HP Omen 16 n0797nr Laptop Price in Pakistan
₨ 324,700
HP Omen 16 n0797nr Laptop Price in Laptop
AMD Ryzen 7-6800H Processor, 16GB Ram DDR4, 1TB M.2 SSD
16.1 FHD, 6GB Nvidia RTX 3060 Graphics, Windows 11
Description
HP Omen 16 n0797nr Laptop Price in Pakistan
- AMD Ryzen 7-6800H
- 16 – GB DDR4 RAM
- 1TB M.2 SSD Drive
- 16.1″ LED DISPLAY
- 6GB Nvidia RTX 3060
- GRAPHICS CARD
- LAPTOP Windows 11
- Laptop Color : Black
Features and Design
The HP Omen 16 is predominantly plastic with what appears to be brushed metal around the edges. It comes with a matte black finish throughout that looks nice, but is also a huge fingerprint and dust magnet. Despite wiping it down often, it will be nearly impossible to keep it looking fresh.
In terms of dimensions, the laptop measures 14.53″ wide x 9.65″ deep x 0.89″ tall. The base configuration weighs in at 5.1 lbs and adding upgraded hardware will increase that a bit. I’m a big fan of the clean lines and chiseled corners. Almost reminds you of a business laptop. HP has given it a nice aesthetic without being too sharp to the touch.
Build quality feels quite nice as well. Although not as robust as all-metal laptops, the Omen feels solid and well put together. It takes a good amount of typing force to get the keyboard to warp, so I don’t expect anyone to run into any issues with that.
Likewise, you have to apply a fair bit of torsion to get the body to deform. I traveled around with the system in a backpack and suitcase and had no issues. This is to be expected for a thicker laptop that starts above 5 pounds. The weight isn’t too bad for a gaming laptop, but if you’re looking for something extremely portable, this might not be the one for you.
The keyboard and trackpad are what I would call acceptable. Nothing outstanding, but they get the job done. This laptop isn’t trying to be super thin, which allows the keys to have a reasonable amount of travel, though the actuation is a bit mushy in my opinion. I would prefer a bit more click at the bottom.
Layout here is standard and there’s enough space that we don’t see any odd key combinations. In the upper right corner, we find hotkeys to open the HP Omen Gaming Hub, the Windows calculator, and taking a screenshot. It would be great if these were re-programmable. The HP software was a little buggy, so if this is possible, I wasn’t able to figure it out. To be picky, it wouldn’t have hurt to put some dedicated media keys on the right side in the gap above the arrows. No sense in keeping that area empty when keyboard real estate is usually so tight.
The trackpad is about as large as it’s physically possible on this size laptop. Pointer precision and mouse click were fine and multi-finger gesture recognition was average. It had no problem with 2-finger scrolling up and down, but often struggled on 3-finger tab switching.
The coating on the trackpad felt a little off to my touch. When moving, it seems almost too smooth at times such that my finger would occasionally slide across without fully registering. At other times, my finger would get stuck and then bump or skip across. Overall, I’d give it and 8 out of 10.
Moving around to the edges, the port selection and connectivity is really nice. On the left, we have the input power jack from the 200W charger, a hinged RJ45 jack, a USB 3.0 Type A port, mini Display-Port, HDMI, USB 3.0 Type C, a headset jack, and an SD card slot
The power brick and connector size are remarkable considering its 200W rating. On the right edge, we find two more USB 3.0 Type A ports for a total of three. There’s also a cooling vent to exhaust hot air. Not very much I can nitpick on here. Nice job HP.
Cooling Design and Thermals
The bottom mesh grill shows HP also did their homework on the thermal design. With the raised rubber feet and recessed honeycomb, the cooling fans will always have access to fresh air and can’t be accidentally covered.
Every environment and configuration will be different, but our test thermal results were as follows. The GPU maxed out at 49C when running on battery and 66C when plugged in. The CPU reached 56C on battery and 79C when plugged in by itself.
With both GPU and CPU pinned at 100% for a long time, the highest temperatures I saw were 56C and 61C respectively on battery, and 77C and 89C when plugged in. Fan noise was quite reasonable. Most of the sound when they ramp up comes from the air blowing through the fins, not the actual fans spinning. This gives the laptop a low “whooshing” sound rather than a high-pitched whine. I never found the laptop bottom or typing surface to be uncomfortably hot even after long periods of high usage. The airflow blows out away from the user, so you never feel the heat, just like a proper thermal design should do.
To stay cool while on battery and to preserve run time, the Omen does some pretty aggressive throttling. The GPU performance jumped about 3.3x and the CPU frequency nearly doubled when switching from battery to wall power.
HP Omen 16 n0797nr Laptop Price in Pakistan
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