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Spec drill · Weight

Note Air 4 C vs Kindle Paperwhite (12th gen)

A side-by-side readout for weight.

Boox · Note Air 4 C
420g
Amazon · Kindle Paperwhite (12th gen)
211g
▲ Lead
VerdictKindle Paperwhite (12th gen) wins on weight.
Context

Understanding weight

Weight is a numeric spec measured in g. On this metric, lower values are generally better — smaller, lighter, thinner, or less demanding usually translates to a more comfortable or more efficient product. When comparing two products, focus on the percentage gap rather than the raw delta: a 200-unit lead means something very different at the low end of the range than at the high end. Pay attention to the unit, too — manufacturers sometimes quote peak or burst figures that are not sustained in real-world use. Cross-check the published number against independent measurements where possible, especially for performance and battery claims. Finally, remember that a single spec rarely tells the whole story; the Mars Score weighs weight together with the rest of the spec sheet so one outlier doesn't distort the verdict.

This matchupNote Air 4 C's 420g is roughly 99% more than Kindle Paperwhite (12th gen)'s 211g (a 209g gap). Lower is better here, so Kindle Paperwhite (12th gen) takes the lead in real use.

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Other specs on this comparison

See the full E-Readers category for all products ranked by Mars Score.