• expired

[eBay Plus] Asus Tuf A15 Ryzen 7 4800H, RTX 2060 16GB / 512GB, $1,903.95 (Bonus $100 GiftCard) + $14.95 Post @ TitanGear eBay

190
PVOLTAGE

Original Coupon Deal

first post be nice, seems a good deal for the specs, I know the screen is not the best.

using code Pvoltage for 15% off

Not eligible for the $100 gift card as shipping is likely not to occur prior to June 30.

ASUS TUF FA506IV-AL043T 15.6in FHD RTX 2060 R7-4800H 16GB 512GB SSD Gaming Laptop | 15.6in (16:9) LED-backlit FHD (1920x1080) 144Hz Anti-Glare IPS-level Panel | AMD® Ryzen™ R7 4800H Processor | NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX 2060 , with 6GB GDDR6 VRAM | 16GB DDR4 3200MHz SDRAM | 512GB PCIe® Gen3 SSD | 2 Year Warranty

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closed Comments

  • +2

    Reading the title, I thought this was just the World's most expensive 2060.

  • +1

    The code is capped at max $300

    Buy it now price: AU $2,203.95
    -AU $300.00
    Your price: AU $1,903.95

    EDIT: price is AFTER claiming $100 ASUS giftcard. Which is actually not $100 off the product

  • seems very good price

  • +11

    "Don't Buy The Asus TUF Gaming A15, Design Flaw Analysis"
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRDUR-rPGsM

    • +10

      Better if you just tell us about the flaw so that we don’t have to watch YouTube videos …

      • +4

        Seems like the cooling system is flawed in that a lot of the intakes/vents are physically blocked by random components.

      • Not enough holes.

        • +1

          drill some after purchase lol

    • +4

      summary
      - small air intake
      - blocked air vent
      result in bad temperature and performance drop

      • +6

        Another one
        - very bad panel (~66% sRGB, undersaturated/washed out color)

        • High sRGB is more for photo/video editing and the like. I think the panel is good enough with IPs and 144hz refresh and G-sync support. Biggest problem is the overheating.

          • @MuddyClear: 99%sRGB (72% NTSC) is not high. It's normal. When working with printing and photo editing you may want higher than that.
            66% sRGB is pretty crap.

          • @MuddyClear: 90-100% sRGB is standard/normal IPS panel. Photo/video editing will requires high Adobe RGB or DCI P3 color space support and less color deviation. 66% sRGB is very very bad, think of cheap TN panels 10-15 years ago.

            • @Kingduytan: You sure it’s standard as there are plenty of low sRGB panels on laptops like this

              • @MuddyClear: "Normal" should be a better way to put it, as in it's what we normally expect when thinking of an IPS panel. Above that are excellent panels, below that are subpar and undesirable. 90% sRGB is usually where many people start to notice the color just aren't as good/vibrant as other "decent" ones. I wouldn't expect to see such low sRGB in 1k+ laptops nowadays.

                • @Kingduytan: If it’s not standard then don’t expect normal to be what you think it is. All entry level gaming laptops are $1k+ unless they are on special, which is not an every day thing. Laptops like the Dell G3/G5 have below average sRGB. Same story with Asus TUF range, and plenty of other laptops I’ve seen in reviews in this range. I would say this laptop has averaged sRGB, and I suspect 3k+ laptops to have the higher sRGB that you’re thinking. The average joe won’t care or need it.

                  • @MuddyClear: The average joes I know (elder/kids/students/office workers) do ask questions from time to time why their laptop screens is bad/"frosted"/"not colorful" (the ones with a bit more tech knowledge ask why their IPS screens aren't as good as mine), all they do are web browsing and office works. So I think most average joe do care, especially in this age and time where almost everyone I know owns an AMOLED phone. Non-tech people just buy laptops looking at res/refresh rate and think all IPS screens are created equal.

                    Again 100% sRGB is not high, it's the standard reference point and where the average joe like me and you would care about. Screens geared toward content creation aim at 100% Adobe RGB and DCI P3, 100% sRGB is a given and not even worth talking about. Lots of high-end laptop with 4k screens have 250%+ sRGB rating (like the Dell XPS), now that's what I would call high.

                    Anyway, probably let's call it agree to disagree. I just put this information out here so people are aware of the compromise they're making.

                    • @Kingduytan: I don’t think joe knows what sRGB is, and gamers don’t particularly think it’s critical for gaming, but sure let’s agree to disagree.

  • +1

    Amazing specs on paper. Was so close to triggering. Too bad it does not reach the potential and has design issues.
    https://www.reddit.com/r/laptops/comments/gcr6cm/people_who_…

    • This is the machine that I read one discussion where a guy took to his brand new machine with a dremel to fix the overheating. Hard pass. Such a shame. i was hoping my next machine would be either ASUS or MSI, but if this is what ASUS is putting out, just nope.

  • +1

    i purchased this few weeks ago with a similar $200 off ebay deal which actually came down few dollars cheaper(also came with cashback) and have regrets.

    The laptop runs HOT , and can get very load after some long gaming sessions .

    i would probably hold back on this one and spend a bit more for a better design gaming laptop with a 2060.

  • Dont order the delivery date is after a month and you wont be able to claim the gift card i messaged the seller to confirm

    • thanks, I will adjust

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