Acer TimelineX 4820T review
Pulling the 14-inch Acer TimelineX 4820T from its box, one thing went through our mind: this could be the perfect thin and light laptop. The $717 system is about an inch thick, weighs only 4.7 pounds, and still has an onboard DVD drive. And unlike the past Acer Timelines and their sissy ULV processors, it has a standard voltage Core i3-350M CPU, 4GB of RAM and a 320GB hard drive. Oh, and it promises over seven hours of battery life. Sound like the perfect no-compromise ultrathin laptop to you too, right? Well, even after our unboxing, the TimelineX 4820T did live up to many of our expectations, but disappointed in some unfortunate others. We'll explain it all in our full review after the break.
Unofficially, the X at the end of the new Timeline series stands for "extreme," but we're going to pretend it stands for extra polished. The system's professional look is still very much intact, but Acer's added a bit of pizzazz here and there: there's now a silver trim around the touchpad and the black brushed aluminum cover gives it a classic look. Even better, the 4820T has very little gloss as the palmrest is covered in a silverish metal as well, though the screen bezel and trim around the keyboard still gets the unfortunate black glossy-plastic treatment.
The 4820T's 0.9 to 1.1-inch thick body is the biggest design coup, though. It's just an incredibly thin and light 14-inch laptop, and the battery doesn't bulge at all like some other ultraportables out there. For comparisons sake, it's thinner and ligher than the smaller-screened 13-inch ASUS U30Jc and ThinkPad Edge 13. Shoving the 4.7-pounder into a larger shoulder bag was no issue – we actually didn't mind dragging it to and from the office. Despite the thin dimensions, the machine still has room for a DVD player and three USB ports on its right edge. We're not sure why Acer had to line up all the USB ports so close to each other -- it makes it hard to simultaneously plug in multiple devices. An extra USB jack, HDMI, Ethernet, VGA, and mic and headphone sockets dwell on the left side, while its 5-in-1 card reader lives on the front lip.
We've said this in the last couple of Acer reviews, but there's no harm in repeating our disclaimer on the build quality. The make isn't superb, though in this case it's what you'd expect for the price. There are parts of the 4820T – notably the flexy keyboard and plastic hinge reinforcements -- that don't have us convinced the machine will age well, but sometimes these are the sorts of laptops that end up lasting longer than you ever thought. Obviously, you take a chance with any machine.
Acer's been using the same chiclet keyboard on all of its laptops these days, and it would be perfectly fine with just a few tweaks. The rounded keys have a nice amount of bounce, but they're just too flat. We wish they had some sort of curve to them and that they melded to your fingers more over time. The real kicker, however, is that the panel on the TimelineX 4820T was ridden with flex – just pressing one finger on the "G" key caused the entire thing to bend. And because of this, there was a slight squeaking sound when we typed this review. It's not good, but for what's worth we did type at a fairly fast clip and without too many typos.
The touchpad on the 4820T is quite generous in size. It supports multitouch gestures, though we turned off the pinch-to-zoom function since it would mistakenly zoom in on webpages when that's the last thing we wanted to do. The scroll strip on the right edge of it was responsive, however. The single mouse button didn't give us any issues, though we'd like to take a knife and chop it into two dedicated buttons. The dual speakers above the keyboard are decent for personal listening, and we could hear a YouTube clip over our TV in the background. Yet, they aren't as loud or full as those on the HP Pavilion dm4.
As members of the matte screen lovers guild (seriously, we'd join if this existed), we think the 4820T would've been perfect with a non-glossy version of its 14-inch, 1366 x 768 display, but everyone seems set on these glossy, reflective screens. Like we've been seeing on recent Acer laptops, the screen's bright, but viewing angles were quite bad. Horizontal angles weren't terrible for sharing the screen with another, but tilting the screen back when watching a gripping video of Lindsay Lohan's sentencing caused her face to darken and her tears to be indiscernible.
As one would expect, the TimelineX 4820T's standard voltage Core i3 processor beats all of the ULV laptops we've reviewed in the past few months. The 2.26GHz Core i3-350M processor along with 4GB of RAM was certainly fast enough for our everyday routine, too – we simultaneously ran Chrome, Microsoft Word 2007, Tweetdeck and Trillian with no lag, and even adding DVD playback to the mix didn't slow things down. It's not as fast as the Sony VAIO Z with its Core i5 processor and GeForce GT 330M graphics, but the Z's at least double the price. Cramming a standard voltage CPU into a thinner chassis does have its downsides, and those lie mostly in heat. For the most part, the 4820T did stay relatively cool, but programs that were CPU intensive, including Firefox Beta 4, caused the left palmrest and touchpad to get extremely toasty.
Though the TimelineX is available with a discrete ATI Radeon GPU, our review unit had Intel's integrated HD graphics. The integrated option was fine for watching YouTube HD videos and a local 1080p Green Hornet trailer, but it's not going to appease heavy gamers. For those that need the extra graphics muscle, the $799 4820TG-5637 with Core i3 and ATI Radeon HD 5650 graphics may be the worth the extra cash.
Onto the million dollar question: how does Acer's use of a standard voltage CPU affect the battery life of this very portable laptop? Not much, by any measure. The 4820T's 66Wh six-cell battery lasted five hours and four minutes on our video rundown test, which loops the same video at 65 percent brightness. That's actually longer than the ULV-powered Dell Vostro V13 and just around the same time as the Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 13. In everyday usage with brightness set at 75 percent we squeezed about five and a half hours out of the system – that should be good enough to last the bus ride from New York to Boston.
Just like the Aspire One 521 and 721, Acer's loaded up the TimelineX with a bit of software. The desktop comes cluttered with Netflix, Acer games, Norton and McAfee antivirus shortcuts.
Is the Acer TimelineX 4820T the perfect ultrathin laptop? Well, it's surely a step in the right direction, but ultimately what holds this back is the same stuff that holds most Acers back, and that's really its substandard build quality. In the case of the 4820T, it's especially apparent in its flexy keyboard and poor LCD. However, there's no doubt that it's in a class much on its own (the Toshiba Protégé R700/R705 falls into the same one, but we're still waiting to review it), and for $717 the 4820T fills the niche for those looking for mainstream laptop power in a thin and light chassis. And, well, that alone may just be perfection for some.
Look and feel

The 4820T's 0.9 to 1.1-inch thick body is the biggest design coup, though. It's just an incredibly thin and light 14-inch laptop, and the battery doesn't bulge at all like some other ultraportables out there. For comparisons sake, it's thinner and ligher than the smaller-screened 13-inch ASUS U30Jc and ThinkPad Edge 13. Shoving the 4.7-pounder into a larger shoulder bag was no issue – we actually didn't mind dragging it to and from the office. Despite the thin dimensions, the machine still has room for a DVD player and three USB ports on its right edge. We're not sure why Acer had to line up all the USB ports so close to each other -- it makes it hard to simultaneously plug in multiple devices. An extra USB jack, HDMI, Ethernet, VGA, and mic and headphone sockets dwell on the left side, while its 5-in-1 card reader lives on the front lip.
We've said this in the last couple of Acer reviews, but there's no harm in repeating our disclaimer on the build quality. The make isn't superb, though in this case it's what you'd expect for the price. There are parts of the 4820T – notably the flexy keyboard and plastic hinge reinforcements -- that don't have us convinced the machine will age well, but sometimes these are the sorts of laptops that end up lasting longer than you ever thought. Obviously, you take a chance with any machine.
Keyboard, touchpad and screen

The touchpad on the 4820T is quite generous in size. It supports multitouch gestures, though we turned off the pinch-to-zoom function since it would mistakenly zoom in on webpages when that's the last thing we wanted to do. The scroll strip on the right edge of it was responsive, however. The single mouse button didn't give us any issues, though we'd like to take a knife and chop it into two dedicated buttons. The dual speakers above the keyboard are decent for personal listening, and we could hear a YouTube clip over our TV in the background. Yet, they aren't as loud or full as those on the HP Pavilion dm4.
As members of the matte screen lovers guild (seriously, we'd join if this existed), we think the 4820T would've been perfect with a non-glossy version of its 14-inch, 1366 x 768 display, but everyone seems set on these glossy, reflective screens. Like we've been seeing on recent Acer laptops, the screen's bright, but viewing angles were quite bad. Horizontal angles weren't terrible for sharing the screen with another, but tilting the screen back when watching a gripping video of Lindsay Lohan's sentencing caused her face to darken and her tears to be indiscernible.
Performance and battery life

Though the TimelineX is available with a discrete ATI Radeon GPU, our review unit had Intel's integrated HD graphics. The integrated option was fine for watching YouTube HD videos and a local 1080p Green Hornet trailer, but it's not going to appease heavy gamers. For those that need the extra graphics muscle, the $799 4820TG-5637 with Core i3 and ATI Radeon HD 5650 graphics may be the worth the extra cash.
| PCMarkVantage | 3DMark06 |
Battery Life | |
| Acer TimelineX 4820T (Intel Core i3-350M) | 4926 | 1724 | 5:04 |
| Dell Vostro V13 (Intel Core 2 Duo SU7300) | 2687 | 556 | 2:39 |
| Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 13 (Core 2 Duo SU7300) | N/A | 905 | 5:12 |
| ASUS U30Jc (Core i3-350M, NVIDIA) | 4841 | 1739/3686 | 4:10 |
| ASUS UL50Vf (Core 2 Duo SU7300) | 3724 | 827/3438 | 6:10 |
Onto the million dollar question: how does Acer's use of a standard voltage CPU affect the battery life of this very portable laptop? Not much, by any measure. The 4820T's 66Wh six-cell battery lasted five hours and four minutes on our video rundown test, which loops the same video at 65 percent brightness. That's actually longer than the ULV-powered Dell Vostro V13 and just around the same time as the Lenovo ThinkPad Edge 13. In everyday usage with brightness set at 75 percent we squeezed about five and a half hours out of the system – that should be good enough to last the bus ride from New York to Boston.
Just like the Aspire One 521 and 721, Acer's loaded up the TimelineX with a bit of software. The desktop comes cluttered with Netflix, Acer games, Norton and McAfee antivirus shortcuts.
Wrap-up






























Looking around, they also make it in an i5-450M model with ATI 5650 GPU.
AS4820TG-3195
http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0340080
@andysexton Yeah, this is one thing I'm not clear on. What is the practical difference between the Core i3 and the Core i5? I've read some things indicating that the Core i3 is considerably weaker, but nothing really concrete.
@Zadillo I'm not sure on this but I believe the i5 is slightly more efficient (as in if they had the same clock speed, the i5 would be more powerful) and the thing I DO know is that the i5 has Turbo Boost, which is kind of like dynamically overclocking the processor automatically. i3s can't do that.
I'm still love stricken by the Eee 1215n... here's hoping you could review it when it comes out... if it's not too much trouble :D
I was playing around with one of these at MicroCenter, and for what it's worth, the keyboard seemed pretty solid. Not quite up there with the 13" MBP or Vaio Z, but I definitely didn't notice a ton of flex as described in the review. The screen seemed pretty average though, certainly next to the Vaio Z's screen though. But for the price, hard to complain. My local MicroCenter also has a config of this Acer with a Core i5 and ATI 5650 for $899 which I believe is more comparable in spec to the Vaio Z, and not a bad option at a lower price. But the Vaio Z still seems like one of the best PC laptops out there right now IMO.
@Zadillo
Vaio Z shreds this...but twice the price ;)
@beaups
Hey you get what you pay for. Vaio Z is in a different class.
Why are manufactures so set with 14 inch 1366 x 768 displays? Really...we can get a 1440x900 or something?
@swcreates
Seriously. Though it would be 1600x900, as the 1440x900 is 16:10 and this is 16:9.
I plan on buying the high end one with the i5 and the 5650, and am probably going to buy a 1600x900 LCD panel from eBay and roll my own.
I've done it before on an HP DV8000, upping the sad 1440x900 panel to 1920x1200.
Why does this laptop article not have a 'laptop' tag?
I bought an acer laptop not too long ago, and it's AWESOME in every aspect EXCEPT for the poor build quality of the LCD hinges and the poor battery life.... It's the Aspire 5740-6378. The hinges don't move easily and they're flimsy... Would it be possible to mod it?
So its between this with a 5650 andi5 or an hp dm4 with a 5450 and an i7. What do? The hp has better build quality and processor while this has better graphics and battery life. I really don't want to deal with crappy build quality, but maybe its worth it...
Hey guys! If you guys want the model that can play games, Microcenter has them! Its called the 4820tg and it has the i5 and the i3 model with the ati 5650. Now that's a deal! $799/899.
I have no problems with the build quality of my last-gen 5810T but the screen sounds horribly familiar.
At least the keys aren't glossy like on mine (seriously, who thought that flat slippery keys that collect fingerprints was a good idea?) but it still has that deep well under them for trapping pet hair.
I would still love to upgrade to a 5820T w/discreet graphics since this machine's C2S is woefully underpowered.
Acer and Asus are so frustrating! They have great prices, performance, battery life, decent build quality but they insist on using HORRIBLE LCDs. Not only are they always 1336x768 res.. the contrast is that of a cheap panel no matter if its a $250 netbook or a $900 timeline.
The HP envy 14.5 looks to be the laptop to get... especially if they go on sale. Wish it was announced before I bought my Z
Is there gonna be an 11 inch version of this? If so, do we know what it's called (especially in UK)?
@Jeffrey Fourmile Acer TimelineX 1820t
Looks like a nice laptop, especially with the 5650 option. I hope engadget will do a slightly more comprehensive screen review of all these new laptops. I really would like to know (besides Apple), which laptop has the best screen (ie: viewing angles, best color rendition). Of course, it would be also nice if manufacturers would get rid of these damn glossy screens that make it almost impossible to do graphics work with a light on in the room.
@Bhima You might want to check notebookcheck.net's reviews - they go into fanatical detail on the screens in terms of analyzing viewing angles, contrast ration, brightness, etc.
I'm on a 4810TG and boy does this sound sweet. The TG version of course which I take will be switchable graphics too.
@engadget
4.7 pounds? over 2.1Kg
you sure that's not the weight in the box with powersupply etc?
I've owned one with a 2.4ghz Core i5 and an ATI radeon 5650M for about a month now, and here's what I think:
It's great. Some of the issues Joanna highlighted are there, like the seriously poor vertical viewing angles and the glossy screen. But my keyboard doesn't flex nor squeak. I read the review on my unit and pressed the G key to try the described flex, but it just didn't budge. You might've got a lemon, as I don't think the models with the Core i3's have different build quality.
Also, I did the Crysis test. It's ~40 fps smooth (haven't had an fps counter on, but 40-50 is what it looks like) on HIGH settings! Yay! I'm seriously thrilled about the power of the core i5 and the radeon 5650. Simply fantastic.
Th screen is good when you sit right in front of it, I'm not too bothered about the viewing angles. But don't expect a high-end screen. There are some artifacts that aren't visible on my desktop computer screen in various 720p videos, and the colors could be better. The gloss problem is eliminated if you turn the brightness up sufficiently, and trust me, the backlight can get VERY bright.
This is a very stylish, powerful, and all around great computer that I'd recommend to anyone.
Do not buy this thing if you want a "thin" laptop. When I popped the battery in, I found the thing was at least 2 inches off the ground and 3 inches thick near the hing with the battery. If you read the description Acer says it's X inches think at the thinnest point and don't mention this huge tumor of a battery. They could have at least made it stick out like some of the smaller Dell Latitudes had.
Just picked up the 3820T and I am extremely pleased with the performance and looks of this beast! First thoughts: THIN!! This laptop is light, yet still feels solid in your hands. I'm impressed with the battery life. Under normal usage (updates, web browsing, youtube, netflix, etc) battery was still at 20% after 6 hours of use. Didnt need lots of processor power so the i3 chip w/ intergrated graphics is more than enough for what I use the lappy for. The screen is crisp and provides a sharp image, the HDMI port is a welcomed addition, the keyboard is great, I like the trackpad. And really, it's the perfect all around laptop for light to medium duty usage.