acer spin 1 sp111-31n 11.6 fhd lcd touch screen 6m.gl5n1.006 price

3.We need your laptop model. We are aware of customers buying this assembly for other then Acer SP111-31 Models ending up loosing time and money in RMA.
Ghost Touch, Running Touch, No-Touch, and Inverted Touch are not screen related issues. Kindly check your digitizer board and cable since they are the most likely cause of any touch issue; please do not open a return claiming the touch did not work. If the machine has a weakened or fragile digitizer board, the replacement unit or assembly will not have proper touch or in some cases it may not have touch at all.

3.We need your laptop model. We are aware of customers buying this assembly for other then Acer SP111-31 Models ending up loosing time and money in RMA.
Ghost Touch, Running Touch, No-Touch, and Inverted Touch are not screen related issues. Kindly check your digitizer board and cable since they are the most likely cause of any touch issue; please do not open a return claiming the touch did not work. If the machine has a weakened or fragile digitizer board, the replacement unit or assembly will not have proper touch or in some cases it may not have touch at all.

Screens-People.com is professional Computer Screen Display trading and repaire wholesale provider, mainly focused on the replacement LCD screens for Lenovo,Dell,HP,Apple,ASUS,Acer and Microsoft.

Acer Spin 1 SP111-31N Lcd Touch Screen w/ Bezel 11.6" FHD LM116LF3L 6M.GL5N1.006. Acer Spin 1 SP111-31 SP111-31N Lcd Touch Screen w/ Bezel 11.6" FHD LM116LF3L. Acer Spin 1 SP111-31 SP111-31N Lcd Touch Screen w/ Bezel 11.6" FHD LM116LF3L On Apr-20-21 at 11:47:12 PDT, seller added the following information:
Condition: New, Compatible Brand: For Generic, Dead Pixel Policy: Contains 1 to 5 dead pixel(s). 50% Restocking Fee., Display Technology: CCFL LCD, Data Cable Pins: 30 Pins, Screen Size: 11.6 in, Compatible Model: For G208228, MPN: G208228, LCD Dimensions: 11.58x7.8", Brand: Acer, Type: Bezel, Commodity: Touch Screen Assembly, Technology: Touch, Lamp: DIODE, Finish: Matte/Glossy write in checkout note. Avoid RMA Fees., Resolution: Full-HD

ACER SPIN 1 SP111-31N-C4UGACER SPIN 1 SP111-31N-C4UG 11.6 TOUCHSCREEN LED BACKLIGHT FULL HD / INTEL CELERON N3350 1.1GHZ / 4GB RAM / 32GB SSD / INTEL HD GRAPHICS 500 / WINDOWS 10 HOME 64-BIT EDITION / OBSIDIAN BLACK / 360° FLIP DESIGN 2-IN-1 NOTEBOOK PC.

The late-2017 update of the Acer Spin 1 on the other hand is different. It’s a premium built 11-incher with a fully metallic body, a nice IPS touchscreen with pen support, a convertible form-factor, a pretty good keyboard and to most ends, the hardware to handle everyday demands smoothly. It’s also rather expensive for its class though, with the higher-end configurations going for around 500-600 EUR in Europe and around $500 in the US, and at this level, such a small laptop needs to impress in order to be worth more than a look.
We spent a few weeks with the Spin 1 and gathered all our impressions below, with the nice quirks and the issues we encountered, so by the end of the article, you’ll know if the Acer Spin 1 Sp111-32N is the mini-notebook you’re looking for or not.
Acer offers the Spin 1 in a few different configurations and the one we have here is the higher end variant. The lower-end version bundles an Intel Celeron N3350 processor, 4 GB of RAM and only 32 GB of storage.
The Spin 1 is not like most other 11-inch notebooks available these days. It’s mostly made out of metal and is very sturdily built, as you’ll feel immediately when you’ll get it out of the box. There’s no flex in the screen, very little give in the keyboard deck and no squeaking when grabbing it firmly.
Then you’ll notice the sharpness of the screen part when trying to open it. There’s no crease on the front lip and the hinges are very stiff, so your fingertips will suffer and you’ll still need both hands to get inside. Lastly, there are the beveled edges around the inner body and the pointy corners, but at least the Spin has a low-profile and these shouldn’t be an issue as long as you mostly use the device on a large desk. On the lap or in cramped spaces, they’ll bite into your wrists.
You’ll also feel them when using the Spin as a tablet, because as I’ve already mentioned in the beginning, this one is a hybrid with a 360-degrees convertible screen. The tablet experience is otherwise decent and the strong build and fanless hardware help enhance it. The big bezel around the screen doesn’t though and make the Spin 1 look dated for this day and age, when most tablets and even most 2-in-1s offer much nicer screen-to-body ratios. At least the panel is good though and there’s support for Acer’s active pen that we previously tested on the Spin 5.
The laptop experience on the other hand is pretty nice, with a decent keyboard, a big enough palm-rest and a screen that can lean back as much as needed. Just don’t forget this is an 11-incher and thus not as roomy as the larger laptops out there.
Acer didn’t skim much on the IO either. There are two full-size USB slots on the sides and a full-size HDMI port, but only a microSD card-reader, yet overall the ports selection is superior to what most other 11-inchers offer.
Bottom point, the Spin 1 is well made, but not that comfortable to use due to its multiple sharp edges and stiff hinges. I would have also appreciated if Acer put a bigger screen on this one, there’s plenty of room for a 12.5-inch panel with smaller bezels.
The keyboard on the Spin 1 is a little shrunken from what’s available on the bigger Acer laptops, with 14 x 14 mm keys, but otherwise gets the same layout. The keys are well spaced, just a tad smaller, and those of you with large hands might struggle with this keyboard.
The Spin 1 gets an 11.6-inch touchscreen with an IPS panel, a fairly good IPS panel actually, with nice colors and good contrast, as you can see below.
The brightness levels might not allow you to properly use this laptop outdoors, especially paired with the glare of the glass layer on top of the screen, but for indoor use this is a very nice panel. I noticed some slight light bleeding around the edges on my unit, but as I’ve mentioned in many other reviews, this is unfortunately a lottery with most notebooks today.
The screen is touch-enabled, includes a digitizer and supports Acer’s Active Stylus that should come included in the pack with retail units. It wasn’t included with our sample, but you’ll find my impressions of this pen over here.
As I mentioned in the beginning, our version of the Spin 1 comes with an Intel Apollo Lake Pentium N4200 processor, 4 GB of DDR3 RAM and 128 GB of eMMC storage.
The CPU is a quad-core without HyperThreading, but that doesn’t mean much as it’s a 6W processor with low clock speeds (1.1 GHz base frequency, with Turbo up to 2.5 GHz) and there’s only that much it can do in multitasking. It’s also paired with just 4 GB of RAM, which further limits multitasking, especially knowing what memory hogs browsers are these days.
As for the storage, the included eMMC is not as fast as an SSD, but not as slow as the older eMMCs we’ve seen in the past either, so overall it’s not this build’s bottleneck and won’t have as much of an impact on performance as the CPU and RAM. Just keep in mind that Acer also offers this laptop with 32 or 64 GB of storage space and Windows takes a fair chunk of it, so personally I would at least buy a configuration with 64 GB of storage, if not this one with 128 GB of space.
As far as performance goes, as already hinted earlier, this laptop can handle everyday activities well enough (movies, streaming, music, editing texts, browsing, etc), but you’ll want to keep multitasking at bay. Chrome with a couple of tabs running in the background is enough to send the CPU at 100% loads and at that time you’ll start noticing sluggishness. Of course, you should keep in mind that I’m used to the fast response and performance of the modern ultraportables and my expectations are set high. If you’re coming from an older laptop and especially one without an SSD, this might not feel that slow to you. Still, don’t get false expectations, this Spin 1 is nonetheless a low-power computer and it performs accordingly.
As a side note, this notebook might feel very sluggish out of the box while it performs its mandatory Windows updates. I’d recommend letting it do its thing for an hour or two and then it should work fine. If you hit CTRL+ALT+DEL and find that the CPU is still at 100% load, you’ll know it’s not yet done with the updates. Unfortunately that’s going to be an issue every time it needs to update though, which is fairly often with Windows 10.
There’s no fan inside inside this computer, no moving parts, and I haven’t notice any coil whining or electrical noise on my sample either, so as a result the Spin 1 is perfectly quiet.
For connectivity Acer went with an Intel dual-band AC7265 that provides wireless AC and Bluetooth. It’s a good mid-level chip and as a result the Spin performed well both near the router and at medium ranges with some obstacles in between.
For audio Acer went with a set of stereo speakers firing though small pinhole cuts on the edges. They’re fairly loud, peaking at around 80 dB at head level in our tests, and they don’t distort or vibrate at high volumes either. The sound coming out of these speakers is tinny though, as they clearly lack bass and lows are only noticeable down to about 130 Hz.
There’s a 36 Wh battery inside this computer, which is fair-sized for an 11-incher and a good match for the hardware inside, even if the IPS panel is a little more hungry than the poorer screens that are usually bundled in this size segment and even if Acer actually had the space inside the frame for a larger one.
The Spin 1 is bundled with a compact and light 45 W power brick and a full-charge takes around 2 hours, as there’s no Quick Charging technology implemented.
The Acer Spin 1 SP111-32N is only available in Europe at the time of this update, with a starting price of 499 EUR for the Petium N4200 / 4 GB RAM / 64 GB storage configuration and about 100 EUR on top for the model with 128 GB of storage space. It’s not yet available in the US, but I’d expect it to start at around $450 – $500, and we’ll update this section once we know more.
Overall, the Spin 1 is more expensive than other 2-in-1 laptops with the same kind of hardware like the first generation Acer Spin 1 or the Lenovo ThinkPad N24, but that’s not a surprise, given its nicer screen and the premium build.
First of all, you’ll have to understand that this is a niche computer and should only be on your list if you’re after a premium crafted mini-laptop with a convertible form-factor and a nice IPS touchscreen, which of course come with a premium. Once you accept these, the Spin 1 is not going to feel overpriced, but you’ll still have to decide if you can live with its quirks, like the uncomfortably sharp bits and edges, the ugly large bezels around the screen, the rattly non-backlit keyboard and the limited performance of the Apollo Lake platform.
If the answer is yes, and if you don’t mind paying extra for the build and screen, like I mentioned earlier, the Acer Spin 1 could be the right pick for you. I’d also have a look at some of the exiting 12-inch Windows tablets though, as well as the slightly more expensive Lenovo Yoga 710, which is also an 11-incher, but built on a faster Intel Core Y hardware platform, with more RAM and SSD storage. Or you can go through this selection of mini notebooks for an updated set of other options. Lastly, if you’re a bit flexible when it comes to the size and weight, you’ll find better balanced products in the 13-inch class of thin-and-lights.
Anyway, that wraps up our review of the Acer Spin 1 SP111-32N, but the comments section is open for your feedback and questions, and we’re around to help out if we can.
Ms.Josey
Ms.Josey