Origin PC NT-15 Quadro Mobile Workstation Review

Origin PC NT-15 Quadro mobile workstation is a 15.6-in. laptop that delivers good performance at a premium price.

Origin PC NT-15 Quadro mobile workstation is a 15.6-in. laptop that delivers good performance at a premium price.

The Origin PC NT-15 Quadro is a powerful 15.6-in. mobile workstation with a 3840x2160 display powered by an NVIDIA Quadro M4200 GPU. Image courtesy of David Cohn.


We have reviewed several workstations from Origin PC over the years, most recently its top-performing M-Class workstation (DE, August 2018). So, when the Miami-based system integrator sent us a laptop to review, we were intrigued.

Founded in 2009 by former employees of Alienware as a builder of high-performance gaming computers, Origin PC typically assembles its computers in the U.S. using imported parts. But you can’t build a laptop the way you can a tower—by choosing a case and a motherboard and then assembling components into a roomy tower case. A laptop, on the other hand, is highly optimized, packing an array of parts into a compact chassis.

For this first-ever review of an Origin PC laptop, the company sent us its NT-15 Quadro, a thin and lightweight 15.6-in. system that certainly qualifies as a professional mobile workstation. The system we received came housed in a fairly utilitarian-looking aluminum case measuring 14.96x10x0.73 in. and weighing 5.02 lbs. Its 150-watt power supply (5.0x2.5x0.87 in.) adds an additional 1.29 lbs.

With a starting price of $2,569, the base configuration is already well-appointed, with a 2.2GHz Intel Core i7-8750HQ 6-core CPU—the only CPU offered—an NVIDIA Quadro P3200 with 6GB of GDDR5 memory, a 3840x2160 display, 8GB of RAM and both a 250GB M.2 boot drive and a 2TB Seagate FireCuda flash-accelerated hard drive, all covered by a one-year warranty. Extending the warranty coverage to three years brings the base price to $2,838.

Mobile workstations compared. Numbers in blue indicate best recorded results. Numbers in red indicate worst recorded results. Click here for full-size chart.

You should note that the base system typically includes a 250GB Seagate BarraCuda solid-state drive (SSD). The 2TB data drive and a $57 price reduction were part of a promotion available at the time of our review.

Options Outside and Inside

As we have seen when reviewing Origin PC’s tower workstations, there are lots of customization options, starting with the exterior. The charcoal gray surface color on the NT-15 we received is standard, but you can add laser etching for $50, a metallic paint finish for $175 or an artistic theme for $249.

Although the only display option is the UHD 3840x2160 in-plane switching (IPS) display, the screen in our evaluation unit had been professionally calibrated to ensure the most accurate color spectrum available, which added $29. Our NT-15 also came with the more powerful NVIDIA Quadro P4200 graphics processing unit (GPU), with 8GB of GDDR5 memory plus Max-Q design, adding $679.

This laptop GPU provides 2304 compute unified device architecture (CUDA) cores, a 256-bit interface and a bandwidth of 224GB/s while drawing a maximum of 115 watts. Max-Q is a new approach that enables original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and system builders to design laptops that are thin and power-efficient, while still delivering high-end graphic performance. The P4200 is also virtual reality ready.

Although the Origin PC NT-15 Quadro base system fills its two memory sockets with a pair of 4GB DDR4 2400MHz memory modules, the system we received was maxed out with 32GB of RAM, installed as a pair of 16GB Kingston HyperX Impact 2666MHz small outline dual in-line memory modules, which added $213.

The base model also includes a Samsung 970 EVO Plus PCIe NVMe M.2 data drive as well as a 250GB SSD. But Origin PC offers options, including PCIe drives of up to 1TB, SATA drives up to 2TB and SSDs of up to 4TB capacities.

Our evaluation unit included a 1TB Samsung 970 EVO Plus PCIe NVMe M.2 boot drive, a $179 option and the 2TB Seagate FireCuda Flash Accelerated drive, which normally adds $134, but was free, thanks to the aforementioned upgrade promotion.

Great Display and Lots of Ports

Lifting the lid reveals the 15.6-in. UHD display and an excellent backlit keyboard with 102 keys, including a separate numeric keypad. A rectangular power button is located in the upper-right corner, above the keyboard, with an LED light that glows white when the system is on. A 1920x1080 webcam, centered above the display, includes an adjacent LED that illuminates when the camera is active.

Price/Performance chart based on SPECwpc Product Development benchmark dataset. Click here for full-size version.

Instead of LEDs on the keyboard, however, messages briefly appear on screen when you use the Caps Lock, Number Lock or Scroll Lock keys. A 4.25x2.5-in. touchpad with multi-touch capabilities and two dedicated buttons is centered below the spacebar, with a fingerprint reader located in its upper-left corner.

The right side of the case provides microphone and headphone audio jacks, a USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-A port, a multi-card reader and a standard RJ-45 jack for the built-in gigabit LAN. The left side of the case includes two additional USB 3.1 Gen 1 Type-A ports—including one that can be powered when the system is off but still connected to the AC adapter or when the battery charge is above 20%—a pair of USB 3.1 Gen 2 Type-C ports, two mini-Display Ports, an HDMI port, the connection for the AC adapter, an air vent and a security lock slot. The front edge of the case provides power, battery, hard drive and airplane mode status LEDs.

The NT-15 includes a Control Center app that lets you monitor the CPU, GPU and memory; adjust fan speed settings; select a performance profile; toggle selected components on and off; adjust the keyboard backlighting and assign keyboard shortcuts.

Like other laptops we have recently received, the battery in the Origin PC NT-15 is not removable and the manual does not address any user-serviceable components. During our tests, the system remained cool and relatively quiet, although the fan noise reached 56dB during some of our tests. The four-cell 55Whr battery kept the system running for just over 4 hours on our battery run-down test.

Workstation-Class Performance

The Origin PC NT-15 performed well on all our benchmark tests. Thanks to its optimized GPU, its results on the SPECviewperf graphics performance benchmark placed it ahead of most of the other 15.6-in. mobile workstations we have tested.

On the SPECapc SolidWorks benchmark, the NT-15 also did very well, although here its slower CPU placed it behind many of the other comparable 15.6-in. systems. On the very demanding SPECwpc workstation performance benchmark, the Origin PC system also lagged behind similar systems, again due to its more modest six-core processor. Similarly, on our AutoCAD rendering test, the 68.4-second average rendering time was the slowest we’ve recorded in quite some time.

Origin PC preloads Windows 10 Professional 64-bit and typically backs the system with a one-year part replacement warranty with 24/7 lifetime support and free labor. Longer warranties are available, and our as-tested price includes a three-year warranty.

Origin PC is unique in that it has an option to ship systems in a wooden crate. Our evaluation unit did indeed arrive in such a crate, which would have added $41 to the system cost, and increased the shipping weight by more than 11 lbs.—something that seems unwarranted for such an otherwise lightweight mobile workstation. We did not include the cost of the crate in our as-tested price.

Once we tallied everything, our system priced out at $3,938, making the Origin PC NT-15 Quadro one of the more expensive 15.6-in. mobile workstations we have reviewed. Although it delivers good performance and a great display, its price and less-than-stellar battery life tempered our opinion.

The MSI WS65 we recently reviewed delivered better performance, longer battery life and less weight for a bit less money. The Origin PC NT-15 Quadro is a powerful, lightweight mobile workstation, but there are other systems out there that deliver more bang for the buck.

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About the Author

David Cohn's avatar
David Cohn

David Cohn is a consultant and technical writer based in Bellingham, WA, and has been benchmarking PCs since 1984. He is a Contributing Editor to Digital Engineering, the former senior content manager at 4D Technologies, and the author of more than a dozen books. Email at [email protected] or visit his website at www.dscohn.com.

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