The Acer Swift 3 SF314 Notebook Review: Swift Gets Swifter With Ryzen 4000
by Brett Howse & Andrei Frumusanu on May 5, 2020 8:00 AM ESTBattery Life
While AMD’s rebirth in the notebook market brought with it some changes that have shaken up the laptop market, one area where AMD’s Ryzen APUs have suffered is in terms of battery life. Thanks to a high base power draw, both the AMD Ryzen 2000 and 3000 series could not match the competition in terms of outright battery life. With the new Ryzen 4000 series, AMD has not only moved to the Zen 2 CPU cores, but also to the 7 nm TSMC process, so they should have a chance to rectify their previous shortcomings.
Despite the 14-inch notebook size, the Acer Swift 3 ships with just a 48 Wh battery, which is much smaller than you would see as an average for this size of device. Of course battery capacity is only one side of the equation, with the other being power draw, so to test the overall battery life the notebook was run through our laptop battery suite, which consists of a low-impact web test, a high-impact web test, and movie playback from a local file. As always, the display is set to 200 nits of brightness to normalize display power across all of the notebooks.
Light Battery Life
The Acer Swift 3 does quite well in our lightest test, offering over ten hours of screen-on time. A great comparison is the Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 15-inch, which had Picasso and a battery of similar capacity.
Web Battery Life
Our revamped web test is much more demanding on the CPU, and generally especially impacts thin and light designs where the base power draw is quite low. That is the case here, with almost 100 minutes less runtime than the light battery test. But the results are still encouraging, with almost nine hours of runtime.
Movie Playback
The Acer Swift 3 offers good battery life with the movie playback as well, closing in on ten hours straight with the display at 200 nits brightness. This is one area where the previous AMD APUs struggled, since it does mean offloading the video decode to the GPU. Intel has incredibly efficient hardware blocks dedicated to this, and the AMD APU can’t quite match that, but is still an improvement over Picasso.
In terms of overall movie playback time, the Acer Swift 3 would let you watch four complete sittings of The Avengers in a row, although you’d miss the end of the credits in the final loop.
Normalized Battery Life
Removing the battery size from the battery life equation lets us take a look at platform efficiency across the different notebooks. In our light test, there is a big jump in efficiency when comparing to the Microsoft Surface Laptop 3 AMD edition, and as the light test is mostly an idle scenario, gives hope that Renoir has finally solved AMD’s extra power draw. The Web test is more demanding, meaning more CPU power is used, and only shows a small gain over the previous generation.
Platform Power Draw
To get an idea how much power draw there is on the new Renoir based platform, we turned to BatteryBar Pro to log the power draw. The results were impressive. AMD has more or less matched Intel in terms of idle power usage with their Ryzen 4000 series.
The first-generation Acer Swift 3 with Ryzen 5 2500U drew around 2.55 watts at idle, but the new Ryzen 7 4700U Acer Swift 3 idled right around 1.0 Watts, matching the 10th generation Intel Ice Lake equipped Surface Laptop 3. This is a big step for AMD, and allows them to compete not just on performance, but battery life as well.
Battery Life Conclusion
Despite the smaller than average 48 Wh battery capacity, the updated Ryzen 7 4700U in the Acer Swift 3 manages to provide solid battery life. This is a big win for AMD, where battery life was one of the key drawbacks to their previous Ryzen APUs. With right around 1.0 Watts of idle power draw with the screen off, they are no longer playing catch-up to the competition. For light tasks, it should easily get through the day.
Charge Time
Acer includes a 65-Watt A/C adapter with the Swift 3, providing more than enough output to power this laptop. As previously mentioned though, the included connector is a barrel connector, which in itself is not a huge issue, except that Acer’s barrel connectors are very thin and would be prone to breaking. This has been a concern on their notebooks for some time. The good news is that the notebook also has a USB-C connector with power delivery, and you can charge the laptop over USB-C with no issues. Despite the convenience, USB-C is still an expensive standard, so some vendors have not made the switch on all of their devices yet.
As far as charge time, the 65-Watt charger makes short work of the battery, charging the laptop up to maximum in under two hours. The charge rate peaks around 30 Watts, and Acer claims you can charge four hours of battery usage in 30 minutes of charge time.
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nandnandnand - Tuesday, May 5, 2020 - link
$629 USD $649 USDWow, faster processor and double the SSD for $20... X.
ingwe - Tuesday, May 5, 2020 - link
Wow yeah that pricing makes absolutely zero sense to me. A typo maybe?neblogai - Tuesday, May 5, 2020 - link
Yes, it is interesting. In other cases (Lenovo, or HP)- 4500U to 4700U costs ~€100 extra.n_gu - Sunday, May 10, 2020 - link
acer is currently sell it in my country and the price is aroud us $650 and $750Santoval - Tuesday, May 5, 2020 - link
I found that strange as well. Since it doesn't appear to be an error perhaps Acer was able to drop the price of the 4700U (and get it so close to that of the 4500U unit) by pairing the 4700U unit with a panel of a quite lower quality. The monitor of the 4700U unit scored the worst in nearly all of the tests, so it's possible that it has a poorer panel than its smaller sibling.Namisecond - Wednesday, May 6, 2020 - link
Or they could be overcharging for the lower tier model.Oxford Guy - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link
"The laptop really struggled with its thermals, dropping the framerate into single digits often. The device attempted to run at around 18 Watts of power draw, slightly over the 15 Watt TDP, but in fact only averaged around 8 Watts during this run."Maybe not overcharging for any of them, considering the apparently poor cooling and the display that can't even bother to cover the ancient paltry sRGB standard with even decent results.
watzupken - Tuesday, May 5, 2020 - link
The Samsung PM991, not sure if this is a 2242 drive? I have one running in my laptop and it is super toasty. Under non disk intensive load, I saw temp readings in HWMonitor up to 74 degs after 5 to 10 mins of use. As a result, the keyboard just above the SSD is super hot as well. It doesn't cause burns, but it is uncomfortable to leave your hands/ fingers on it.MrCommunistGen - Wednesday, May 6, 2020 - link
The teardown pic of the internals on Tom's Hardware shows what looks like a 2280 M.2 SSD.FWIW, the PM991 board is almost completely bare and it looks like all the components would probably fit on a 2242 size M.2 board if they cut down on all the bare area on the board.
sonny73n - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link
I’ve been looking to buy this laptop but it’s not available anywhere.