Asus Lamborghini VX1

By Rory Reid, CNET.co.uk on 02 June 2006

Very attractive in most respects and a competent all-rounder

8.8 8.4
  • Good: Stylish design • Attention to detail • Screen display quality
  • Bad: Stickers plastered on the inside • Non-widescreen display • Price
  • Specs: 160 GB • 2GB • Intel Core Duo • 2 GHz • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$4,199.00

PC fans commonly liken the speed of their computers to that of high-performance cars. It's therefore somewhat surprising to note that relatively few hardware manufacturers have released car-inspired PCs. Acer pioneered this phenomenon with its Ferrari laptop range, but it has taken almost two years for anyone else to follow suit.

Ever eager to widen its range of stylish laptops, Asus has just released the sports car-inspired Lamborghini VX1 range, which promises as much performance and style as its namesake.

Design
The VX1 comes in two flavours: black, and the more traditional Lamborghini yellow. Both are attractive, but our yellow review sample makes an instant retina-searing impression straight out of the box, making it the more suitable poser's accessory. Asus says the laptops use the same paint finish as the iconic cars, incorporating subtle golden paint flecks that catch the light of the sun, as well as the famous Lamborghini logo.

Asus Lamborghini VX1The lid of the VX1 sports the iconic Lamborghini logo

The lid of the VX1 has a moulded plastic section that is reminiscent of a car boot spoiler, but it's actually inspired by the engine cover slats of a Lamborghini Gallardo. It's a nice touch, giving the laptop a sleek overall look. Unfortunately, the 'spoiler' section of our review sample was a slightly different shade of yellow to the main body of the laptop -- a flaw which Asus says won't be present on final retail models.

Asus Lamborghini VX1The raised 'spoiler' section gives the VX1 a streamlined appearance

Look closely at the spoiler section and you'll see a set of lights hidden behind fine meshing. These three indicator lights are of little use, but make a nice talking point for anyone who loves fine details. We'd hoped the sea of yellow would flow onto the inside section of the laptop, but Asus has chosen a contrasting black. This isn't such a bad thing, but the effect is spoiled by a row of stickers advertising the quality of the laptop's TFT panel and its interior components.

This is a shame, as the stickers take your eyes away from the Lamborghini logo on the palm rest, which also has hundreds of tiny drilled holes, two of which hide power and hard drive access lights. There's also a vertical blue LED strip between the mouse buttons, which is a nice touch. The base of the laptop plays host to a business card holder which can accommodate a couple of ordinary size cards, but again we were disappointed by the lack of a yellow finish.

Asus Lamborghini VX1An eerie blue LED separates the left and right mouse buttons

Features
Any laptop bearing the name of a high-performance sports car deserves high-performance components, and the Asus Lamborghini VX1 doesn't disappoint. It's not the most insanely well-equipped laptop we've seen, but its 2GHz Intel T2500 CPU and 2GB of DDR2 RAM give it a very potent foundation from which to build.

We'd have preferred if the laptop used the 2.2GHz T2600, the fastest CPU in the Centrino Duo range, but this is an acceptable alternative. Graphics performance comes courtesy of a custom Nvidia chip, the Geforce 7400 VX. This is essentially a GeForce 7400 that was renamed for Asus' use, but it's a welcome and capable inclusion for a laptop that doesn't tout itself as a dedicated gaming machine.

Unusually, Asus has opted not to use a widescreen 16:9 display on the Lamborghini VX1. Instead, you get a 15-inch screen with a native resolution of 1,400x1,050 pixels. This is fine for everyday use, but its 4:3 aspect ratio limits the number of windows you can view side by side, and means you get a letterbox view when playing 16:9 widescreen movies. Some may take exception to the screen's glossy coating, which is a tad too reflective to use in direct light, but aside from this, we were very impressed with the image quality. Colours were recreated faithfully, and the screen was able to accurately display the subtle tonal differences.

Also impressive was the capacious 160GB hard drive. It's the largest laptop drive on the market and is perfect for storing a wealth of games and other multimedia content. You also get a dual-layer DVD rewriter drive that lets you burn up to 8.5GB of data per DVD disc. Unfortunately it's quite slow at 4x, and is a tray-loading model. We'd have preferred a slot-loading drive to help maintain the sleek lines of the laptop.

The Lamborghini VX1 features the usual assortment of ports, including three USB ports, a 4-pin Firewire port, plus a Gigabit (1,000Mbps) Ethernet port. You also get a 5-in-1 memory card reader which supports all major formats, but there's no sign of a modem -- you'll need to buy your own USB modem, as is the case with most new laptops.

All told, the VX1 has a strong specification, but its AU$4199 price tag is in excess of what you'd pay for a laptop without the Lamborghini badge.

Performance
As a high-end laptop, we expected a lot from the VX1, and it delivers in most respects. Its 2GHz CPU helped it reach a commendable PCMark 2005 score of 4,212, which isn't quite enough to catch the all-conquering Acer Travelmate 8204WLMi's tally of 4,236, but the difference between these two systems is marginal.

Where the Lamborghini trails slightly is in its graphics performance. It clocked up a 3DMark 2006 score of 1,403, which again is lower than the Travelmate's score of 1,999. In real terms this equates to 48 frames per second in Doom 3 versus the Acer's 56.6fps, both at a resolution of 1,024x768 pixels.

Ultimately, the VX1 isn't as potent in this department as many of its rivals, but it provides sufficient graphics horsepower to run most games, albeit at modest resolutions and image quality settings.

Topics: laptop, notebook, asus, vx1, lamborghini, asu, spoil, yellow, car

Comments (11)

  • BMW M5 gave 10/10 on 18/07/2008 02:14 Report abuse

    GREAT LAPTOP.

    • Good: STAND OUT IN A CROWD AT THE AIRPORT PRIVATE LOUNGE. PEOPLE CAN'T HELP BUT LOOK WITH ENVY AT THE BADGE.
    • Bad: CAN'T COMPLAIN ABOUT PRICE WHEN YOU WANT TO BE A STEP ABOVE THE REST.
  • davidson2325 gave 10/10 on 20/05/2008 23:28 Report abuse

    This labtop is one step towards what the future will be like and I think that all ages 13+ will enjoy it

    • Good: spectacular
    • Bad: N/A
  • rooboy gave 10/10 on 18/09/2007 08:41 Report abuse

    Nice Looker, Smooth Finish, my wife is jealous. Asus does not have the best service though

    • Good: Great looks
    • Bad: asus Service
  • Zergling gave 10/10 on 25/07/2007 21:29 Report abuse

    my VX1 came with Windows Vista Ultimate 32bit an 64 bit

    • Good: exelent layout
    • Bad: price
  • barry gave 10/10 on 25/01/2007 23:25 Report abuse

    Its pure class,if you like to stand out from the crowd this is the laptop for you!

    • Good: Super stylish,powerfull,lite,did I mention super stylish,worth every cent
    • Bad: none
  • Pomstar13 gave 3/10 on 21/12/2006 04:58 Report abuse

    Be careful potential buyers. I bought this VX in high expectation as an Industrial Designer but within 1 month it broke down due to "overheating" problems as ASUS told me. Send it off for repairs and get it back a month later! Then the problem still exists but the repair centre added some nice scratches on top of the beuatiful black Galliardo finish! Another month off for repairs and CRC, ASUS's repair centre in the UK (absolutely incompetent) have still not managed to deliver it through City Link. I'm still waiting for the unit to come back to me as we write. You may think this is a vengful review, yes it is but seriously do you really wanna go through that much trouble when you spend that much money? Imagine you buy a Lamborghini that breaks down due to the engine overheating and then you send it off for repairs and get it back with scratches all over the paintwork. Not great and you would definitely not be happy. I'm stuck with this now so I have to wait but I'm just trying to tell those people who are considering this that this is what could happen and a MacBook Pro running windows on bootcamp looks tempting nice now. It has now been in for servicing longer than I've actually used the unit.

    • Good: Great outside Design and Finish. If it was working it'de be a fantastic laptop.
    • Bad: Inside is probably ill-designed with overheating problems. BAD - very bad Customer service from ASUS and their repair centre.
  • Aj gave 8/10 on 30/11/2006 16:36 Report abuse

    looks good

  • Anonymous gave 3/10 on 09/10/2006 14:04 Report abuse

    a ricer...for show, not for go

    had it had widescreen and a core 2 duo option, i would have forked out the extra $500.

    • Good: extremely sexy...Possibly even more so than my W3J...but only marginally. Great about the hard-drive...except any wealthy (middle aged, ahem) business man doesnt play games too often and hence doesn't need around 80 of those gigs. Great graphics card
    • Bad: Processor?!?!?! Why a 2.0gHz core duo? What about a merom option. What about atleast a 2.2gHz option. And it badly needs widescreen.
  • Anonymous gave 8/10 on 07/09/2006 21:08 Report abuse

    Fantastic Looker (Yellow), Above Average performer!

  • Henk Jan Jansen gave 10/10 on 02/09/2006 21:52 Report abuse

    A awesome notebook

    really a great gadget

    • Good: Everything i need super quality
    • Bad: the only bad thing about the notebook is her price

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