Skip to main content

Dell Inspiron 14 7000 Series review

Dell Inspiron 14 7000 front windows 8
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Dell Inspiron 14 7000 Series
MSRP $849.00
“Dell’s Inspiron 14 7000 Series is a slim, aluminum laptop with a nice 1080p touchscreen and solid battery life. We just wish it included an SSD.”
Pros
  • Nice 1080p screen
  • Thin, premium aluminum frame
  • Roomy, comfortable keyboard
  • Runs relatively cool and quiet
Cons
  • No solid-state storage
  • Bottom edges are sharp
  • So-so performance
  • Screen could be brighter

Dell’s had a rough time as of late. PC sales continue to slump, and the company has thus-far failed to capture a significant share of the growing mobile smartphone and tablet market.

But fortunes for the world’s number three PC maker may be turning. Dell is now completing the process of going private under the returning leadership of founder Michael Dell. The company showed its first year-on-year growth since 2011 last quarter, according to research firm IDC. Some of the company’s latest products, including the Venue 11 tablet line, look impressive from a design and price standpoint.

Dell’s 14-inch Inspiron 14 7000 Series isn’t as innovative as some of Dell’s other new devices, but it is an impressively slim (0.6 inches) laptop with a nice-looking (if derivative) aluminum shell, decent battery life, and a nice 1080p touchscreen. The $849 starting price is also pretty reasonable.

Dell-Inspiron-14-7000-half-closed-left
Image used with permission by copyright holder

We do wish the Inspiron 14 7000 Series shipped with some solid-state storage to pair with its 500GB hard drive. The unrounded bottom edges make the system a bit uncomfortable to hold. But the Inspiron 14 7000 Series does deliver respectable performance for a mainstream laptop and decent battery life, all while remaining quite cool and quiet, which is a fine feat for a laptop this thin.

A familiar-looking silver shell

At a glance, it’s hard not to compare what Dell calls the Inspiron 14’s “forged aluminum” chassis to Apple’s MacBook Pro. It is worth noting that Dell’s Inspiron is thinner than Apple’s latest 0.71-inch thick models. But at 4.4 pounds, its weight is more in line with Apple’s larger 15-inch laptop, and slightly heavier than Lenovo’s similarly sized, 4.2-pound U430 Touch.

The new Inspiron 14 further sets itself apart from that other laptop maker, with a Dell logo etched into the lid and another situated below the rather nice 1080p touchscreen. Build quality overall feels quite good and solid, certainly better than the average plastic-clad portable.

Dell’s Inspiron 14 7000 Series is a slim laptop with a nice-looking shell, decent battery life and an 1080p touchscreen for $849, a reasonable price.

The only noticeable gaps in the system’s metal shell are around the hinge, and hidden on the bottom of the device. A couple of rubber strips on the laptop’s underside keep it from sliding around on a desk, while elevating it a bit for better cooling.

Our main fault with the Inspiron 14’s chassis, is also found on the bottom of the laptop. While Dell has shaved off the corners of the top of the laptop’s lid and the lower keyboard section, they neglected to do the same on the Inspiron 14’s bottom edges. The result is a laptop that’s a bit uncomfortable to hold from the bottom, as the edges dig a bit into your fingers and palms. This is less of an issue when carrying the laptop around when closed, as you can hold it along one of the more comfortable top edges.

The Inspiron 14 7000 covers the necessary basics when it comes to port selection. The right edge houses a USB 3.0 port, SD card slot, headphone jack, and small speaker grille. The left side is occupied by a second USB 3.0 port (with sleep-charge abilities), an HDMI port, power connector, lock slot, and another speaker grille. You’ll have to rely on Wi-Fi, though. Like recent MacBooks, there’s no Ethernet jack here.

As you may have guessed, given that the speakers fire out of small grilles on the sides of the laptop, the Inspiron 14’s audio output isn’t exactly stellar, but it’s not terrible either. The speakers don’t get as loud as we’d like for a system of this size, and there isn’t much in the way of discernable bass. But the sound isn’t overly distorted at max volume either.

More than adequate input

Given that the Inspiron 14 is flirting with half-inch thickness, we weren’t expecting a great typing experience. We were pleasantly surprised. Sure, key travel is a bit shallow, but not egregiously so. The silver plastic keys are well spaced and generally well laid out.

Dell-Inspiron-14-7000-keyboard
Image used with permission by copyright holder

With so much space around the keyboard, we can’t help but wish for full-size arrow and function-row keys. While the keys are backlit, there are only two selectable levels of brightness, and the backlight isn’t exactly even. There is some keyboard flex, but it’s not terrible. Overall, the Inspiron’s keyboard is quite comfortable to type on. Still, the keyboard on Lenovo’s similarly sized IdeaPad U430 Touch is a bit better overall.

At more than 4.5 inches diagonally, the touchpad is reasonably roomy, impressively responsive and accurate. It handles Windows 8 gestures well, and we didn’t notice a single unintentional cursor jump or twitch during testing. Even the click mechanism under the buttonless touchpad has just the right amount of resistance and travel, at least to our fingers.

An okay hinge and a great screen

The Inspiron 14 7000 Series’ hinge opens a full 180 degrees, allowing both the keyboard and screen to lie flat on a desk. But when the screen is at a more traditional laptop angle, tapping or swiping, particularly near the top of the screen, results in some noticeable screen springiness; the laptop’s lid bounces forward and back for a second from the impact of your fingers. This is a minor issue, and didn’t bother us much, but it may annoy others.

As for the laptop’s 14-inch, 1080p display, it’s rather nice for a mainstream laptop. First off, the 1,920×1,080 resolution is highly appreciated, and feels like a good fit for a screen this size. The display on Lenovo’s U430 Touch, by comparison, is only 1,600 x 900.

Dell also covers the Inspiron’s screen with a sheet of Gorilla glass, which is found only on high-priced options, like their XPS line.

Dell also covers the Inspiron’s display with a sheet of Gorilla glass, a feature often found only on high-priced options like the company’s XPS line. While there is some noticeable glare from the glass, it’s not as bad as we’ve seen from several mid-priced touchscreen laptops in the past.

The Inspiron’s panel also performed much better in our benchmark testing than the panel in Lenovo’s U430 Touch, reproducing 89 percent of the sRGB spectrum, versus 65 percent from Lenovo’s panel. The Dell display also delivers better black levels and contrast.

Viewing angles are also good, with no major contrast or color shifts, even when the screen is lying flat on a desk. The screen is noticeably dimmer at off angles. Brightness in general is the panel’s chief failing. At maximum brightness, it’s on par with the screen on Lenovo’s U430 Touch, but we’ve tested laptops in the past that get well more than 50 percent brighter, like Dell’s own XPS 12.

Still, overall, the screen here is loads better than what’s found in most budget and mid-range laptops, both in terms of pixel count and performance. And on every metric other than brightness, it’s much better than the screen on Lenovo’s U430 Touch.

Performance is a bit mixed

The $849 base model Inspiron 14 7000 Series we tested comes with a now familiar Core i5-4200U processor (the same that’s found in the Lenovo U430 Touch), an adequate 6GB of RAM, and a 500GB hard drive. A stepped-up $999 model ships with a faster Core i7 CPU and 8GB of RAM.

The components in the base model are certainly adequate for handling most mainstream computing tasks, but the lack of any solid-state cache is a bit disappointing, given the system’s price. Lenovo’s U430 Touch, for instance, pairs its hard drive with 16GB of solid-state storage for quicker boot times and faster loading of commonly used apps.

Dell-Inspiron-14-7000-left-corner-hinge
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The Inspiron 14’s slim chassis may also work against its showing in some of our benchmarks, keeping the CPU from reaching its full potential. Both the Dell system and the model of the Lenovo U430 we tested have the same Core i5 processor. But the Inspiron 14’s score of 28 GOPs in the SiSoft Sandra’s Processor Arithmetic test ran well behind the Lenovo U430 Touch’s score of 38 GOPs.

That being said, the Dell system did much better on our 7-Zip compression test, scoring 7,080 MIPs, to the Lenovo U430’s score of 5,812.

Just like with the U430, Intel’s integrated HD 4400 graphics are the only GPU option here. The Dell system does manage a better showing in the 3DMark graphics benchmark, though, scoring 4,296 on the Cloud Gate test, and 649 on the more-demanding Fire Strike benchmark. The Lenovo system only managed 3,253 and 391 on the same tests, respectively. Most games will be playable on the system, but expect to keep detail settings set to low, especially if you hope to game at the screen’s native 1080p.

Perhaps the Inspiron’s most impressive performance feat is that the Inspiron 14 is able to remain relatively cool and quiet, even under load, despite its slim frame. Under full CPU load, the bottom rear of the laptop stayed just under 89 degrees, and only stepped up to 94.8 degrees when stressing the laptop’s graphics in FurMark.

The system vents out the back, and while the fan is audible as a low hum under load in a quiet room, it never got louder than 41.8dB in our testing, or just a couple decibels louder than our testing environment. The Lenovo U430 Touch hit 43.1dB, and we lauded that system for its relative silence. With the Dell system, fan noise is exceptionally low.

Battery life in line with the competition

Whenever a system gets close to a half-inch thick, battery life is often sacrificed, as there often just isn’t room inside the chassis for a normal-sized battery. Likewise, a display with more pixels, like the 1080p panel here, can also eat into battery life. But fear not: The Inspiron 14 delivers the kind of battery life we’re coming to expect from systems with Intel’s Haswell processors.

In our heavy-hitting Battery Eater test, the Inspiron 14 lasted 2 hours and 27 minutes, or three minutes less than Lenovo’s U430 Touch. That’s about in line with other recent similarly sized systems. In the light-load Reader’s Test, the Inspiron 14 lasted 8 hours and 10 minutes; three minutes longer than the U430 Touch did.

To be sure, you can find thicker systems with longer battery life, or laptops with optional extended batteries, but the Inspiron strikes a good balance between appealingly thin aesthetics and longevity when away from a power plug.

Conclusion

With its nice full-HD screen and slim, solid aluminum shell, Dell’s Inspiron 14 7000 Series looks much nicer than many laptops that cost more than its $849 starting price. It’s certainly a more premium-looking device than the similarly sized Lenovo U430 Touch.

But while the Lenovo system has an uglier screen, it also costs $150 less than the Inspiron with the same CPU and storage space. The Lenovo U430 has solid-state cache, which the Dell system lacks. That can make a big difference in the overall responsiveness of the system. We wouldn’t say the Inspiron feels sluggish, but it certainly doesn’t feel as snappy as its premium Ultrabook looks imply.

While its design is attractive, the Inspiron 14 is quite literally a bit rough around the (bottom) edges. Every time you pick up the system from the bottom, you’ll be reminded that the Inspiron 14 isn’t quite as sleekly designed as it looks as the chassis digs into your hands.

Still, with a nice-enough keyboard and a great touchpad, combined with pretty good battery life and a pleasing screen, the Inspiron 14 7000 Series is a solid almost-Ultrabook for those who don’t want to spend more on a pricier premium system like Apple’s MacBook Pro or Dell’s own upcoming XPS 15.

With a more comfortable backside and some solid-state storage, the Inspiron 14 7000 Series could be a great mid-range Ultrabook. As it stands, it’s just a pretty good thin laptop.

Highs

  • Nice 1080p screen
  • Thin, premium aluminum frame
  • Roomy, comfortable keyboard
  • Runs relatively cool and quiet

Lows

  • No solid-state storage
  • Bottom edges are sharp
  • So-so performance
  • Screen could be brighter
Matt Safford
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Matt Safford began accumulating electronics experience as a child with his Mattel Aquarius and Tandy TRS-80 (Model 4)…
Dell XPS 14 or XPS 16? Here’s how to know which to buy
The Dell XPS 14 open on a wooden table.

Dell XPS 14 Luke Larsen / Digital Trends

Dell upended its XPS laptop lineup, downsizing the XPS 17 to a new 16-inch model and the XPS 15 to a new 14-inch machine. At the same time, it pulled design cues from the XPS 13 Plus (now called the XPS 13) to create ultramodern and sometimes controversial new machines.

Read more
Acer gets serious about 14-inch gaming laptops
Somebody playing a game on Acer Nitro 16

The 14-inch category of gaming notebooks is getting quite the traction. We recently saw the HP Omen Transcend 14, the company’s first attempt at making a compact yet premium gaming laptop, and a redesign of the popular Zephyrus G14 from Asus. Now, Acer is bringing two new models under its Predator and Nitro brandings.

The new Nitro 14 will be available with the latest AMD Ryzen 7 8845HS or the Ryzen 5 8645HS, which are the same chips as last year but with some added AI capabilities. The 14.5-inch display uses an IPS panel, and customers can choose between either a 1200p and a 1600p resolution model, both of which are capable of 100% sRGB coverage and a 120Hz refresh rate.

Read more
Dell vs. HP: Which laptop brand is best for your needs?
The Dell XPS 13, open on a table in front of a window.

When it comes to computer brands, few names are as well-known and respected as Dell and HP. Both companies have been churning out popular laptops for decades, with their catalogs now filled with iconic lineups like the Dell XPS 15 and HP Pavilion. Both HP and Dell have a lot to offer -- and because they sell so many products vying for the same niche, it can be difficult to determine which one is best for your lifestyle.

Whether you're looking for a premium gaming laptop or something budget-friendly for a job or small business, you'll find that both Dell and HP have a product that fit your needs. The two catalogs feature products with a variety of processors, graphics cards, and price tags, though there are some key differences you should know about the brands before making a purchase.

Read more