Acer Spin 512 R857TN R857TN-P5QA 12.2" Touchscreen Convertible 2 in 1 Review
The Acer Chromebook Spin 512 is one of the most portable laptops you can buy, but its painfully slow CPU and questionable reliability make it a tough sell for most people.
Overview
Let's be clear from the start: the Acer Chromebook Spin 512 is a specialist. Its AMD 1200 CPU lands in the 1st percentile for performance, which means it's one of the slowest processors you can get in a modern laptop. That's the headline number. But it's also in the 95th percentile for compactness, so it's incredibly small and light. This isn't a machine for heavy lifting; it's a hyper-portable web terminal with a touchscreen.
Performance
Performance is exactly what you'd expect from those numbers. The 4-core AMD 1200 and integrated Intel UHD Graphics are built for one thing: running Chrome OS and web apps. It'll handle dozens of browser tabs and Google Docs just fine. But that's the ceiling. The 8GB of RAM is in the 10th percentile, so multitasking has a hard limit, and the GPU score (42nd percentile) means even basic Android games from the Play Store might stutter. It's a capable machine for its intended, very narrow lane.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Extremely portable, scoring in the 95th percentile for compactness. 96th
- The 12.2-inch 1920x1200 touchscreen is sharp and functional for a device this size.
- 8GB of RAM is decent for a Chromebook, allowing for reasonable tab management.
- The 2-in-1 convertible design with touch adds flexibility for media consumption.
- Chrome OS is simple and secure, perfect for its target use case.
Cons
- CPU performance is in the 1st percentile, making it unsuitable for any demanding task. 1th
- Reliability scores a concerning 8th percentile, which is a red flag for long-term use. 5th
- Storage is in the 2nd percentile, with only 64GB of eMMC flash, filling up fast. 9th
- Connectivity is limited, with a port score in the 37th percentile (only one HDMI noted). 17th
- It's categorically not for gaming, with a score of 4.2/100.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Processor
| CPU | AMD Ryzen 3 1200 |
| Cores | 4 |
| Frequency | 3.1 GHz |
| L3 Cache | 8 MB |
Graphics
| GPU | UHD Graphics |
| Type | integrated |
| VRAM Type | Shared |
Memory & Storage
| RAM | 8 GB |
Display
| Size | 12.2" |
| Resolution | 1920 (Full HD) |
Connectivity
| HDMI | 1 x HDMI |
| Bluetooth | Yes |
Value & Pricing
At a listed price of $600, the value proposition is tough. You're paying a premium for the compact 2-in-1 form factor. For that same money, you could find Windows laptops or more powerful Chromebooks with better specs, but they'll likely be bigger and heavier. This is a price you pay for ultra-portability, not for performance.
Price History
vs Competition
Don't even look at the listed 'competitors' like the MacBook Pro or gaming laptops; they're in a different universe. A more relevant comparison is against other compact Chromebooks. The Spin 512 wins on pure portability but loses on everything else. A standard clamshell Chromebook at $400 will likely have a faster CPU, more storage, and better reliability. You're choosing this specifically for its tiny, convertible design and accepting major compromises everywhere else.
Verdict
This is a hard machine to recommend broadly. If your entire computing life happens in a browser, you travel constantly, and every ounce in your bag counts, the Spin 512's 95th percentile compactness might justify its 1st percentile CPU. For literally anyone else—students, general users, business—the severe performance and reliability limitations make it a difficult sell, especially at $600. Only buy this if size is your absolute, non-negotiable top priority.