Lenovo ThinkPad Broadwell Updates for T550, T450s, E550, E450, and L450
by Jarred Walton on January 4, 2015 11:10 PM ESTWrapping up the ThinkPad updates for now, Lenovo also announced the T550, T450s, E550, E450, and L450 today. As with the X1 Carbon and X250, these replace the previous generation Haswell products and upgrade them to Broadwell processors. Let’s quickly go through the various laptops.
The T550 is a 15.6” Ultrabook with an optional 3K (2880x1620) touchscreen display. Similar to the X250, it supports Lenovo’s Power Bridge Technology that features a smaller integrated battery with a user swappable external battery. Combined with the 6-cell 72Wh battery, the T550 is rated at up to 17 hours of battery life. It weighs 2.26kg (4.98 lbs) and measures 380mm x 252mm x 22.4mm (14.96” x 9.92” x 0.88”). It supports up to Core i7 Broadwell-U processors, with up to 16GB RAM and a 512GB SSD.
The T450s is a slightly smaller 14.0” version of the T550 Ultrabook, with up to a 1080p display. Power Bridge Technology is again present, allowing for up to 17 hours of mobility. The T450s measures 331mm x 226mm x 21mm (13.03” x 8.90” x 0.83”) and weighs 1.58kg (3.48 lbs). It comes with 4GB RAM soldered onto the motherboard with one SO-DIMM slot allowing up to 12GB RAM total. Up to a 512GB SSD and a Core i7 Broadwell-U processor are supported.
The E550/E450 are one step down the ThinkPad hierarchy, and as such they lose support for Power Bridge. They are also not Ultrabooks, but they do have optional discrete GPUs – R7 M260 2GB for the E450 and R7 M265 2GB for the E550. Both support up to the Core i7-5500U, with two SO-DIMM slots allowing up to 16GB RAM. Storage from the factory consists of pure HDD solutions, unfortunately. The E550 is available with either a 15.6” 1366x768 or 1080p LCD, while the E450 comes with a 14” 1366x768 or 1080p LCD.
Both are rated at up to nine hours of battery life, with the E450 featuring an integrated (non-swappable) battery while the E550 has a user swappable battery. The E550 weighs 2.35kg (5.2 lbs) and measures 377mm x 256mm x 27mm (14.82” x 10.08” x 1.06”) while the E450 weighs 1.81kg (4.0 lbs) and measures 339mm x 239mm x 24mm (13.35” x 9.41” x 0.94”). But have 720p webcams, but the E550 has an optional 3D camera.
Finally, the L450 is the entry-level 14” ThinkPad, but it’s more of a step sideways from the E-series. It comes with up to Core i7 processor support, 16GB RAM, 1TB HDD or 360GB SSD, and up to a 1080p IPS display. It comes with R5 M240 graphics and Intel’s HD 5500, along with a 720p webcam. It’s a bit heavier than the E450, weighing 1.93kg (4.25 lbs), but dimensions are similar at 339mm x 235mm x 24.3mm (13.3” x 9.3” x 0.9”).
Pricing and availability for all of these ThinkPad models have not been announced, but we’d expect most of these to ship Q1 at the latest.
30 Comments
View All Comments
Hulk - Sunday, January 4, 2015 - link
I have a 2006 Dell laptop I've been waiting to upgrade for for 9 years now. Finally it looks like I have found a winner with the T450s. Hopefully the 1080p display is IPS and reviews well.JarredWalton - Sunday, January 4, 2015 - link
There's no mention made of it being IPS, which considering all of the other ThinkPad spec sheets call out IPS displays makes me think it's a TN panel. I could be wrong, but don't get your hopes up. :(Hulk - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Thanks for the additional info. Hopefully they will have a IPS spec option on the T450s since this would really upset the T440s owners. It would be a huge step backwards and I'd have to continue my nearly 9 year laptop search!kspirit - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
AFAIK, there are no 1080p TN displays on laptops. 900p, sure, but every notebook with 1080p is IPS.nwarawa - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
"every notebook with 1080p is IPS"This is patently FALSE. I have seen with my own eyeballs numerous TN 1080P screens on laptops. To point, I have actually called Lenovo on this very issue for 2014's model, that didn't mention IPS, and they said, and I can almost quote verbatim, "If it doesn't say IPS, it isn't IPS".
Samus - Sunday, January 4, 2015 - link
You have a 2006-era Dell laptop that still works? Wow.dsraa - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
I do too! Its a Dell D620 with 4GB of RAM, and a SSD. It runs amazing, and works very well. Although.....my battery just gave me the middle finger, and is starting the "I can't hold a charge" BS. So maybe its time to swap it out. lolJohnmcl7 - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
I don't see what's surprising about that - I find dell laptops easy to keep going as dell provide the service manuals for free, the interior layouts are usually logical and spare parts are easy to get a hold of for a reasonable cost.Hulk - Monday, January 5, 2015 - link
Yup, 620m. Still going. I replaced the hard drive with an SSD two years ago and the battery around that time as well. While it works fine I'm ready for something faster with better battery life a better screen and lighter!gobaers - Sunday, January 4, 2015 - link
Well, at least the trackpoint buttons are back. Wish they would just give in and bring back the old keyboards.