System Temperatures

We’ll start with our usual shot from HWMonitor. I should note that I’ve received a couple emails over the past few months questioning the stability of the G73 notebooks—there are some reports floating around the net stating that the series has overheating problems. While I’m sure individual notebooks have had problems, I’ve done my best to stress the G73SW as hard as I can, including running Furmark overnight, and a second overnight run of Furmark with the Cinebench SMP rendering looping in the background. There are no stability problems to report and the HWMonitor result below shows the internal temperature ranges for the various components.

The CPU cores and GPU all report a maximum internal temperature of 75C. That’s the same GPU temperature we recorded on the MSI GT680R, but the G73 is 8C cooler on the CPU temperature. So as far as temperatures go, I’m not at all concerned with the ability of the G73 chassis to deliver the goods. That doesn’t mean quality assurance (QA) is always perfect, or that there won’t be the occasional lemon in the batch, but stability, heat, noise, and performance were never an issue with this particular test sample. Ironically, we can’t say the same for the LCD (see below), but given the prerelease nature of our test unit (it was one of the CES 2011 show models, apparently), we’ll let that slide.

While the internal temperatures hit 75C, the surface temperatures on the G73SW are a lot lower. Unfortunately, my digital thermometer broke in the course of testing [that or the laptop was suddenly 95C or hotter on the surface], so I can’t provide load specifics. The above images show the idle surface temperatures; I’d estimate that the hot spots are around 5-10C higher under load, and in general the notebook runs reasonably cool considering the components. As stated in the intro, the large chassis does an excellent job at removing heat, and it does so without getting particularly loud. Idle noise levels measured 31.0dB at 18” and load noise (with Furmark and Cinebench SMP) topped out at 37.6dB. The noise also tends to be lower in pitch, so the G73 is very quiet compared to other gaming notebooks.

My guess is that the only thing between the G73 chassis and a GTX 485M or HD 6870M is the power brick and power circuitry, because the cooling setup looks like it still has plenty of headroom—especially if ASUS were to ramp up fan speeds and noise levels to compensate for the additional heat. The other thing keeping such high-end GPUs out of the G73 line is most likely price; ASUS has stated in the past that as soon as they start pushing beyond $1000, sales figures start to drop, and at $2000+ they plummet. That makes sense, though I’d still love to see some more competition for the high-end Clevo notebooks that can easily run into the $2500+ range.

What About the LCD?

As I mentioned above, there was an issue with our particular unit’s LCD. It’s not something that would affect benchmarks (outside of our LCD tests), but it was certainly distracting. At the heart of the problem are two things: first, the LCD would periodically flicker black. The only other time I’ve seen something like this was with a pre-release Dell Studio XPS 16. [Update: Several readers pointed out that this is an NVIDIA 266.58 driver bug specific to the G73SW.] The second problem with the panel is that there was a huge bright spot in the lower right that would show up once the panel got warm. You can see this as a yellow discoloration in the image below.

It appears to be a manufacturing glitch with the various layers of the LCD. If I purchased a notebook with this problem, you can bet I’d send it back. ASUS offered to ship me a replacement, but this problem isn’t something I’m overly concerned with. We’ve tested this same HannStar 171PUW-1 panel several times already, and the characteristics are always about the same. It’s got a great contrast ratio, a reasonable color gamut (particularly if all you’re concerned with is the sRGB color space), and it’s a nice 1080p display. That said, something really needs to be done about the relatively low maximum backlight intensity; it would be great to see 400-nit maximum white levels, with the ability to drop down to 50-75 nits minimum for dark LAN parties. Indoors, 155 nits is fine, but if the LCD is exposed to bright lights (i.e outdoors or in a harshly lit environment) you’ll have serious reflections. Actually, what would be ideal is to get matte LCDs with at least 750:1 contrast, but those seem to be a rare breed outside of MacBook Pros. Anyway, here are the LCD performance charts, with results slightly worse than the G73JW we tested previously.

Laptop LCD Quality - Contrast

Laptop LCD Quality - White

Laptop LCD Quality - Black

Laptop LCD Quality - Color Accuracy

Laptop LCD Quality - Color Gamut

Investigating Battery Life and Power G73 Is Still Kicking…
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  • NaterGator - Friday, March 4, 2011 - link

    You are correct, for some reason it is a G73SW problem. nVidia suggested they were aware of the problem and implementing a fix, but the most recent driver release (March 2011) still has the flickering problem.

    There is a thread in the nVidia forums about it here:
    http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=19101...
  • Wolfpup - Friday, March 4, 2011 - link

    My understanding is the jw (and now sw) models that ship with the Geforce GTX 460 didn't have this problem.

    The G73jh that shipped with the Radeon 5870 had a gray screen of death caused by the GPU. Supposedly that was eventually (4+ months? last year) fixed with a video BIOS update, although I'm unclear as to whether it was posted on Asus' site, or just available from resellers as kind of a "if it crashes, install this" thing. Supposedly it was a problem with the 5870.

    Anyway, still a nice level of performance, though yeah, I'd love a GTX 470 or something. I'm not sure though...did the review explain the recall situation? I mean if you buy one now (or when they show up again), that means it's shipping with a fixed chipset (err...chip...southbridge...whatever it's called now), I assume, since the system uses what, 3-4 SATA ports? I guess HP's Envy 17 and Dell's M17x-R3 must be fixed now too...
  • Bolas - Friday, March 4, 2011 - link

    You can get this computer cheaper than $1745 from www.xoticpc.com if you pay cash instead of credit.

    http://www.xoticpc.com/asus-g73swa1-republic-gamer...

    http://www.xoticpc.com/advanced_search_result.php?...
  • mattwco - Saturday, March 5, 2011 - link

    The pricing investigation was fairly cursory for this article. Though stock levels remain low due to the recall, you can get a variant of this for ~$1400. Google is your friend. "G73SW-XR1"
  • jas71 - Saturday, March 5, 2011 - link

    Does anyone know when asus will start using the gtx 485m. I would like to get an asus but the the I will just get a clevo if asus doesn't use the 485 soon
  • jas71 - Saturday, March 5, 2011 - link

    lol "the the" it's too late at night for me

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