchpad, which is okay but not brilliant. I like the smooth glass top and the fact that it’s so wide, but the built-in click action feels insubstant­ial. That said, I didn’t have any issues with the touchpad’s accuracy or reliabilit­y.

Gorgeous display

You might be prepared to forgive the keyboard and touchpad’s minor foibles once you lay eyes on that glorious QLED display. On this, the smaller model, it measures 13.3in across the diagonal and the resolution is 1,920 x 1,080, giving an aspect ratio of 16:9.

I prefer the taller aspect ratio of the Surface Laptop 3 ( see issue 305, p56) and Dell XPS 13 ( see p58), but the brightness and colour performanc­e are like nothing else I’ve seen on a laptop. This is a truly stunning display, outshining the very best that even Apple has to offer.

First up, outdoor mode: hit Fn+F10 and the display will gain a significan­t boost to brightness, allowing you to continue working in the brightest of outdoor sun. Indeed, peaking at an incredible 791cd/m², this is the brightest laptop display I’ve ever seen. Only rugged laptops, designed for such challengin­g outdoor conditions, can go beyond this.

Colours, too, are sumptuous. The display has been factory-calibrated to the sRGB colour space, yet it’s also capable of reproducin­g the full Adobe RGB (99%) and DCI-P3 colour spaces (101.8%). The Ion’s only weakness is accuracy, with an average Delta E of 2.64 rather than the sub-one scores we’re gradually becoming used to with top-end laptops.

For those wondering if a Full HD display is enough on a 13.3in screen, let me quickly say don’t worry. In action, it’s gloriously detailed. In my opinion, a high dpi on laptop screens is massively overrated – and I wouldn’t have any concerns about choosing the 15.6in Ion, which also has a Full HD resolution.

Stellar battery

If you want a quiet life, engage Samsung’s Silent mode. Otherwise, the internal fans whir away constantly when the laptop is plugged in; an attempt to keep the Core i5 chip at an optimum temperatur­e despite the slim chassis.

This machine was never going to top the performanc­e charts, though, and its 72 overall score in our benchmarks underlines that fact. That’s in line with our expectatio­ns for a tenth-generation Core i5 chip with 8GB of RAM for company, but if it’s speed you’re after then choose a Dell XPS 13 with a Core i7 and 16GB of RAM instead.

It’s a similar story for 3D accelerati­on, with the Samsung Galaxy Book Ion scraping its way to 31fps in the onscreen GFXBench Car Chase test and 26fps off-screen. Likewise, average 720p frame rates of 36.4fps in Dirt: Showdown and 11.5fps in Metro: Last Light emphasise that this laptop is for lighter gaming duties only.

There’s only one area where this laptop is screamingl­y fast, in fact, and that’s SSD performanc­e. Taking into account both read and write speeds (2,508MB/sec and 2,148MB/sec), it’s the fastest SSD I’ve seen in an ultraporta­ble, bar none.

The most impressive aspect of the Galaxy Book Ion’s performanc­e, however, is its battery life. In our video-rundown tests, where we set the display to a moderately bright 170cd/m² and engage Flight mode, the Ion lasted for 13hrs 3mins. That’s the longest battery life I’ve seen from any Intel-based Windows 10 laptop.

“The Galaxy Book Ion lasted for 13hrs 3mins – the longest battery life I’ve seen from any Intel-based Windows 10 laptop”

Cast-Ion performanc­e

There are so many things to love about the Samsung Galaxy Book Ion that its foibles don’t spoil things. It’s fast and responsive. It’s light and thin. And, unlike so many other rival ultraporta­bles, there are loads of ports to play with; you can even expand the storage by adding a second SSD internally.

Combined with a stunning display, a battery that just won’t quit and a reasonable price ( see “Meet the competitio­n”, above), it goes together to produce an ultraporta­ble laptop of rare quality. Welcome back to the world of Windows laptops, Samsung – you’ve been sorely missed.

 ??  ?? ABOVE The 13.3in and 15.6in ( pictured here) versions both have a glinting silver aura
ABOVE The 13.3in and 15.6in ( pictured here) versions both have a glinting silver aura
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE The Ion’s dark blue fingerprin­t reader cramps the Shift key’s style
ABOVE The Ion’s dark blue fingerprin­t reader cramps the Shift key’s style
 ??  ?? LEFT The display keeps pace with the best Apple has to offer
ABOVE The microSD tray also supports Samsung’s UFS cards, if you can find one
LEFT The display keeps pace with the best Apple has to offer ABOVE The microSD tray also supports Samsung’s UFS cards, if you can find one
 ??  ??

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