HP Spectre x360 13 5 review back on top
HP Spectre x360 13.5 review: back on top Digital Trends Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site.
(single / multi) Handbrake
(seconds) Cinebench R23
(single / multi) HP Spectre x360 13.5
(Core i7-1255U) Bal: 1,566 / 7,314
Perf: 1,593 / 7,921 Bal: 169
Perf: 120 Bal: 1,623 / 5,823
Perf: 1,691 / 7,832 5,203 HP Spectre x360 14
(Core i7-1165G7) Bal: 1,214 / 4,117
Perf: N/A Bal: 230
Perf: 189 Bal: 1,389 / 3,941
Perf: 1,404 / 4,847 4,728 Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(Core i7-1255U) Bal: 1,652 / 8,194
Perf: 1,692 / 8,443 Bal: 200
Perf: 141 Bal: 1,679 / 7,176
Perf: 1,748 / 7,701 5,211 Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1
(Core i7-1255U) Bal: 1,703 / 6,520
Perf: 1,685 / 6,791 Bal: 153
Perf: 141 Bal: 1,729 / 6,847
Perf: 1,773 / 7,009 5,138 Acer Swift 3 2022
(Core i7-1260P) Bal: 1,708 / 10,442
Perf: 1,694 / 10,382 Bal: 100
Perf: 98 Bal: 1,735 / 9,756
Perf: 1,779 / 10,165 5,545 Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Gen 7
(Core i7-1260P) Bal: 1,717 / 9,231
Perf: 1,712 / 10,241 Bal: 130
Perf: 101 Bal: 1,626 / 7,210
Perf: 1,723 / 8,979 5,760 Asus ZenBook S 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 6800U) Bal: 1,417 / 6,854
Perf: 1,404 / 7,223 Bal: 112
Perf: 111 Bal: 1,402 / 8,682
Perf: 1,409 / 8,860 5,647 The Spectre x360 13.5 scored about as expected in the 3DMark Time Spy test, with its score in performance mode being at the top end of the class. Of course, the laptop is limited to Intel’s Iris Xe and won’t be able to play modern titles at anything except 1080p and low graphics. I couldn’t get Fortnite to install, so I couldn’t test the Spectre’s performance in our go-to game for integrated graphics. I’m sure, though, that it wouldn’t have performed any better than other Iris Xe machines. HP Spectre x360 13.5
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,582
Perf: 1,815 N/A HP Spectre x360 14
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,457
Perf: 1,709 Bal: 19
Perf: 23 Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,790
Perf: 1,716 Bal: 18
Perf: 18 Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,492
Perf: 1,502 Bal: 12 fps
Perf: 12 fps Acer Swift 3 2022
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,967
Perf: 1,967 Bal: 19
Perf: 19 Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Gen 7
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,658
Perf: 1,979 Bal: 12 fps
Perf: N/A Asus ZenBook S 13 OLED
(Radeon graphics) Bal: 2,110
Perf: 2,213 Bal: 19 fps
Perf: 19 fps
(nits) Contrast sRGB gamut AdobeRGB gamut Accuracy DeltaE
(lower is better) HP Spectre x360 13.5
(OLED) 380 28,230:1 100% 97% 0.61 Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(IPS) 321 1,380:1 99% 80% 1.89 Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7
(OLED) 406 28,380:1 100% 95% 0.87 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7
(IPS) 386 1,900:1 100% 81% 0.78 MSI Summit E14 Flip
(IPS) 516 1,320:1 100% 89% 1.10 Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7 Carbon
(OLED) 397 27,590:1 100% 96% 0.88 Four downward-firing speakers provide plenty of volumes, with crisp and clean mids and highs. There’s not a lot of bass, and so the Spectre x360 13.5’s audio can’t keep up with the best around, Apple’s MacBooks. Still, the audio is good enough for binging Netflix and listening to the occasional tune. Of course, audiophiles will still prefer a good pair of .
Applications HP Spectre x360 13.5
(Core i7-1255U) 9 hours, 58 minutes 13 hours, 59 minutes 10 hours, 52 minutes HP Spectre x360 14
(Core i7-1165G7) 6 hours, 57 minutes 10 hours, 16 minutes 9 hours, 8 minutes Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(Core i7-1255U) 7 hours, 7 minutes 13 hours, 53 minutes 10 hours, 41 minutes Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1
(Core i7-1255U) 6 hours, 42 minutes 10 hours, 6 minutes 8 hours, 43 minutes Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7
(Core i7-1260P) 6 hours, 57 minutes 10 hours, 16 minutes 9 hours, 8 minutes Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7
(Core i7-1260P) 10 hours, 10 minutes 16 hours, 12 minutes 10 hours, 33 minutes Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 6800U) 8 hours, 4 minutes 13 hours, 13 minutes N/A
HP Spectre x360 13 5 review back on top
August 8, 2022 Share "The HP Spectre x360 13.5 has everything you could want in a high-end Windows convertible 2-in-1." Pros Elegant aesthetic Excellent productivity performance Rock-solid build Superior keyboard and touchpad Stunning OLED display Surprisingly good battery life Cons Creativity performance is lacking Slightly expensive The HP Spectre x360 has long been some of over the years, especially in the category of . Contents Show 4 more items Last year’s 14-inch model, which was excellent, has now been rebranded as the Spectre x360 13.5, still carrying the same size screen but sporting a clean new design. It’s a bit expensive, but it’s even more attractive this time around, a bonus to the improved performance and battery life. The competition has stiffened, but HP still managed to climb its way back to the top with its flagship.Price and configurations
I reviewed a $1,700 configuration of the Spectre x360 13.5 with a Core i7-1255U and a 13.5-inch 3:2 3000×2000 OLED display. The Spectre x360 13.5 is available in several configurations, starting at $1,200 for a Core i5-1235U CPU, 8GB of RAM, a 512GB PCIe 4.0 SSD, and a WUXGA+ (1920 x 1280) IPS touch display. At the high end, you’ll spend $1,840 for a Core i7-1255U, 16GB of RAM, a 2TB SSD, and a 13.5-inch 3:2 3K2K (3000 x 2000) OLED display. If you want the maximum RAM, a $1,780 configuration is available with a Core i7-1255U, 32GB of RAM, a 2TB SSD, and the WUXGA+ display. I’m not sure why HP hasn’t enabled both the maximum RAM and the OLED display, and perhaps that’s something that will change. My review configuration was $1,700 for a Core i7-1255U, 16GB of RAM, a 1TB SSD, and the OLED display. The most pertinent competitive laptop at around the same price is the , although that 2-in-1 is heavily discounted and a few hundred dollars less than the Spectre. The is less expensive and offers the same CPU but, at the moment, no OLED display option.Design
The Spectre x360 14 featured HP’s dramatic gem-cut design with sharply angled edges and notches cut into the rear display and chassis corners. With its rose gold or copper accents, the 2-in-1’s aesthetic was a lovely laptop that stood apart from the crowd. HP scaled back that design with the Spectre x360 13.5, just like it did with the , rounding off and slimming the edges and toning down the extravagance. The chassis notches remain functional, with the left hosting the 3.5mm audio jack and the right a USB-C port for keeping the charging cable out of the way. The result is a more refined look that’s just as elegant and distinctive but not as loud. The rounded edges are also a bit more comfortable to hold in tablet mode, although not as comfortable as the even more rounded edges of the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7. My review unit sported the Nightfall Black color with brass accents, with optional Natural Silver and Nocturne Blue color schemes with matching edges. In each case, the keyboard matches the primary color. The Spectre x360 13.5’s only aesthetic equals in the 14-inch 2-in-1 crowd are the Yoga 9i Gen 7 and Yoga 7i Gen7, which have rounded and sculpted chassis that are just as attractive in their own way. I’m not saying the rest of the field is boring, exactly, but none are as attractive as these three machines. Constructed of CNC machined recycled aluminum, the Spectre x360 13.5 is rock-solid. Constructed of CNC machined-recycled aluminum, the Spectre x360 13.5 is also rock-solid, with no bending, flexing, or twisting anywhere in the lid, keyboard deck, or bottom chassis. It joins the best-built laptops like the and the Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7. The only laptop I’ve handled that truly feels more solid is the , and the difference is marginal. Unfortunately, the hinge is just the tiniest bit too stiff to open the lid with one hand, but it holds the display firmly in place in clamshell, tent, media, and tablet modes. I include the Spectre x360 13.5 in the 14-inch category, but it could easily be lumped in with 13.3-inch laptops just as easily. With the taller display, though, it feels like a 14-inch machine, so that’s how I’m going to treat it. Thanks to narrow bezels and a 90% screen-to-body ratio, the Spectre x360 13.5 is a compact machine. Compared to the Yoga 9i Gen 7, the HP is almost an inch narrower and half an inch shallower, and it’s 0.67 inches thick and 3.01 pounds compared to the Yoga at 0.60 inches and 3.09 pounds. The latest Dell XPS 13 is smaller, with the Spectre x360 13.5 being an inch wider and deeper. The XPS 13 is thinner at 0.58 inches and lighter at 2.8 pounds. That slots the Spectre x360 13.5 between the Yoga and XPS 13 in every dimension except thickness.Ports and connectivity
The Spectre x360 13.5 has decent connectivity, with two USB-C ports with Thunderbolt 4 support, a single USB-A 3.2 Gen 2 port, a microSD card reader, and a 3.5mm audio jack. That’s more than the typical 13-inch laptop but less than many that include an HDMI port. HP throws in a USB-C hub with two USB-A ports and an HDMI port, which is good to have, but it doesn’t substitute for built-in connections. Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2 provide the latest in wireless connectivity.Performance
HP opted for a lower-power CPU with the Spectre x360 13.5, specifically the 15-watt 10-core (two performance and eight Efficient), 12-thread Core i7-1255U with a Turbo Boost of 4.7GHz. The Core i5-1255U with a Turbo Boost of 4.4GHz is also available. My review unit equipped the Core i7-1255U, and it performed well compared to the other similarly equipped laptops we’ve reviewed. It was also a massive improvement over the 11th-gen Core i7-1165G7 in the Spectre x360 14. At the same time, unsurprisingly, the Spectre x360 13.5 wasn’t as fast as the Yoga 9i Gen 7 and which were equipped with the 28-watt, 12-core (four Performance and eight Efficient), 16-thread Core i7-1260P. I used the HP Command Center utility to test both balanced and performance modes. The utility made a significant difference in the CPU-intensive benchmarks, but I did notice that the fans were never extremely loud in either mode. HP updated the thermal design of the Spectre x360 13.5, including adopting new fans that were designed to produce less noise. They did the job. The laptop also didn’t throttle much in either mode, hitting 91 degrees C at most and spending the majority of time in the mid-70s. Given the thin chassis, I suspect HP tuned the machine to avoid generating too much heat, which likely limited performance a bit compared to laptops that are tuned to run hotter but throttle at the high end. The Spectre x360 13.5 provided excellent productivity performance while running cool and quiet. In the Geekbench 5 benchmark, the Spectre x360 13.5 fell behind the Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7 but was faster in multi-core than the . It was well behind the Core i7-1260P machines and ahead of the Asus ZenBook S 13 OLED with a 28-watt, eight-core/16-thread AMD Ryzen 7 6800U. In our Handbrake test that encodes a 420MB video as H.265, the Spectre was the fastest among its peers and only slightly behind the higher-watt laptops (in performance mode). In Cinebench R23, the Spectre x360 13.5 was in line with its peers, again in performance mode but well behind the faster machines. Finally, in PCMark 10 Complete, which tests a variety of productivity, multimedia, and creative tasks, the Spectre was competitive with the rest of the comparison group. Overall, the Spectre x360 13.5 provided excellent productivity performance while running cool and quiet, but as with other laptops with the same CPU, it fell behind in creative tasks. It’s significantly faster than Intel’s previous generation, though, and can tackle some lightweight creative work in a pinch. As we’ll see in the battery life section, the Spectre leveraged the lower-watt CPU’s efficiency better than the other laptops I’ve reviewed. Geekbench(single / multi) Handbrake
(seconds) Cinebench R23
(single / multi) HP Spectre x360 13.5
(Core i7-1255U) Bal: 1,566 / 7,314
Perf: 1,593 / 7,921 Bal: 169
Perf: 120 Bal: 1,623 / 5,823
Perf: 1,691 / 7,832 5,203 HP Spectre x360 14
(Core i7-1165G7) Bal: 1,214 / 4,117
Perf: N/A Bal: 230
Perf: 189 Bal: 1,389 / 3,941
Perf: 1,404 / 4,847 4,728 Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(Core i7-1255U) Bal: 1,652 / 8,194
Perf: 1,692 / 8,443 Bal: 200
Perf: 141 Bal: 1,679 / 7,176
Perf: 1,748 / 7,701 5,211 Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1
(Core i7-1255U) Bal: 1,703 / 6,520
Perf: 1,685 / 6,791 Bal: 153
Perf: 141 Bal: 1,729 / 6,847
Perf: 1,773 / 7,009 5,138 Acer Swift 3 2022
(Core i7-1260P) Bal: 1,708 / 10,442
Perf: 1,694 / 10,382 Bal: 100
Perf: 98 Bal: 1,735 / 9,756
Perf: 1,779 / 10,165 5,545 Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Gen 7
(Core i7-1260P) Bal: 1,717 / 9,231
Perf: 1,712 / 10,241 Bal: 130
Perf: 101 Bal: 1,626 / 7,210
Perf: 1,723 / 8,979 5,760 Asus ZenBook S 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 6800U) Bal: 1,417 / 6,854
Perf: 1,404 / 7,223 Bal: 112
Perf: 111 Bal: 1,402 / 8,682
Perf: 1,409 / 8,860 5,647 The Spectre x360 13.5 scored about as expected in the 3DMark Time Spy test, with its score in performance mode being at the top end of the class. Of course, the laptop is limited to Intel’s Iris Xe and won’t be able to play modern titles at anything except 1080p and low graphics. I couldn’t get Fortnite to install, so I couldn’t test the Spectre’s performance in our go-to game for integrated graphics. I’m sure, though, that it wouldn’t have performed any better than other Iris Xe machines. HP Spectre x360 13.5
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,582
Perf: 1,815 N/A HP Spectre x360 14
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,457
Perf: 1,709 Bal: 19
Perf: 23 Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,790
Perf: 1,716 Bal: 18
Perf: 18 Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,492
Perf: 1,502 Bal: 12 fps
Perf: 12 fps Acer Swift 3 2022
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,967
Perf: 1,967 Bal: 19
Perf: 19 Lenovo Yoga 9i 14 Gen 7
(Intel Iris Xe) Bal: 1,658
Perf: 1,979 Bal: 12 fps
Perf: N/A Asus ZenBook S 13 OLED
(Radeon graphics) Bal: 2,110
Perf: 2,213 Bal: 19 fps
Perf: 19 fps
Display and audio
As usual, the Spectre x360 13.5’s 13.5-inch 3:2 OLED display was gorgeous from the second I fired it up. It’s sharp enough at a resolution of 3000 x 2000 and colorful and bright with deep, inky blacks. HP also offers a WUXGA+ (1920 x 1280) IPS display and a WUXGA+ display with HP’s privacy screen. My colorimeter loved this display. It was bright at 380 nits, above our 300-nit standard, and bright enough for any indoor setting. Its colors were wide at 100% of sRGB and 97% of AdobeRGB and incredibly accurate with a DeltaE of 0.61 (1.0 or less is indistinguishable to the human eye). And its contrast hit the OLED standard at 28,230:1. The three OLED displays in the comparison group were almost equal in quality, with the Spectre having the widest and most accurate colors. Whether you’re doing productivity work, binging Netflix, or working with images and video, you’ll love this display. And it’s not just the brightness, colors, and contrast but also the aspect ratio, which at 3:2 is the closest to a physical piece of paper in portrait mode and thus optimal for tablet use. Brightness(nits) Contrast sRGB gamut AdobeRGB gamut Accuracy DeltaE
(lower is better) HP Spectre x360 13.5
(OLED) 380 28,230:1 100% 97% 0.61 Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(IPS) 321 1,380:1 99% 80% 1.89 Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7
(OLED) 406 28,380:1 100% 95% 0.87 Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7
(IPS) 386 1,900:1 100% 81% 0.78 MSI Summit E14 Flip
(IPS) 516 1,320:1 100% 89% 1.10 Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 7 Carbon
(OLED) 397 27,590:1 100% 96% 0.88 Four downward-firing speakers provide plenty of volumes, with crisp and clean mids and highs. There’s not a lot of bass, and so the Spectre x360 13.5’s audio can’t keep up with the best around, Apple’s MacBooks. Still, the audio is good enough for binging Netflix and listening to the occasional tune. Of course, audiophiles will still prefer a good pair of .
Keyboard and touchpad
HP’s Spectre line has long offered some of the best keyboards in Windows laptops, with only Apple’s latest MacBook Pro Magic Keyboard being better. That remains true with the Spectre x360 13.5, although the keyboard isn’t exactly the same as previous models. Interestingly, HP dropped the convenient row of navigation keys along the right-hand side, which I miss, but I appreciate the extra key spacing. The keycaps are also large, making for a very efficient layout. As before, the switches are light and snappy with a precise bottoming action. It’s one of the most comfortable keyboards I’ve used for long typing sessions. One nit to pick is that HP dropped the right Ctrl key in favor of a fingerprint reader. The touchpad is large and takes up most of the space on the palm rest, which is larger than usual thanks to the taller 3:2 display. The touchpad surface is smooth and provides a precise surface for Windows 11’s multitouch gestures, and the buttons have a nice click without being too loud. Outside of Apple’s Force Touch touchpad or Dell’s haptic touchpad on the , it’s one of the best touchpads you’ll find. The display is touch-enabled, of course, and supports HP’s active pen that’s included in the box. I found the pen’s Windows Ink support to be excellent thanks to 4,096 levels of pressure sensitivity and tilt support, and it conveniently attaches magnetically to the right side of the display. The pen charges via USB-C, which is another convenience. Windows 11 Hello passwordless login is supported by an infrared camera, facial recognition, and the fingerprint reader mentioned previously. Both methods worked quickly and reliably.Webcam
HP has outfitted the Spectre x360 13.5 with a 5MP webcam that provides a high-resolution image, and several software tools optimize the videoconferencing experience. HP Presence provides Auto Frame to keep the user’s face in view as they move around the office during a call, Backlight Adjustment that ensures consistent lighting no matter the ambient environment, and Appearance Filter that smooths out blemishes that other webcams might highlight. Several audio enhancements also improve the experience, including directional beamforming mics and bi-directional AI noise reduction. There’s a key to electronically close a physical shutter over the webcam, along with a key to turn off the microphones. That provides for some extra privacy.Battery life
The Spectre x360 13.5 has 66 watt-hours of battery capacity, a slight decrease from the previous generation’s 67 watt-hours. That’s a fair amount, more than the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7’s 57 watt-hours but less than the Yoga 9i Gen 7’s 75 watt-hours. Both the Spectre and Yoga 9i used power-hungry OLED displays, and so I was looking forward to seeing if HP managed to exploit the lower-watt CPU’s presumed efficiency advantage. According to our suite of benchmarks, HP did something right — the Spectre x360 13.5 lasted surprisingly long in our suite of battery tests. Looking back at the performance section, it’s clear that HP tuned the laptop to run more efficiently in balanced mode at the expense of performance. That’s a reasonable tradeoff, with the Spectre being more than fast enough for typical productivity tasks while achieving excellent battery life. In our web browsing test, for example, it lasted for 10 hours, which is an excellent score, particularly for a laptop with an OLED display. The Spectre made it to 11 hours in the PCMark 10 Applications battery test, which is the best predictor of battery life running a typical (i.e., non-demanding) productivity workflow. And in our video test that loops a local 1080p movie trailer, it lasted for 14 hours, another strong showing given the OLED display. The only laptop in our comparison group that competed with the Spectre x360 13.5 in all but the web browsing test, where it was almost three hours behind, was the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7, and it benefitted from a low-power Full HD+ IPS display. You don’t often get OLED quality and long battery life, but the Spectre x360 13.5 delivers. You should be able to work for a full day of typical productivity tasks and maybe even have a little time left over. Web browsing Video PCMark 10Applications HP Spectre x360 13.5
(Core i7-1255U) 9 hours, 58 minutes 13 hours, 59 minutes 10 hours, 52 minutes HP Spectre x360 14
(Core i7-1165G7) 6 hours, 57 minutes 10 hours, 16 minutes 9 hours, 8 minutes Lenovo Yoga 7i Gen 7
(Core i7-1255U) 7 hours, 7 minutes 13 hours, 53 minutes 10 hours, 41 minutes Dell Inspiron 14 2-in-1
(Core i7-1255U) 6 hours, 42 minutes 10 hours, 6 minutes 8 hours, 43 minutes Lenovo Yoga 9i Gen 7
(Core i7-1260P) 6 hours, 57 minutes 10 hours, 16 minutes 9 hours, 8 minutes Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Gen 7
(Core i7-1260P) 10 hours, 10 minutes 16 hours, 12 minutes 10 hours, 33 minutes Asus Zenbook S 13 OLED
(Ryzen 7 6800U) 8 hours, 4 minutes 13 hours, 13 minutes N/A