Also see: Best Black Friday Laptop Deals The U506 is powered by a desktop-class Intel Core i5 quad-core CPU, on this model the 6600K variant although options include 6600, 6700 and 6700K. The all-important graphics for gaming are either Nvidia GTX 980M or as here 970M. You can load up to 32GB system memory, and this new generation ushers in DDR4 for the first time. Our sample had 8GB of 2400MHz on two sticks. Storage options abound. There are four bays available, two each for 2.5in SATA and M.2 2280. And its M.2 spec goes all the way to PCIe 3.0 x4 NVMe. Schenker is currently fitting up to Samsung SM951 (AHCI) but 950 PRO (NVMe) will soon follow. Thanks to the desktop-class CPU and X170 chipset, this machine also packs Thunderbolt 3.0 and USB 3.1 on a combined USB-C port, beating even Apple to market with 40Gb/s Thunderbolt. Ordinarily, fitting desktop CPUs to notebooks is a complete no-no for reasons of heat and battery demand, yet this chip’s TDP of ‘only’ 91W using latest Skylake power management really works here. The generous 38mm chassis, two fans and plentiful heatpipes assist thermal management. In use, fans were no louder than other gaming laptops; and with its 82Wh removable battery the U506 survived two hours and 23 minutes of streaming video wirelessly through its 2×2 802.11ac Wi-Fi. Build quality is outhouse-class, unashamedly chunky and utilitarian, but eminently serviceable with two slide-off underside plates for component access. It’s an enthusiast machine through and through. The display is another crowning achievement, a matt IPS panel with superb image quality and little glare. The full-HD panel had up to 630:1 contrast ratio and 90 percent sRGB gamut.
Schenker XMG U506 review: Performance
Nvidia 970M graphics are central to gameplay, allowing maxed-out settings for one display in typical games. With 6GB of memory, two DisplayPort 1.2 and HDMI 2.0 you can also connect bigger external displays. With G-Sync disengaged, the U506 averaged 113fps in High-detail Tomb Raider, and 58fps set to Ultimate. Batman: Arkham City started at 115fps and was still playing 86fps in top Extreme mode. Averaging 27fps, Metro: Last Light in Very High with all effects could be upgraded to 88fps by simply reducing effects and setting to High instead. Beyond gaming, it averaged 12784 points in Geekbench 3 from this non-Hyper Threading 3.5GHz CPU; or a record-beating 4182 points single-core. PCMark 8 Home returned a round 4000 points, very much a superior desktop result.