Toshiba Satellite C55-C-175 review
Welcome to a Biomedical Battery specialist of the Toshiba Laptop Battery
At a little under £400, Toshiba’s new Satellite C55-C could be just the ticket for anyone that can't or won’t invest much in a laptop. It has a clean, fuss-free design – especially in all-white – and a recent Intel processor lets it run for half a working day. See also: Best cheap laptops to buy in 2015
As a budget design built to a price it lacks quality in key areas, and Toshiba pre-loads user-hostile software (such as web browser toolbars) to claw back revenue from its customers. Not the greatest of starts, then.
Toshiba Satellite C55-C-175 review: Build and Design
The lightweight plastic chassis is essentially that used in other budget Toshibas with battery like Toshiba PA2445UR Battery, Toshiba PA2445U Battery, Toshiba PA3832U-1BRS Battery, Toshiba PA3929U-1BRS Battery, Toshiba PA3930U-1BRS Battery, Toshiba PABAS250 Battery, Toshiba Dynabook RX3W Battery, Toshiba Portege R830 Battery, Toshiba Satellite R630 Battery, Toshiba Tecra R840 Battery, Toshiba PABAS112 Battery, Toshiba PA3593U-1BRS Battery, such as the Satellite L50D-C and P50T-C, with this C55-C missing the token metal veneer found on some models’ lids. Available in black or white, our snow-white sample had a fetching pale green trim along all edges. Sadly this proved to be just protective packing tape.
The keyboard is serviceable if uninspiring, shallow tiled keys with a numberpad. Real buttons on the trackpad are a boon, since some low-quality buttonless types can be exhausting to operate. But the buttons require some pressure to click, making long sessions less comfortable.
There’s a tray-load DVD writer to the left, able to burn to M-DISC media, plus ethernet, a power inlet and a USB 2.0 port. Poor layout means it’s nearly impossible to press Eject without lifting the laptop. The opposite side features one each USB 2.0 and 3.0, HDMI, and a slot for SDXC cards. For wireless comms there’s standard Bluetooth 4.0, plus basic single-stream 802.11ac Wi-Fi.
Inside is a modest 4GB of memory and a 500GB hard disk. Don’t expect to upgrade these easily since there are no access doors, nor removable battery. Any service work will require a workshop strip-down.
The usual casualty for budget laptops is screen quality. The C55-C is no exception with a lousy low-resolution panel that became unreadable viewed more than a few degrees off axis. In our tests, contrast ratio was only 80:1 and colour coverage just 60 percent sRGB. Together with its poor colour accuracy of Delta E 10.0, the result is a milky, washed-out image with furry text.
These are the same figures we've seen for most recent budget laptops, including the Satellite L50D mentioned earlier and the Asus X555LA, which currently sits at the top of our budget laptop chart. If you want or need a better screen, it's advisable to spend a couple of hundred pounds more and get an IPS screen. A good example is the new Dell Inspirion 15-5558.
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