CHUWI LapBook 14.1 Apollo Lake Laptop Review – Part 2: Windows 10 Benchmarks, User Experience, and Battery Life

CHUWI LapBook 14.1 is the one of the first Apollo Lake laptop on the market. It features a 14.1″ IPS display, a Celeron N3450 quad core processor, 4GB RAM and 64 GB storage. The company has sent me a sample for review, and I had already check out the hardware in “CHUWI LapBook 14.1 Apollo Lake Laptop Review – Part 1: Unboxing & (Partial) Teardown“, so since then I’ve played with it including checking emails & news, writing a blog post on CNX Software, and watching some YouTube videos, as well as running benchmarks and estimating battery life, so I’ll report about my experience with the laptop in the second part of the review.

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CHUWI LapBook 14.1 System Information

LapBook 14.1 runs an activated version of Windows 10 Home 64-bit on an Intel Celeron 3450 “Apollo Lake” quad core processor @ 1.1 GHz / 2.2 GHz with 4 GB RAM (3.84 GB usable)

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The internal storage is a 64GB eMMC flash with a 57.1 GB Windows partition. The 64GB storage could mean it does not quality for a discounted Windows 10 license, as the requirements are  4GB RAM max, 14.1 display size max, and up to 32GB eMMC flash/SSD.

64GB storage will be filled quickly in Windows 10, especially if you have lots of emails, and store more and more pictures over time. It’s possible to extend storage via the micro SD slot, and possibly via an M.2 connector inside the device. USB storage is also an option, but as we’ll see below, I would not recommend it with this laptop.

I have taken a screenshot of Device Manager for people who want more details about peripherals.

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HWInFO64 mostly reports about the Intel Celeron N3450 processor, and as expected it’s exactly the same part number (CPU/Stepping/SSPEC) as on Voyo VMac Mini.

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The motherboard is named Hampoo A2W6_NA14 with the UEFI BIOS dated 12/30/2016.

CHUWI LapBook 14.1 Benchmarks

Let’s run some benchmarls on the laptop and compare them to Voyo VMac mini Celeron N3450 mini PC benchmarks results.

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LapBook 14.1 got 1,584 points in PCMARK 8 Home Accelerated 3.0, which compares to 1,566 points on Voyo VMac Mini that contrary to the laptop is actively cooled. So basically the score are identical here.

3DMark results are also pretty close with Ice Storm 1.2 (20,982 points), Cloud Gate 1.1 (2,092 points), and Sky Diver 1.0 (931 points), against respectively 18,892, 2,130, and 941 points for Voyo VMac Mini (N3450).

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The laptop achieved 830,7 points in PassMark PerformanceTest 9.0, against 998.4 points for the mini PC which is faster in all 5 categories: CPU, 2D Graphics, 3D Graphics, Memory, and Disk.

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Internal storage performance is acceptable with 256/116.4 MB/s sequential R/W speeds, and decent random read and write speeds, but not quite as fast as some other low costs devices.

For example, Voyo V1 VMac Mini SSD achieved about 500 MB/s read speed and 200 MB/s write speed, with significantly faster random R/W operations too.

CHUWI LapBook 14.1 User Experience

Two big parts of deciding whether a laptop is worth your consideration are the display and keyboard. The latter feels really nice to use, but unfortunately lacks brightness adjustment keys, which can be a pain is you set the brightness really low at night, and then need to use the laptop in broad daylight. I’m quite happy with the Full HD display, but you have to know it’s a non-touch display, it does not rotate that much (see video below), and viewing angles are not that great on the side. For my personal use, those did not affect me at all.

I’ve run some typical tasks, and shot a video with:

  • Multi-tasking – Launching and using Firefox, Thunderbird, LibreOffice, and Gimp at the same time
  • Web Browsing with Firefox
    • Loading multiple tabs with CNX Software blog
    • Playing a flash game  (Candy Crush Saga)
    • Playing a 1080p YouTube Videos
  • Gaming with Asphalt 8

Overall, I’m quite happy with the performance considering it’s a low power, fanless, entry-level laptop. I could load my hundreds of thousands emails in ThunderBird, while browsing the web with multiple tabs, and editing photos with gimp. 1080p YouTube videos are watchable in Firefox, although there are a few dropped frames here and there from time to time. I did not really notice it, and if you want slightly better playback, you can use Microsoft Edge browser with YouTube. Asphalt 8 feels a little smoother than in VMac Mini (N4250) possibly because the display is smaller.

The laptop also comes with a mini HDMI port to connect to an external display. A cable is not included so you’ll have to buy your own adapter or cable.

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Once connected Windows 10 will default in clone mode, but I had no trouble switching to extended display, and I had two Full HD independent displays.

I used a USB mouse connected to the laptop for close to 5 hours, and I had no problems, but this was another story with USB flash drives.

USB 2.0 Port OK Not detected OK
USB 3.0 Port OK Not detected Detected, but not mounted (“No Media”)

The laptop has two USB ports, one 2.0 port, and one 3.0 port, as you can see I did not have always have luck with my flash drives, especially the USB 3.0 port. This is what my DataTraveler G4 USB 3.0 flash looked like in Disk Management while connected to the USB 3.0 port.

“No Media”, but if I plugged the very same flash drive to the USB 2.0 port, it could be mounted.

A USB hub allowed me to work around the issues. However, I downloaded some system info and benchmarking tools on the laptop, copied them to one of the USB drive, but once I try to install those on another computer some of the files appeared to be corrupted. So I would not trust USB storage with important data, or you have to make sure you run some data sanity check (e.g. MD5) on your files. It’s also possible I was just unlucky, but it’s something to keep in mind.

CHUWI LapBook 14.1 Battery Life

Battery life is also an important aspect. While companies like Hewlett Packard are using MobileMark 2014 for testing battery on their Windows 10 laptops. but it’s a paid program, and I could not find a free battery testing application. So instead, I did my own “real use” case by charging the battery to 100%, and doing things on the laptop,  I normally do on my desktop PC in a typical day with two main use cases:

  1. Working outside from 9:00 to 12:00 with 100% brightness, checking emails, browsing the web, and editing pictures in Gimp
  2. Play YouTube videos in Firefox indoor with brightness set to 25% from 12:30 to about 14:00

When I started, Windows expected about 5 hours and a half of battery life.

I’d like to note I have lots of messages in Thunderbird because of mailing lists and RSS feeds (a few hundreds thousands), so Thunderbird was pretty active during the morning.

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After 3 hours I had 37% of battery capacity left. I had lunch, and then I went indoor to watch YouTube videos, and it lasted about 1h30 until the battery was fully depleted. So I had 4h30 of battery life on a charge.

An earlier full charge of the battery from 13% to 100% took just under 3 hours.

Conclusion

CHUWI LapBook 14.1 laptop almost matches all my needs. It is lightweight, the full HD display is good enough for me, battery life is good for about 5 hours, performance is acceptable for tasks such as web browsing, office applications, watching YouTube videos, and occasional light gaming. Normally I like to get at least 512 GB storage in a laptop, and that one only comes with 64GB eMMC flash with average performance, but it can be expanded with a micro SD card and possibly and M.2 SSD, but the latter are still quite expensive compared to hard drives. I also miss the keys to adjust brightness, and the main issue I found on the device is that USB mass storage is unreliable with some flash drives not  supported, and potentially data corruption when they are.  One of my other requirements is to run Ubuntu, so I’ll try to install Ubuntu 17.04 (daily build) on the laptop.

I’d like to thank CHUWI for sending an early sample of the laptop, which is not yet for sale, but available for pre-order on sites like GearBest and Banggood for $259.99 and up with shipping scheduled by the end of February.

[Update: CHUWI appears to have completely changed the hardware design. See comment below]

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22 Replies to “CHUWI LapBook 14.1 Apollo Lake Laptop Review – Part 2: Windows 10 Benchmarks, User Experience, and Battery Life”

  1. Just a quick update to say Ubuntu 17.04 can boot after changing boot method from “Windows” to “Linux” in UEFI menu.
    I could also connect to WiFi from the interface. I’ll wait for one or two days before installing it on the eMMC flash, and checking what works, what doesn’t in more details, in case people have questions about Windows 10.

  2. @CNXsoft, in Linux i use the following to adjust the brightness down: “xbacklight -set 20” in Fedora as with LXDE the functions keys for brightness adjustment isn’t working on my ThinkPad X220. Itworks fine with KDE/Gnome etc, but i prefer LXDE since it’s lightweight 🙂

  3. A new model is coming this month with a smaller but higher resolution display, and more RAM:

    Model: Chuwi lapbook 12.3
    CPU: Intel Apollo lake N3450 processor
    Screen: 12.3 inch retina screen
    Resolution:2736 * 1824
    Storage: 6G RAM+64G ROM
    Dual band WiFi: 2.4G/5G
    Release date: end of the month

    No price yet.

  4. I’ve received an email about CHUWI LapBook 14.1. It looks like they have completely change the design (not only the eMMC flash):

    I am terribly sorry to contact you about this, but you have at some point in the past done a review of the Chuwi LapBook 14.1. Based on the information provided in your and other reviews, I have recently purchased one of those laptops from GearBest.

    After paying an additional $100 in import fees, I unfortunately discovered that the laptop I received was significantly different from how it was described. Immediately upon unpacking it I noticed that the keyboard was odd. Upon further investigation I discovered that it was a completely different laptop. Here’s a short list of differences:
    * The keyboard is almost useless, for example the keys 9, 0, -, i, o, f and others are pretty much broken and require considerable pressure to activate. This makes typing slow and my hands felt cramped after just a few minutes of typing.
    * The 9000mAh li-po battery was replaced with a 4400 mAh li-ion battery.
    * They didn’t configure the charge controller correctly so the battery is not usable below 20% charge level. If it gets to that level, it discharges within a few minutes. I suspect this also damages the battery.
    * The m.2 sata connector is missing.
    * The bios is different, has almost no options in it.
    * The laptop doesn’t run linux without considerable effort. It seems it won’t boot most bootloaders at all. I had some luck with using systemd-boot on Arch. For Ubuntu, it can’t even boot the install disk.
    * The touchpad was replaced with a very crappy i2c touchpad. It’s so bad that linux can’t even work with it despite having all the drivers. Seems like the engineers who made it just hacked at it till it worked OK with Windows and shipped it, never bothering to even read the two protocol specs. I only got it to work on linux after writing my own driver for it.
    * The motherboard is completely different, so it doesn’t have those free pads for adding more RAM to it.
    * The various chips on the motherboard may have been replaced with lower quality ones, but I couldn’t verify.

    Here you can see what I was expecting to get: https://i.imgur.com/AIb0l86.jpg
    And here is what I got: https://i.imgur.com/qO3fx77.jpg

    So, in summary, this really feels like a bait-and-switch scheme where the reviewers and early buyers were sent good items, and then they replaced the model with a crappier one that just looks the same hoping no one would notice.

  5. Thanks so much for posting the video.

    I watched how responsive the system was with a couple apps open, and my jaw dropped how long it took to load things. My 2011 VAIO SVS-15 with i5-3210M and a Crucial M4-CT256M4SSD1, now 7 years old, absolutely wipes the floor with that Chuwi laptop… mind you I spend $600 for this and $180 for the SSD back in 2011, but you’d think that in 7 years a device at half the price point would be able to keep up with the older one.

    For me, anything longer than about 1.5s to launch an app is inexcusable, unless it’s a Java monstrosity like Eclipse.

    I can actually cold boot and start up those apps in about the same time it took the Chuwi to load them!

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