Review: HP Spectre x360 13 is our buyer’s choice for best 2-in-1
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
When it comes to convertible PCs, there are two major players right now fighting it out in the 13-inch Ultrabook space: HP and Dell (Lenovo’s 14-inch Yoga C940 is no slouch, either).
Dell’s XPS 13 2-in-1 is in a few ways better than the HP Spectre x360, but HP certainly delivers more for your dollar. It’s also one looker of a laptop. Seeing as HP has fixed most of the significant complaints of this popular convertible, let’s see where it shines and why you should consider it.
I’ve spent the last few months with the Spectre x360, and it’s easy to recommend. But like all laptops, it could be better too. Here’s how.
Best all-around
HP Spectre x360 13 (late-2019)
Bottom line: HP has finally fixed all the major frustrations with its revamped Spectre x360 13. Between the overall affordability and feature set it’s easy to recommend this laptop over the competition. It’s only held back by a dated 16:9 display and OK battery life.
Pros:
- Thin bezels, small footprint
- Pen and leather case sleeve included
- Excellent keyboard and audio
- Very good display
- Outstanding value
Cons:
- 16:9 aspect is getting old
- Drop-jaw Type-A port is frustrating
- Gem-cut design is a bit gaudy
New for early 2020
HP Spectre x360 13 What’s new
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
- Bezel reduction with a 90 percent screen-to-body ratio
- Microsoft Precision Touchpad
- Micro front-facing camera with Windows Hello
- 4K AMOLED option
- New anti-reflective glass technology
- Factory calibrated display
- New 10th Gen CPUs with Iris Plus graphics
- Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5, optional 4G LTE
- New drop-jaw Type-A port
- Dedicated mic-mute button
The most significant change is the new bezel size, which cut those from 17mm to just 6mm. It’s such a massive reduction that the entire laptop’s footprint is now smaller. HP had to cut the speakers from four to only two because of the lack of space, but luckily the audio quality is still outstanding.
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
Everything else is minor but also significant to the overall excellent experience of using the Spectre x360.
So many options
HP Spectre x360 13 specs and features
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
The Spectre x360 13 starts at a modest $1,100 for the entry-level model. That one features a full HD touch display, 10th Gen Core i5 processor, Iris Plus graphics, 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage. Quite frankly, most consumers would be quite satisfied with that configuration.
It’s worth noting that HP includes its HP Pen (non-tilt) at that price, which offers exceptional value. Those wanting the pen with tilt must pay an extra $30, which is still modest.
Category | HP Spectre x360 13 |
---|---|
OS | Windows 10 Home |
Display | 13.3 in, 16:9 aspect ratio Full HD 300 Nits 4K UHD AMOLED 400 Nits |
Processor | 10th Gen Intel Core i5-1035G4 10th Gen Intel Core i7-1065G7 |
Graphics | Intel Iris Plus |
Memory | 8 or 16GB LPDDR4-3200 |
Storage | 512GB or 1TB SSD and 32GB Intel Optane 256GB to 2TB SSD |
Pen | Yes, active (included) |
Expandable storage | Micro SD reader |
Front camera | HP TrueVision HD IR camera |
Security | Windows Hello IR, fingerprint |
Connectivity | Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5, 4G LTE (optional) |
Ports | Two USB 3.1 Type-C with Thunderbolt 3 One USB 3.1 Type-A MicroSD reader |
Audio | Bang & Olufsen with dual speakers |
Battery | 60WHr 65W AC adapter |
Dimensions | 12.08 in (W) x 7.66 in (D) x 0.67 in (H) |
Weight | 2.88lbs (1.3kg) |
Colors | Dark Ash, Poseidon Blue, or Silver |
Though we did not sample the LTE model, it is only available with the i7-1065G7 and full HD display, instead of the 4K OLED option.
If you have $1,100 and you want a convertible Ultrabook, this is the one to get.
Even wholly maxed out, the Spectre x360 13 is still “only” around $1,900, which is much lower than Dell, Lenovo, or Microsoft for similar premium designs.
Considering how thin the Spectre is, HP did not skip out on ports for connectivity. There is a Type-A with a “lock-jaw” to allow for a slim profile. That’s impressive as many companies ditch Type-A to go with the thinner Type-C-only solution. There are two Type-C ports with Thunderbolt 3, a MicroSD reader as well, and a headphone jack.
HP is also sticking with a physical camera kill-switch that lets users disable the front-facing 720P web camera. The toggle kills the camera at the drive level so that users can be assured of privacy. Matching that concern is a physical key on the keyboard for muting the microphone. It has an LED to let you know it’s engaged.
The Spectre’s hinges are the double-hinged variety. They look and feel great by not being too stiff, but also easy to operate. Flipping the display around and holding the Spectre like a tablet is like any other convertible experience, which is not fantastic, but the sheer variety of options for viewing content is certainly welcomed.
Full HD is just right
HP Spectre x360 13 display and inking
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
That said, HP’s panel is very good for a few reasons. I tested the full HD (1080 x 1920) touch display and the results are impressive, with 100 percent sRGB, 78 percent AdobeRGB, and 81 percent DCI-P3. Those numbers are in line with other top-tier Ultrabooks, but it’s nice to see here too.
Brightness is decent, with a peak reading of 442 nits and a low (zero percent brightness) of just 14 nits. There is no auto-adjust sensor, but users can toggle brightness with two dedicated keys.
Putting aside metrics, it’s an outstanding LCD. Reflectivity is much lower than the previous model without losing vividness from similar matte screens. Colors are bright, punchy, and sharp.
HP’s micro camera is very small and flanked by dual LEDs for Windows Hello.Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
HP’s new micro web camera is quite small, but it still managed to squeeze in a Windows Hello infrared (IR) camera for logging into the OS. The camera is OK and passes for video, but the quality is nothing outstanding. Still, considering the size of that top bezel, its inclusion is an engineering marvel.
HP’s pen is very good. An included leather sleeve (another nice touch) has a pen holder built-in not to lose it.
Awesome keyboard, fixed trackapd
HP Spectre x360 13 keyboard, trackpad, and audio
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
Even the font HP uses is quite lovely, which is only amplified by the backlighting. Sure, the contrast with the light is less with silver keys, but it is generally readable.
On the keyboard deck is a fingerprint reader. That may seem redundant with the Windows Hello IR camera, but if you use the webcam kill switch, this reader gives you a good fallback option for instantly logging into Windows 10. It worked well, and I have no complaints.
I was concerned with the Spectre losing two speakers from the top deck audio would be compromised. But I was pleasantly surprised to find the bottom (but to the side) speakers are loud with tremendous audio separation and acoustic fidelity. The Bang & Olufsen-tuned and amplified speakers are some of the best in this class. It’s loud, crisp, and excellent for movies and music.
Just average, but that’s OK
HP Spectre x360 13 power, benchmarks and battery
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
Geekbench 5
Geekbench 5.0 (CPU) (Higher is better)
Device | CPU | Single core | Multi core |
---|---|---|---|
HP Spectre x360 13 | i7-1065G7 | 1,006 | 3,402 |
Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 7390 | i7-1065G7 | 1,209 | 3,571 |
HP Elite Dragonfly | i7-8665U | 1,125 | 2,942 |
Dell XPS 13 (9300) | i7-1065G7 | 1,284 | 4,848 |
Lenovo Yoga C740 | i5-10210U | 1,094 | 3,767 |
Galaxy Book S | SD 8cx | 685 | 2,681 |
Surface Pro X | SQ1 | 725 | 2,819 |
Acer Swift 7 | i7-8500Y | 732 | 1,106 |
Surface Laptop 3 13.5 | i5-1035G7 | 1,177 | 4,413 |
Surface Pro 7 | i5-1035G4 | 1,191 | 4,441 |
PCMark
PCMark 10 Express
Device | Score |
---|---|
HP Spectre x360 13 | 4261 |
Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 | 4,554 |
HP Elite Dragonfly | 3,716 |
Lenovo Yoga C740 | 4,941 |
LG gram 17 | 4,157 |
Acer Swift 5 (SF514-54T) | 4,415 |
Surface Pro 7 (i5) | 3,992 |
Surface Laptop 3 15 (AMD) | 4,006 |
Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 (7390) | 4,427 |
Dell Inspiron 13 7390 2-in-1 | 3,764 |
Dell XPS 15 7590 | 5,521 |
SSD
CrystalDiskMark (Higher is better)
Device | Read | Write |
---|---|---|
HP Spectre x360 (Optane) | 2,092 MB/s | 515 MB/s |
Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 | 2,400 MB/s | 1,228 MB/s |
HP Elite Dragonfly (Optane) | 2,124 MB/s | 548 MB/s |
Lenovo Yoga C740 | 3,408 MB/s | 2,982 MB/s |
LG gram 17 (2020) | 3,477 MB/s | 2,900 MB/s |
Surface Laptop 3 15 | 2,028 MB/s | 806 MB/s |
Surface Laptop 3 13.5 | 2,338 MB/s | 1,583 MB/s |
Acer Swift 5 (SF514-54T) | 1,641 MB/s | 1,025 MB/s |
Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Extreme (Gen 2) | 3,416 MB/s | 3,016 MB/s |
Lenovo ThinkPad P53 | 3,567.23 MB/s | 2,813.25 MB/s |
Lenovo ThinkPad P52 | 3,120 MB/s | 1,551.5 MB/s |
Dell XPS 15 7590 | 3,000 MB/s | 2,796 MB/s |
MSI PS63 Modern | 3,300 MB/s | 1,875 MB/s |
.
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
HP does give you a 65-watt charger in the box, however, versus Dell’s smaller 45 watts alternative.
For heat, HP did fans and noise well. For regular use like web browsing and productivity, the dual-fans will not be much of an issue. Running more demanding apps and those fans will come one, and due to the metal chassis, the laptop can get warm, but never hot. But because of the design here, and what I think is a less than an innovative thermal solution (compared to Dell), the Spectre’s performance is held back moderately.
Best overall value
HP Spectre x360 13 is easy to recommend
Source: Daniel Rubino/Windows Central
And that is what it comes down to for this review. If you have $1,100 and you want a convertible Ultrabook, this is the one to get.
That is not to say all is perfect, though. HP should consider moving to 16:10 for the display aspect ratio. Microsoft set the trend with the taller 3:2, but now Dell is embracing 16:10, and others will soon too. It is not just about getting more screen space, either. Using 16:10 would make the area where your palms rest on the keyboard deck roomier and more comfortable. It also means a taller trackpad. There is a cascading effect here that could benefit HP’s engineering chops.
The Spectre x360 13 clearly stands out from the competition.
The USB Type-A port with drop jaw is undoubtedly creative, but if you thought getting the orientation right with a Type-A plug was already challenging, wait until you add a clamp to the mix. It’s nice to have, but the frustration makes you understand why Type-A needs to die a quick death.
There’s also the look of the Spectre, which is admittedly, entirely subjective. While I appreciate the “gem cut” design and the creativeness to make it happen, it just feels a bit too fancy for a modern laptop. Many companies are embracing symmetrical, square designs with fewer angles, not more. That is why even though the Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 is significantly more expensive (+$300, and no pen) I prefer the look and feel of it over the Spectre. Indeed, I overall like the XPS 13 2-in-1 better, but it’s hard to ignore that substantial increase in price over HP.
Overall, HP continues to do clever work on the Spectre line. They clearly stand out from the competition, and the total amount of stuff you get in this PC is unmatched for the price. Luckily, it’s not all just about value as the power, performance, and overall experience also matches that high praise putting this the top of our list for buyers.
4K OH-LED!
HP Spectre x360 13 (late 2019)
They fixed almost everything
The HP Spectre x360 only had a few things keeping it from greatness, and now those things are here. Microsoft Precision touchpad drivers, 4K AMOLED display with anti-glare, 4G LTE, new 10th Gen Intel processor, and a massive 60 percent reduction in bezel size makes this all-new Spectre x360 13 the best convertible ever.
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