Novatech V13 review

If you can put up with its flaws, Novatech's V13 is a decent budget ultra-portable laptop but better-designed, better-value models are available.
Written By
Published on 2 February 2010
Novatech V13 ultraportable laptop
Our rating
Reviewed price £480 inc VAT

Novatech’s V13 is surprisingly attractive and svelte for what is a relatively inexpensive ultraportable laptop. The brown and black design looks sophisticated, but it flexes under pressure quite a bit which means you’ll have to take care of it when travelling. It lasted almost four hours between charges. This isn’t bad, but we’d expect longer from a thin and light laptop with a CULV processor. The V13 has a Pentium Dual Core SU4100 processor and 2GB of RAM, which is the maximum amount possible. This could be a concern if you want to run memory-hungry programs, but it’s enough for most tasks as shown by the overall score of 39 in our benchmarks. The laptop’s base became a little warm and the cooling fan a little noisier during benchmarking, but not enough to be irritating. Unlike many other CULV ultraportables we’ve seen, the V13 has an ExpressCard/34 slot for adding peripherals such as TV tuner or an expansion card with more USB ports. There’s even an internal PCI Express MiniCard slot for adding an internal 3G modem, as there’s already a SIM card slot installed. The keyboard is large with only the cursor keys a little narrower than the others, but not enough to trip up touch typists. The soft-feeling keys don’t give quite as much feedback when pressed as we’d like, but typing is still fairly comfortable. The touchpad is small but accurate, although the pivoting button feels too spongy. We were disappointed, but not surprised to find that the bright 13.3in widescreen display has restricted viewing angles so you’ll need to sit directly in front of it for the most accurate-looking colours. The lid barely tilts back at all, which could make it a tricky to use in cramped conditions, such as an aeroplane seat.

If you’re on a budget or needs its expansion options, then Novatech’s V13 is a fine, reasonably well-designed ultra-portable laptop. Acer’s Aspire Timeline is better value though with even better battery life, a more responsive keyboard and better build quality.

Written by

Alan Lu is currently external communications manager at Vodafone UK and has a background in corporate communications and media writing. An alumnus of The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), he has previously served as reviews editor for IT Pro and Computeractive.

More about