It’s always easy to tell laptop shoppers, especially those on a budget, to hold out for a value system with 8GB of memory, 1TB storage, and a Full HD IPS screen. And, it is a little easy to tell them to cough up the dollars required for such a system once it pops up. The ASUS VivoBook F510UA-AH51 is a daily laptop with robust features and surprisingly good build quality, but its price is firmly in the budget category.
If a sleek design and decent day-to-day performance are what you’re after, and your budget limit is right under $600, the Asus VivoBook F510UA will prove an excellent value and should be near the top of your shopping list.
Design and Build
The ASUS VivoBook F510UA-AH51 sports a refreshed build over last year’s model, cutting a thinner and lighter profile. It weighs just over 3.7 pounds and will slide into any backpack with its 0.8-inch figure. Those are notable trims over last year’s model, which weighed 4.2 pounds and was what now appears to be somewhat spooky 1.6 inches thick.
Those numbers seem to have moved in the right direction – a good thing, but we’re starting to see where Asus has cut costs with this machine. Aside from the lid clad in a gorgeously spun star gray finish, the entire body is cut from plastic.
The system gets a shiny coating that mimics an aluminum construction. Still, it isn’t anything close to the gorgeous carbon-fiber finish on Dell’s latest XPS 15 or even the timeless aluminum build of Apple’s MacBook Pro with a touch bar.
Display
Asus has a good reputation for its VivoBook brand, and it’s only going to win more fans here, with a full HD (1920-by-1080) resolution screen. It uses In-Plane Switching (IPS) panel technology to deliver vibrant colors and clear images, something we only see in notebooks that cost more. The full HD screen is a delight to use, both for serious office tasks and for watching movies, with excellent viewing angles.
It’s a NanoEdge display with an 80 percent screen-to-body ratio, giving you more screen estate over the body bezel. Asus claims that this VivoBook uses its in-house Splendid Visual Optimization technology. Apart from being a marketing gimmick, I don’t see any significant improvement that would set it apart from other entry-level IPS panels.
On the Asus VivoBook F510UA, the design and screen should be the main attraction before looking at even performance. Another thing should be its weight. It’s light. Seriously so, but it doesn’t feel flimsy because of the lightweight profile.
If there’s one thing I need to criticize, it could be the standard VGA, which will not do anyone any favors. In 2018 we expected things to be better. Especially when Asus decided to design a well-rounded system at a very reasonable price. The speakers are surprisingly good, managing good maximum volume and a slight bass tone. I’d gladly watch YouTube and Netflix with these speakers, they can fill a small room, and music plays nicely.
Keyboard and Touchpad
The same material used in the body is replicated in the keyboard deck and touchpad. Still, it offers a decent amount of essential travel and a comfortable feel, though the keys themselves aren’t particularly luxe. They do take another point from this laptop’s superior construction, but it’s a design you won’t be seeing in similarly-priced systems.
Despite the laptop’s compact size, the keyboard is big in all the right places, with the nicely sized letter and number keys. The Backspace and Enter keys are large enough, the Shift key is the same size as the rest of the keys, which is sometimes hard to hit, but you’ll get used to it over time. For the touchpad, it is pretty good, but it doesn’t give you the instant feeling you get from the likes of XPS 13 and MacBook Air.
Connectivity
With a thinner chassis, the number of full-size USB ports is lower than you’d find on notebooks, and the optical drive is also dropped. On the Asus VivoBook F510UA, all you have is a USB 3.1 port (Type-C), a USB 3.0 port, a USB 2.0 port, and an HDMI port. The HDMI is full size, better than the mini-HDMI that’s becoming common among ultrabooks.
With a USB 3.1 Type-C connector, you can seamlessly connect power peripherals such as USB monitors and storage arrays. Also included is an SD card reader, a 3.5mm headset jack, and a webcam is also included, but the Ethernet port is gone. Wireless connectivity comes via 802.11ac Wi-Fi.
Storage
The Asus VivoBook F510UA has 8GB of memory and 1TB 5400rpm of storage. That does sound like a lot of storage space, but it’s slower than the solid-state-drive (SSD) storage you get on modern systems. For instance, the ASUS ZenBook UX330UA-AH54 comes with a 256GB SSD; while it isn’t a lot, it does suffice for faster boot times and snappy overall performance. There’s an m.2 2280 slot next to the hard drive, so you can easily throw in an SSD for fast boot times.
Performance
The Asus VivoBook F510UA FHD laptop is among the first releases to sport Intel’s eighth-generation processors. Based on the previous Kaby Lake processors, we’re looking forward to even better performance. The system is equipped with a quad-core 1.6GHz (turbo up to 3.5GHz) Intel Core i5-8250U processor and 8GB of RAM, Intel UHD Graphics 620.
This is the same configuration we’ve seen on the ASUS ZenBook UX330UA-AH55. The earlier iteration was fitted with a quad-core 2.5GHz Intel (Kaby Lake) Core i5-7200U processor and the same memory and graphics card.
This CPU has four processing cores, eight processing threads and operates between a base frequency of 1.6GHz and a turbo frequency of 3.4GHz. It adds some much-needed performance and quite a bit of extra battery life over its predecessor ‘Kaby Lake,’ which was a sticking point of the previous ZenBook models. What’s truly impressive about this system is how ASUS managed to fit in an 8th-Gen processor and enough memory in such a tiny machine.
A CPU Benchmark score of 7381 points is sufficient for day-to-day performance but not enough to enable the system to close in on systems like the Apple MacBook, Dell XPS 13 Touch, and HP Spectre 13. Look at it, the MacBook Air with the same specs costs almost double, and you don’t get the Windows 10 experience.
Graphics Performance
On the ASUS VivoBook F510UA is the integrated UHD 620 graphics, typical to midrange ultraportables, which don’t provide much room for 3D gaming. The ZenBook’s Kaby Lake-R processor is relatively new, and together with a dual-channel RAM, its performance is almost at par with most dedicated lower mid-range graphics cards.
In short, its gaming capabilities are limited. You can smoothly run games at low resolution and low to medium quality settings, especially true for games that do not tax the hardware so much. I tested it with hardware-hungry titles like the Witcher 3, and the frame rates were not anything close to good.
For midrange gaming, you might have to look at the ASUS VivoBook M580VD-EB54, which comes with a dedicated NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 gaming graphic card, or better still, the Acer Predator Helios 300 thanks to its potent NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB GDDR5 graphic card. If we get nitty, the Zenbook AH54’s gaming performance is on par with the Apple MacBook Air 13-inch and the Dell XPS 13 Touch, though with slightly negligible differences since none of the three can run high-end 3D games smoothly.
Battery Life
Battery life is not-so-great, though. We expected that mobile computing would be better with the newer chip, but it looks like we will wait a little longer. We are looking at something around 5 hours 42 minutes on a single charge, which is around the same ballpark as the likes of the Dell XPS 15 Touch (9550) (5:56), but a relatively lower than the MacBook Pro 15-Inch Retina Display (2014) (8:55).
It may weigh more than the svelte ultraportables, but it will last almost as long as most 15-inch laptops. This laptop can last enough for a day at school or the office on moderate use.
Bottom Line
The ASUS VivoBook F510UA-AH51 is cheaper than most 15-inch laptops, and with its feature set, it is the best value around for a budget. While the 1000GB of storage is more than sufficient for most users, it would have been better if Asus had thrown in a solid-state drive (SSD) for loading apps and programs, while the hard drive could have been used exclusively for storage.
Is there a better alternative?
In this ASUS VivoBook F510UA review, it is clear that alternatives are many depending on your computing needs. The most definite choice must be the newer Asus VivoBook 15, a 2019-release of the VivoBook base model, with a faster AMD Ryzen R5-3500U, AMD Radeon Vega 8 Graphics, 8GB RAM, and 256GB SSD. It tops up everything with a new design and offers extended battery life.
If AMD processors don’t excite you, Acer offers the Aspire 5 A515-54-51DJ, which packs an 8th Gen Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB memory, 256GB SSD storage, long battery life, and a comfortable backlit keyboard.
Should you buy it?
Yes. At launch in late 2017, the ASUS VivoBook F510UA-AH51 was our Editors’ Choice, but Asus has since updated its Vivobook line with better machines, including the Asus VivoBook 15 (F512DA-EB51) we’ve recommended above.
Again, competitors have also updated their budget 15-inch offerings to include the Acer Aspire 5 A515-54-51DJ, which is our newest Editors’ Choice for budget general-use laptops. Either way, the newer VivoBook 15 and Aspire 5 offer better value than last year’s Vivobook. In computing, new is mostly (though, not always) better.
Recommended Configuration
AC Charger Fit for Asus Vivobook F510QA F510Q F510UA F510U F510 F510UA-AH51 F510UA-AH55 Laptop Power Supply Adapter Cord
The Review
ASUS VivoBook F510UA-AH51
The ASUS VivoBook F510UA-AH51 is a 15-inch laptop with a nice aesthetic footprint, a solid feature set that can easily rival some of its premium rivals. It checks all boxes for work or college laptop that won’t cost much but offers solid performance for the budget desktop-replacement category.
PROS
- A premium aesthetic footprint
- Good sound quality
- Latest 8th-Gen processor
CONS
- Keyboard flex
- HDD instead SSD
Review Breakdown
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EDITORS RATING