Kobalt G150 review

The ultimate mobile GPU meets Intel's awesome new Sandy Bridge CPU

Kobalt G150
The performance of the GTX 485M is utterly outrageous

TechRadar Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Ridiculous performance

  • +

    Great screen

  • +

    Moderately portable

Cons

  • -

    Pricey graphics options

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From the get go, Intel's new Sandy Bridge family of PC processors have seemed destined for mobile greatness. Partly that's because Intel never intended the new Core i3, i5 and i7 2000 series chips to take over at the very top of the performance table.

That honour remains the reserve of the six-core Gulftown chip, if only just. But Sandy Bridge's status and the first pukka fusion processor for the PC is what really has us foaming over our flat panels.

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This Kobalt system scores highly in other areas, too. The build is solid, with zero bounce or bend in the bed of the keyboard. Speaking of which, the whole top surface of its surround is covered in a thin rubberised film, which is intriguing to the touch even if it does attract bits of detritus.

Perhaps even better is the 15.6-inch LCD. Technically it's nothing special, based as it is on TN panel technology. But it does have an LED backlight and a glorious full-HD grid measuring 1,920 x 1,080 pixels. Thus, you get the same screen real estate as desktop monitors up to 24-inches in size.

What's more, it's a bright, vibrant panel with rich colours, decent viewing angles and good contrast. The latter is boosted by a glossy screen coating that may or may not be to your taste. It looks dramatic but also generates distracting reflections.

Specs appeal

Elsewhere, there's 6GB of DDR3 memory, a Blu-ray ROM and DVD burning drive along with good connectivity including HDMI, DVI and E-SATA. Various flavours of quad-core Sandy Bridge CPU are available.

Kobalt g150

Our test system has the base Core i7 2630QM model, rated at 2.0GHz with a maximum Turbo speed of 2.9GHz. In our testing it never clocked up beyond 2.6GHz. But that's hardly an issue.

We can only describe the performance of both the 2630QM and the GTX 485M graphics as utterly outrageous. Many a time has a laptop been described as offering desktop-replacement performance. The Kobalt G150 actually delivers.

In that context, we'd describe the battery life of just under two and a half hours when playing back 720p video as reasonable. All of which means this impressive system only has three problems.

The first is that you can't use that lightning-fast Quick Sync Video transcoder core. That's a real bummer, both because of the awesome performance it offers and because you've effectively paid for a feature you can't use.

Next up is the hard drive. At 500GB, it's capacious. But it's also a traditional magnetic drive with a spinning platter, and in this age of SSDs it feels dog slow. Kobalt offers a Crucial C300 128GB SSD for £153. That's an upgrade box we'd tick.

Finally, there's the minor matter of money. The killer here is that GTX 485M graphics is a £381 upgrade option. That's right, nearly £400 for a lower clocked version of a card that goes for £200 in desktop trim.

All told, it makes for a system that just breaches the £1,700 barrier. That's a whole hill of money. But if you want the best, you have to pay for it. If you can afford it, we doubt the Kobalt G150 will disappoint you.

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Contributor

Technology and cars. Increasingly the twain shall meet. Which is handy, because Jeremy (Twitter) is addicted to both. Long-time tech journalist, former editor of iCar magazine and incumbent car guru for T3 magazine, Jeremy reckons in-car technology is about to go thermonuclear. No, not exploding cars. That would be silly. And dangerous. But rather an explosive period of unprecedented innovation. Enjoy the ride.