The Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 2 is a well-made, solid Intel i5-1135G7 Core, 12.4” touch screen laptop weighing 1.127kg. It is perfect for those on the go.
Even though it comes in four colours – Platinum, Sage, Ice Blue, Sandstone – it is a tad plain, but hey, arch-nemesis Apple has been making bland space grey MacBook’s for yonks. This is the Microsoft equivalent – a safe, average performance, student or consumer laptop running full-fat Windows 11 with all the benefits like touch screen, easy networking, USB device support, externally mountable drives, etc.
Let’s explore Windows 11 further, as I am impressed with it. I have upgraded a dozen PCs now, including a Windows on ARM tablet, and without fail, these perform better. It is a mix of new code to extract the most from the hardware and better memory management. For example, where a Windows 10 PC idled at 10% CPU and 40% utilisation, the same PC now sits at 5% and 18%, respectively. It feels faster.
So, think of the Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 2 as a good, reliable laptop. Not pretentious, but not too Apple-like bland either.
We use Fail (below expectations), Pass (meets expectations) and Exceed (surpasses expectations or is the class leader) against many of the items below. We occasionally give a Pass ‘+’ rating to show it is good but does not quite make it to Exceed.
The review unit was Sage, which perhaps softens the laptop’s otherwise hard edges. The base is made from glass fibre reinforced aluminium and polycarbonate composite resin, and the top deck and LCD screen cover are aluminium.
Underneath it has everything, you expect for the price. Intel Core i5-1135G7, 4 or 8GB (forget the 4GB model), decent but non-backlit keyboard/largish trackpad, 12.4” touch screen (about the size of the Surface Pro 8) and Wi-Fi 6 AX/BT 5.1.
It uses an LG display model LPW125WX162403. We cannot find the exact specs, but it is a 60Hz, WLED backlit, a-Si TFT-LCD panel. It is 8-bit, 16.7m, and about 97% sRGB (75% DCI-P3, 71% NTSC) colour gamut. The panel is capable of 330 nits. Our tests showed it can reach 370 nits and 1000:1 contrast.
If you view it too far off-angle, it has an almost ethereal feel– probably due to the anti-reflective finish.
It is a four-core, eight-thread, 2.4/4.2MHz with a 12-28W TDP (Thermal Design Power). Geekbench 5 single/multi-core is 1309/4207. It is a low-wattage processor that extends battery life, but you can push it on mains power.
It has integrated Intel Xe 1.3Ghz 80EU graphics. OpenCL/Vulkan scores are a respectable 15070/15029.
Throttling appears to be well controlled (80% on battery and 100% in performance mode on mains power), and the vent temperature reached 41° (well within tolerance) and 48dB (still quiet).
Best use: Suitable for office productivity and even some light gaming IF you get the 8GB version.
Our test unit has 8GB, and 50% is used with four MS Edge tabs and a few test programs, idle but open. A lot is going on in Windows, and after removing Teams and some useless background functions, it returned to a respectable 35% and 1% CPU.
We recommend you read Five free Windows programs that will save your bacon (guide), and Remove Windows Bloatware and get back heaps of memory and CPU resources (guide) to maximise performance on 8GB. We can’t recommend 4GB as it would be almost all used out of the box.
It has a SK Hynix HFM256GD3GX013H 255GB M.2 2230 PCIe 3.0 x4 lane SSD. The disk is replaceable by a qualified technician, and we understand it can handle up to 1TB.
CPDT (cross Platform Disk Test) gave a sequential read/write result of 2320/1250MBps which is in the Tier 2 SSD performance range. Crystal Disk Mark gives it 3415/1590MBps using a different testing regimen.
There is no microSD storage, but backup to a USB-C 3.2 Gen 2 external SSD is pretty quick. CPDT shows sequential read/write 939/681MBps and Crystal disk Mark 1064.54/1032MBps. One nice thing about Windows is the drive is automatically mounted, e.g., D: so you can use it for live recording.
While we don’t expect Thunderbolt 4 for this price, the port configuration affects expandability. You can run an external 4K@50/60Hz (or 180p@50/60Hz). If you use an unpowered dongle like the OWC USB-C Travel Dock Gen 2 with 4K and 100W pass-through (review), you get 4K@24/30Hz or 1080p@50/60Hz as it also has to allocate bandwidth to two USB-A 3.0, an SD card reader and 100W power pass-through charging.
Under Windows, most USB-C Powered Docks (not dongles) will support dual monitors, 3.5mm and USB-A ports.
It has approx. 40 WH battery that Microsoft claims gives 13.5 hours under its typical use test. The PC Mark Modern Office battery test shows around 9 hours. Our video loop test at 150 nits, 50% volume, and Wi-Fi off was 12 hours and 12 minutes.
Microsoft claims an 80% charge in one hour. Our tests show battery charge time using the 15V/2.6A/39W ribbon charger was close to 2 hours, reaching 62% in the first hour. It will charge with any higher rating USB-C PD charger (up to 230V/3A/60W) as long as you have a 3W USB-C cable.
There are no visible speaker grills, and the X-ray reveals dual left and right speakers under the Cap’s Lock and Enter keys.
Microsoft calls these Omnisonic Speakers with Dolby Audio Premium (not Atmos). We could not find any Dolby Audio Premium settings or an App. The sound is straight Intel Realtek 16-bit/48Hz with no EQ or adjustments.
It appears you must separately download Realtek Audio Console free from the Windows Store only. Please note that the Store could not serve the App (we tried with multiple Surface devices), so we cannot test it. Also, note that this is not the paid Dolby Access App.
The maximum volume is 80dB with acceptable distortion.
I am so over 720p cameras, and this is no exception. It’s a .9MP camera that delivers a low dynamic range, 1280 x 720p video. Get a decent 1080p or 4K webcam if you do a lot of video conferencing.
The dual mics (also standard Realtek array) do a passable job, but you really need to be well within 2 metres of them.
Its Wi-Fi 6 AX uses an Intel AX201 HE160 card. It is capable of 2400Mbps full-duplex (as the Surface Pro 8 and Laptop 2 are) and our tests gets 2042Mbps.
Bluetooth is 5.1 and supports Windows fast connect.
Like the rest of the Surface Laptop range, it has an excellent keyboard with 1.3mm throw and injection moulded lettering (that won’t wear off). We would love a little more throw, but overall, the 45g actuation pressure is spot on – typists won’t swear at this keyboard. Our only gripe is that it is not backlit.
The Microsoft Precision trackpad is, as usual, responsive and easy to navigate.
Business users should note that a version with 16GB, Windows Hello face ID, Fingerprint scanner, Surface Management Portal and Windows 11 Pro/Enterprise is available.
Components including feet, SSD, Keyboard Cover, Top Assembly, battery and SurfLink connectors can be replaced by Microsoft Authorised Service Providers.
After we had completed the review tests, Microsoft issued a swag of updates, including Bios and firmware. We did not have time to retest everything, but we noticed faster Wi-Fi connection speeds.
I got excited with the Surface Pro 8, Laptop Studio and even the Go 3, but this is not overly exciting. It is competent, does the job it was intended for and has a great build quality for the price.
We can’t recommend the 4/128GB version. It is only $100/200 for the 8/128GB or 8/256GB version.
This is perfect for secondary and tertiary students, travellers and consumers that don’t want a larger laptop.
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