When you jam that much hardware into a tiny laptop, there will be trade-offs.
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Dell’s XPS 15 (version 7590) is a test of just how much hardware you can jam into a 4.2-pound laptop. This latest iteration includes up to an 8-core “overclockable” Core i9-9980HK and a discrete GeForce GTX 1650 card. That is a lot of hot hardware in a body arguably not built to handle it. Hardware you'd expect to see in a gaming laptop, not a high-end, thin-and-light workhorse.
We know why Dell likely did it: to compete with another high-end 15-inch laptop that's stuffed to the gills, the MacBook Pro 15. That's not a gaming machine either—both are systems designed for programmers, engineers, content creators, and other computing-intensive professionals. But the sad truth is most consumers will compare the top CPUs in both laptops, and buy the one with the “faster” CPU. So yes, if Apple is going to cross the line with a Core i9, Dell is apparently ready to cross it too, thermal limitations be damned. Our review will see if the XPS 15's stretch was worth the sacrifice.
What’s outside: Same as before
First, we’ll start off in the most unremarkable area: the exterior, essentially the same as before, with a carbon fiber keyboard deck, aluminum top and aluminum bottom. Most probably could not tell the difference between old and new except for the relocation of the webcam from the bottom to the top of the screen. So yes, double-chin folks, rejoice.
The biggest change is the processor. While the previous XPS 15 9570 featured an 8th-gen 6-core Core i7, with an optional 6-core Core i9, the newest XPS 15 offers Intel’s newest 9th-gen 8-core Core i9—and not just any 8-core CPU either, but the overclockable Core i9-9980HK.
Graphics bumps upward, too. The previous top GPU was a GeForce GTX 1050 built on the Pascal architecture. The XPS 15 7590 maxes out with a GeForce GTX 1650 built on the newer Turing architecture.
The rest of the specs of our review model turn the dial to 11 as well—bigger, faster, fancier. Here are the details:
XPS 15 7590 Specs:
CPU: Intel 9th-gen Core i9-9980HK
RAM: 32GB DDR4/2666
Display: 15.6-inch 4K OLED @ 60Hz
GPU: GeForce GTX 1650
Storage: 1GB Samsung NVMe M.2 SSD
Ports: 2 USB Type A, 1 Thunderbolt 3 (4 lane), HDMI 2.0, Analog headphone, SD Card, Noble lock port
Size: 14.06 x 9.7 x 0.45-0.66 inches
Weight: 4.4 pounds
Upgrade options
The XPS 15 continues to be friendly to upgrades. To get inside, you’ll need to remove the perimeter Torx screws and two Phillips-head screws in the center. You can then gently remove the bottom panel and access two DIMM slots, an M.2, the battery, and a wireless module.
Dell XPS 15 7590 CPU Performance
Our first benchmark is the venerable Cinebench R15. This is a 3D modelling test built on an engine sold by Maxon in its Cinema4D product. It is nearly a pure CPU test and, like most visualization applications, it loves CPU cores and threads.
The performance of the XPS 15 7590 in the multithreaded version of this test is simply outstanding. Our results include performance from three 9th-gen 8-core CPUs, plus two desktop 8-core CPUs (one Intel, one AMD).
The Dell XPS 15 7590 has enough ponies to outrun the thicker and heavier MSI GE65 Raider as well as the AMD Ryzen 2700-based laptop in this test. It's outpaced only by the much larger and much heavier Acer Predator Helios 700, and the beastly Alienware Area 51m R1.
Even though Cinebench isn’t representative of all multi-threaded chores, it’s a pretty good stand-in to gauge performance in applications where Cinema4D is embedded, such as Premiere Creative Cloud. If you have an older laptop, the uptick can be significant: 45 percent compared to the 6-core XPS 15 9570, and a crushing 123 percent faster than a 7th-gen Kaby Lake laptop.
If all you really do is run Office and browse online, you really only care about single-threaded performance—and you probably don’t need an 8-core laptop, as you can see when we run Cinebench single-threaded. Again, 3D modelling is not representative of all application performance, but gives an idea of how the XPS 15 will respond under a fixed single-threaded load.
The higher scores of the 9th-gen Core i9 laptops are there for all to see. However, you should also notice that the 9th-gen and 8th-gen Core i7 laptops follow close behind. Most would be hard-pressed to tell the difference between a Core i9 or Core i7 in the vast majority of single-threaded tasks such as Office, Chrome or even most Adobe Photoshop routines, even if they are a little faster.
One issue with the benchmarks above is they run too quickly (within a few minutes) to heat up the CPU much. That’s why we use the free HandBrake utility to encode a 30GB file using the H.264 encoder. Even on our 8-core CPU laptops, the task typically takes in excess of 25 minutes to finish. That warms up the CPU and should reveal any limitations in the cooling or power delivery of a laptop.
It’s here that we see the XPS 15 7590 swap positions with the MSI GE65 Raider, which it beat in Cinebench R15. That thicker, heavier MSI GE65 can keep its CPU cooler and feed it with power better than the lighter XPS 15 can. In fact, the MSI GE65 beats the XPS 15 even though it uses one step down in CPU models.
The thermal limits on the XPS 15 7590 put it uncomfortably close to the HP Omen 2XS (when the latter is set to performance mode). We’ll dive further into the thermal limitations of the XPS 15 and what you should expect later on.
XPS 15 7590 Gaming Performance
The HandBrake tests give you a good hint about what to expect if you try to game on the XPS 15. While it's not officially a gaming laptop, anyone looking at its parts may understandably assume otherwise. We won't run it through the full gauntlet of gaming tests, just enough to show you what it can (and can't) do.
First up: We ran UL's 3DMark FireStrike to measure just the graphics performance of the laptop in DirectX 11. The result is no surprise: The XPS 15 slides in just under an Acer Nitro 7 budget gaming laptop with the same GeForce GTX 1650.
Moving on to to DirectX 12 performance, we also measured the XPS 15’s GPU using 3DMark Time Spy, a newer test with far more complex graphics. In pure graphics performance, the XPS 15 7590 ties with the same Acer Nitro 7 with the same GPU. On paper, the XPS 15 7590 is the equal of more thermally challenged GeForce GTX 1060 GPUs.
In Rise of the Tomb Raider, we can see the limits of the XPS 15’s smaller body. The spacious chassis of Acer's Nitro 7—and most of the gaming laptops that make up this list—helps keep it comfortably ahead of the XPS 15.
Dell XPS 15 7590 Battery Life
We’ll end our official tests with the most important metric to many: battery life. We loop a 4K video with the laptop in airplane mode, with the screen brightness set to reasonably bright 250 to 260 nits. We also attach a pair of earbuds with the audio turned on about halfway.
We honestly didn’t expect much from the XPS 15 7590, because of its 4K screen. Higher-resolution screens generally lop a third off of battery life. With its 32GB of RAM and the rest of its hardware, we didn’t think the XPS 15 would compete at all.
Instead we were pleasantly surprised to see more than 10 hours of run time from the XPS 15 7590. That’s simply exceptional for a 4K-equipped laptop. The OLED panel likely helped, because OLEDs don’t use power for backlighting on black scenes. It also helps that the XPS 15 7590 rocks a giant 96-watt-hour battery.
But here's the top laptop on our list: the Dell XPS 15 9570 with a standard 1080p screen, which hits 14 hours of run time. So yes, if you want maximum runtime, opt for a lower-res panel.
We should note that video rundown tests are easy for modern laptops. Expect, say, web browsing to cut life by a third or more. If you plan to edit video on the go, cut it in half at least. If you intend to play games, don’t ever expect more than an hour or two of battery life on any laptop. Cranking up the screen brightness will kill battery life, too. As always, your mileage may vary.
Dell XPS 15 Thermal Throttling
We don’t normally get into the weeds of the thermal performance of a laptop, but the XPS 15 7590 jams an 8-core CPU and decently powered GPU into a 4-pound, 6-ounce package. Is Dell asking too much of this slender chassis?
You probably saw a hint of the XPS 15 7590’s thermal limitations above in our HandBrake test, where the XPS 15 loses to the thicker and heavier MSI GE65 Raider despite the Raider’s “slower” CPU. To dig deeper, we conducted four runs of HandBrake back-to-back. That’s basically more than an hour of pegging the CPU at 100-percent utilization across all 8 cores.
We recorded the laptop’s telemetry during the run. The green represents the CPU’s temperature, the orange represents the clock speed, and the blue represents the wattage of the chip.
As you can see in the chart below, the XPS 15 roars off at 4.4GHz on all cores. But once the laptop heats up, it begins to slow down. The clock speeds fall back to Earth, with most of the test running in the 3.3GHz range. Eventually the laptop runs at its 45-watt TDP rating but still stays above its base clock of 2.3GHz.
For the second and third runs, you can see the CPU’s temperature is hotter for a longer period, but it still moves along. The fourth run has built up enough heat inside that most of the run is at 2.9GHz and a TDP rating of 45 watts. There’s also not much headroom left for Turbo Boost on that last run.
Frankly, this isn’t bad at all when you consider that we’re hammering all 8 cores of a 4.2-pound laptop for more than an hour with clock speeds at reasonably high levels.
Not all tasks are confined to the CPU. We also wanted to see what would happen to the XPS 15 when the GPU and CPU are both producing heat. You know, like in a game. For that we recorded the CPU’s vitals while playing Player Unknown Battlegrounds. The game isn’t known for its advanced graphics features, but it is for its CPU load, whether it’s to calculate game physics such as bullet drop or execute positional audio modelling, among other chores.
In the chart below, the orange is the CPU’s clock speeds, the gray is the wattage of the CPU, and the yellow line is the CPU’s temperature. We ran the game at 1080p with High settings, which is one notch down from Ultra.
As you can see, the clock speed kicks along in the neighborhood of 4GHz for the first 15 minutes of the game. At that point, the CPU falls into the much lower gear of 1.4GHz for most of the game, with the CPU now in a low-power state of 10 watts. Yes, we’ll say that again: 1.4GHz.
This, frankly, is the issue that has vexed the XPS 15 series for some time: thermal and power delivery ceilings when all of the components are under loads. It’s basically a 75-watt TDP GPU and a 45-watt TDP CPU (with boost taking it typically to 55 watts and higher) vying for cooling and power. Eventually you run out, and something gives.
One thing we unfortunately don’t have here is a frame rate trace. Certainly frame rates dropped, but we suspect it’s not the impact you'd assume going from, say, 2.6GHz to 1.6GHz. Given the GeForce GTX 1650's moderate horsepower, a drop from 70 fps to 55 fps doesn’t really change the experience much.
We suspect many games could hit this limitation (we also saw it on Rainbow Six Siege). That disturbing graphic should make anyone with a gaming bent consider the Alienware M15 M2 instead of the XPS 15.
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Pros
- Relatively thin and powerful
- Beautiful 4K OLED panel
- Actually reasonably priced vs. the competition
Cons
- Will rarely hit maximum Turbo Boost clocks
- CPU tends to heavily downclock under gaming workloads