Welcome to a Laptop Ac Adapter specialist of the Asus Ac Adapter
On the inside, the ASUS N56VM features a third-generation Intel Core i7-3610QM CPU, 8GB of DDR3 SDRAM, an NVIDIA GeForce GT 630M graphics adapter and a 5400rpm, 750GB hard drive. It's a good overall configuration, and it put up decent results in our benchmarks. It recorded only 20sec in the Blender 3D rendering test, 45sec in the iTunes MP3 encoding test, and 39min in the AutoGordianKnot DVD-to-Xvid conversion test. All of these results are faster than the other Ivy Bridge-based laptop we've seen so far, Lenovo's ThinkPad Edge E530.
In 3DMark06, the discrete NVIDIA GeForce GT 630M graphics adapter such as Asus ADP-65DB Ac Adapter , Asus A6 Ac Adapter , Asus A7 Ac Adapter , Asus A8 Ac Adapter , Asus F9 Ac Adapter , Asus U5 Ac Adapter , Asus A6JA Ac Adapter , Asus A7J Ac Adapter , Asus A8Js Ac Adapter , Asus Z91 Ac Adapter , Asus W3V Ac Adapter , Asus Z61a Ac Adapter posted a mark of 10756, while in 3DMark11, it posted P1321. Again, both of these marks are faster than what the Lenovo did in these benchmarks using the same graphics adapter and a similar overall configuration. In games such as Battlefield 3, the ASUS recorded between 27 and 30 frames per second and the game was comfortably playable. You could definitely use this notebook for gaming, as long as you aren't too serious about detail levels.
Like many laptops these days, the N56VM also features switching technology so that the Integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics are used when the laptop is running on battery power, or when running applications that don't need the extra 3D processing grunt. The Intel graphics recorded 6793 in 3DMark, so you can see that the NVIDIA part offers a good deal more performance when you want to play games. The fan will kick in when the laptop is under a heavy load, such as when you're gaming, and it's not overly loud. The exhaust is on the left side of the chassis and lots of heat can be felt passing through it; some heat comes up through the keyboard, but we didn't find it to be uncomfortable.
Storage is handled by a single, 5400rpm, 750GB Hitachi hard drive (model HTS547575A9E384). It recorded a read rate of 93.17 megabytes per second (MBps) and a write rate of 89.28MBps in CrystalDiskMark. In our own file transfer tests, it averaged 58.88MBps, which is a fine result for a single drive, and once again that is faster than what the Lenovo posted in the same test. We had no problems with the responsiveness of the ASUS N56VM when launching applications and multitasking. The laptop came out of sleep in just under 3sec, while a cold boot took about 52sec, which is a little longer than we hoped.
A removable, 6-cell, 56 Watt-hour battery is installed in the spine of the laptop and it lasted 3hr 35min in our rundown test, in which we disable power management, enable Wi-Fi, maximise screen brightness and loop an Xvid-encoded video. This is only one minute less than the time recorded by the Lenovo ThinkPad Edge E530, which uses a slightly more powerful battery.
All up, it's a good result for a 15.6in laptop with a Core i7 CPU. You can get more life out of it if you use a sensible power management profile, and ASUS knows this so it changes profiles for you automatically most of the time. Even when we manually selected high performance, the laptop would revert back to a balanced or power saving ASUS Power4Gear profile when the laptop was restarted.