Acer Aspire 5536 review

Our rating

3.5 stars out of 5

User rating

3.5 stars out of 5

See all 10 user reviews

What do you think?

Verdict

The configuration of the Acer Aspire 5536 that we reviewed, the 5536-643G50Mn, is better value than the recently reviewed 6530-623G25Mn. It's smaller and lighter but similarly specified. The keyboard is much more comfortable too, making this a laptop that's well worth a look if portability is only an occasional concern

Good

  • Good looks
  • Comfortable keyboard

Bad

  • Awkward trackpad
  • Tinny speakers

In this review

Desktop-replacement laptops don't necessarily need to be the size of a headstone. The 15.6-inch Acer Aspire 5536 has more sensible proportions that most models. In fact, it's essentially a smaller version of the recently reviewed 16-inch Aspire 6530. At around £430, the configuration that we review here, the 5536-643G50Mn, is about £50 cheaper than the similarly specified 6530-623G25Mn. You can pick up the 5536-643G50Mn from Laptops Direct, among other online vendors. 

Good looks
We appreciated the good looks of the 6530, and the 5536 is cut from the same cloth. Both models share similar colour schemes, although the 5536 lacks a light-up Acer logo on its glossy blue lid and there are no silver highlights on its screen hinges. Neither of those omissions is a great loss in our opinion.

The 5536's screen is only 10mm (0.4 inches) smaller than the 6530's and the two laptops are almost the same width. The 5536 isn't quite as deep, though, and it's a fair amount lighter, at 2.8kg. It still isn't a laptop you'd want to lug around all day, however.

Like its sibling, the 5536 has a full-size keyboard with a separate numeric keypad, but it has a different design, which we much prefer. The low-profile keys are similar to the 'chiclet' style favoured by Apple and Sony, but the wide, flat key tops sit above the keyboard tray rather than poking through holes in it. Fluff, crumbs and other desktop detritus will probably accumulate in the empty space beneath the keys, but the design looks great and works well. The keys have a solid, positive action, without a hint of flex.


Like the 6530, the 5536 is a good-looking machine, but it also sports a better keyboard

Unfortunately, the 5536's trackpad has the same irksome design as that of the 6530. It's simply a shallow area in the wrist rest with nothing to separate the touch-sensitive area from the flush-sitting buttons. As a result, it's easy for a button-pressing finger to stray onto the trackpad, leading to the mouse cursor jumping around. It's not a huge problem, but it's an annoying one, nonetheless.

Bright screen
We weren't that impressed by the 16-inch screen on the 6530. The image quality was fine, but the vertical resolution of 768 pixels was disappointingly low. The same applies to the 5536, but the 1,336x768-pixel resolution is more acceptable on a 15.6-inch screen, particularly when the laptop weighs so much less.

As with the 6530, the 5536's screen has a 16:9 aspect ratio, rather than the more common widescreen-laptop aspect ratio of 16:10. The supposed benefit is that this eliminates the black borders when watching widescreen movies. It's important to note, however, that this only applies to movies presented in a 16:9 aspect ratio. Many movies are presented in the even wider 2.20:1 aspect ratio, and these will still have black borders at both the top and bottom. The 5536's screen is bright and clear, however, and the LED backlight means that it's evenly lit. It is glossy, however, so it can be overly reflective in certain conditions and won't suit everyone.

The Dolby Home Theater branding might suggest that the 5536 would offer excellent audio, but the sound quality is little better than on any other laptop we've reviewed. Unlike with the 6530, there's no bass-enhancing tube at the rear of the 5536, and so the speakers sound rather tinny, although they're fine for the odd spot of music.

Decent performance
The 5536-643G50Mn and 6530-623G25Mn have largely identical specifications, including a 2.1GHz AMD Athlon 64 X2 QL-64 CPU, 3GB of RAM and an ATI Radeon HD 3200 GPU. As a result, it's no surprise that their benchmark results are largely the same too.

User reviews10

Add your review

Dylan John Ritchie's avatar
3.5 stars out of 5

Dylan John Ritchie 6 January 2012

Good: Wide screen, looks good, and is very fast.

Bad: Can get very hot, poor graphics card for gaming and keyboard

Comment: I've had this laptop since 2009. It's still going strong and is mostly in good condition, apart from the mouse pad, now I have never had any problems with it, it's decent, but the glossy paint that it's coated in has over time worn off to a blackish colour, just wear and tear I guess.
The laptops 4GB of RAM still keeps it going strong and fast.
The keyboard however is a burden, although the keys feel very nice, they are somewhat annoying to catch materials and debris underneath them which can cause a crunching or sticking motion when typing other than that the keys are nice and fluid.
The laptop can also get very hot reaching temperatures of 95C, so hot that the plastic air vent - some of the grid restraints have broken off.
(Just ordered a laptop cooler)

All in all this laptop as excellent if you need something for work, student life & all round day to day things, obviously bad for gaming.

7/10

I own it
dazzz2937's avatar
3 stars out of 5

dazzz2937 10 July 2011

Good: full keyboard hdmi socket cheap

Bad: cheap ,mouse pad

Comment: I have the one with 500gb hdd and 4 gb of ram which has now also died on me after 20 months .But up until then I have not had two many problems other than mouse pad placement when typing.It was fast and smooth running and is a good cheap laptop which can also be it's downfall .

I own it
Henrique Diogo's avatar
3.5 stars out of 5

Henrique Diogo 5 May 2011

Good: Decent specs

Bad: constant failures

Comment: I've owned this machine for nearly 2 years and every 10 months or so the hard drive has a catastrophic failure do to overheating, i have tried many techniques to keep it cool, but it gets hot very quickly. Aside from the Disk Errors every so often it runs rather smoothly, but having a heart attack every ten months because of fear that i've lost my lifes work isn't worth the trouble, wont be buying acer again...

I own it

Tell us what you think

Log in with your CNET UK or Facebook account to post a user review, or click Join to create an account

Step 1

0 out of 5

Step 2

Submit

Please log in, register or login with Facebook to add a review or comment

Should you buy it?

Acer Aspire 5536 angle

Ask your Facebook friends and Twitter followers if you should buy the Acer Aspire 5536

About CBS Interactive

Copyright © 2012 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved.