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Lenovo ThinkPad 13 Specifications with review

Lenovo’s ThinkPad laptops usually make for excellent workhorses for students or even professionals who prioritise productivity. The hallmark feature for us has always been the ergonomic ThinkPad keyboards which are hard to beat.

Lenovo ThinkPad 13 design and build quality
The 13.3-inch screen makes the ThinkPad 13 fairly compact and easy to carry around. It’s pretty lightweight too at roughly 1.4kg and has good weight distribution. The body is built from plastic but it doesn’t feel cheap. The matte finish on the lid provides a rubber-like feel, which helps keep pesky fingerprints at bay. There’s a ThinkPad logo on the lid and on the palm rest area, with an illuminated dot on the letter ‘i’. The lid provides decent protection for the display as there’s little flex, and it doesn’t warp easily when pressed from the back.
The one thing that ThinkPads usually get right is the keyboard, and the ThinkPad 13 is no exception. Despite its compact size, Lenovo has managed to fit in well-spaced keys which are the size of what you’d find on a standard desktop keyboard. Unfortunately, there’s no backlighting. You have the trademark TrackPoint input controller nestled between the G H and B keys, and the corresponding mouse and scroll buttons below the spacebar. The trackpad isn’t very wide but does a good job, and left- and right-clicks are recognised well. You also get a fingerprint sensor that’s placed next to the trackpad.
Lenovo ThinkPad 13 Specifications
- 13.3-inch display
- 1,920×1,080- or 1,366×768-pixel resolution screen
- Intel Celeron 3865U, Intel Core i3-7100U, Intel Core i5-7200U or Intel Core i5-7300U CPU
- 4GB, 8GB or 16GB DDR4 RAM
- 128GB or 256GB SSD
- Intel HD Graphics 610
- Optional fingerprint reader
Another useful feature is the laptop’s multitude of ports. Want to connect an external monitor, mouse and charge your phone? You can do all of that and more on the ThinkPad 13 without purchasing any separate dongles. It also has a Lenovo OneLink+ which works with the Lenovo OneLink+ dock..
Ports
- Three USB 3.0
- Full-size HDMI
- USB-C port
- Lenovo OneLink+
- 4-in-1 card reader (SD, SDHC, SDXC and MMC)
Lenovo rates the battery life at up to 11 hours. In our CNET Labs battery streaming video test, it ran short of that at 8.5 hours. That’s an improvement over last year’s model, but still short compared to the LG Gram and the HP EliteBook x360, which both last around 11.5 hours.
Lenovo ThinkPad 13 performance
We loaded up Windows 10 Pro and updated the drivers and software to get the ThinkPad 13 running. The SSD helps in shortening boot and application load times but the write speeds are a bit disappointing. In SiSoft Sandra’s file system benchmark, we got a sequential read bandwidth score of 459MB/s while the write bandwidth was a mere 143MB/s. Out of the 192GB of storage space, you actually get 172GB, and of this, around 15GB is taken up by the OS leaving you with about 150GB for programs and files. This is a decent amount of space for work or school needs, considering there’s always cloud storage. However, if you have a lot of media or large files then you’ll probably run out of space pretty soon. A 256GB SSD would have been preferable here.
Verdict
While you won’t be able to pick this specific model up right now, we’re told that refreshed ThinkPad 13s with Intel’s Kaby Lake CPUs are only a few weeks from hitting our shores. You can expect the price range to be from Rs. 62,000 to Rs. 75,000, depending on the configuration you select. The best part is that the refreshed units will have backlit keyboards, something we sorely missed here. There should be variants with touchscreens too, so it’s definitely worth waiting a little while.
ThinkPads have always commanded a premium compared to regular laptops, and for the most part, it’s worth it if your work involves a lot of typing or you need something durable that can withstand the jostles of a daily commute. However, the ThinkPad 13 that we reviewed today feels a bit underwhelming, especially because of its premium price. The body, while sturdy, could have used some metal reinforcements. A backlit keyboard, a higher resolution display and a larger SSD would have helped make things more balanced.