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frontpageDr.W posted Yesterday 06:58 PM
frontpageDr.W posted Yesterday 06:58 PM

Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 Laptop: i7-14700HX, 16" 2400p, RTX 3500 Ada, 64GB DDR5

+ Free Shipping

$1,759

$4,059

56% off
Lenovo
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Deal Details
Lenovo has Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 Mobile Workstation Laptop (Storm Grey, 21FA0052US) on sale for $1759. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member Dr.W for sharing this deal.

Specs:
  • Intel Core i7-14700HX (20-core / 28-thread; P-cores up to 5.50 GHz, E-cores up to 3.90 GHz, 33MB cache) Processor
  • 16" 3840x2400 IPS Anti-glare, HDR400, 100% DCI-P3, 800 nits, 60Hz Display
  • 64GB DDR5-5600 (2x32GB SODIMM) RAM Memory
  • 1TB M.2 2280 PCIe Gen4 Performance TLC Opal SSD Storage
  • NVIDIA RTX 3500 Ada Generation 12GB GDDR6 Graphics
  • Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX211 2x2 + Bluetooth 5.3 + NFC Wireless
  • 1080p FHD IR Hybrid camera with privacy shutter, dual far-field microphones Webcam
  • Backlit keyboard w/ numeric keypad; fingerprint reader integrated
  • Ports:
    • 2x USB-C Thunderbolt 4 (40Gbps, DisplayPort 2.1)
    • 1x USB-C 10Gbps
    • 2x USB-A 5Gbps (1 always on)
    • 1x HDMI 2.1 (up to 8K@60Hz / 4K@240Hz)
    • 1x Headphone/microphone combo jack
    • 1x Power-in
  • Windows 11 Pro operating system
  • 94Whr battery w/ 230W AC power adapter
  • 14.33" x 10.47" x 1.19" (6.5 lbs)
Warranty: 1-year courier or carry-in

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff

Original Post

Written by Dr.W
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Lenovo has Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 Mobile Workstation Laptop (Storm Grey, 21FA0052US) on sale for $1759. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member Dr.W for sharing this deal.

Specs:
  • Intel Core i7-14700HX (20-core / 28-thread; P-cores up to 5.50 GHz, E-cores up to 3.90 GHz, 33MB cache) Processor
  • 16" 3840x2400 IPS Anti-glare, HDR400, 100% DCI-P3, 800 nits, 60Hz Display
  • 64GB DDR5-5600 (2x32GB SODIMM) RAM Memory
  • 1TB M.2 2280 PCIe Gen4 Performance TLC Opal SSD Storage
  • NVIDIA RTX 3500 Ada Generation 12GB GDDR6 Graphics
  • Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX211 2x2 + Bluetooth 5.3 + NFC Wireless
  • 1080p FHD IR Hybrid camera with privacy shutter, dual far-field microphones Webcam
  • Backlit keyboard w/ numeric keypad; fingerprint reader integrated
  • Ports:
    • 2x USB-C Thunderbolt 4 (40Gbps, DisplayPort 2.1)
    • 1x USB-C 10Gbps
    • 2x USB-A 5Gbps (1 always on)
    • 1x HDMI 2.1 (up to 8K@60Hz / 4K@240Hz)
    • 1x Headphone/microphone combo jack
    • 1x Power-in
  • Windows 11 Pro operating system
  • 94Whr battery w/ 230W AC power adapter
  • 14.33" x 10.47" x 1.19" (6.5 lbs)
Warranty: 1-year courier or carry-in

Editor's Notes

Written by jimmytx | Staff

Original Post

Written by Dr.W

Community Voting

Deal Score
+25
Good Deal
Get Deal at Lenovo

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Top Comments

starcaptor
3668 Posts
1370 Reputation
So I have used two lenovo P series laptops, and am typing on one right now. The first was the P51 that lasted me five years, and the second is this P15 Gen1. I didnt upgrade to the P16 because it lost ethernet, and I also now integrate a mini pc with more muscle into my workflow. But if that doesnt faze you, this is an excellent machine.

Pros:
four RAM slots...and 64gb is already in the $700+ range on its own, making the laptop $1000, and it really is $1000 worth of kit. I have all four of mine populated (two under keyboard, two under bottom cover).
The 3500 Ada is somewhere between a 4070 and a 5070 (laptop versions). Quadro class cards have ECC memory and do not particularly enjoy (read: cannot) be overclocked. But they are dead stable. Afterburner wont do much with it unless theres some beta version out which can tinker with the pro class cards.
The LCD is actually higher than 4k and covers full gamut. It is accurate (again, pros care about this stuff).
The absolute best support in the PC business. Parts are overnighted to you without much fuss, or you will get a technician to call you within a few hours to schedule a repair. They pick up calls 24/7/365 domestically (usually from NC or VA). You need to upgrade to on-site to get these perks. There is usually a coupon floating around on their banner ads to get a discount. worth the $200 or so to do so, as thinkpad parts are obscenly expensive to buy on your own.
LIkely the usual stainproof and drop resistant and spill resistant build that comes with thinkpads. Your foot will likely break before this does if you break it.

Cons:
Heavy - but what do you expect? This is similar to a gaming laptop.
No ethernet jack - this is a major deal for workstations.
60 Hz screen - Usually this is the default option unless you go down to 2k (basically the same screen from the Legion 5 Pro)..and no OLED at 165 hz.
Despite the MXM board letting you swap graphics...you will likely have to get boards specifically for this model from Lenovo because the BIOS are not compatible between manufacturers. I was looking to use an RTX 5000 board from a Dell Precision in my P15...no go. And the only 5000 boards for P15 are like $600...not worth it for four year old tech.

You can theoretically get faster graphics for this money if you get a dedicated gaming laptop, but definitely not with this amount of memory. Gaming is secondary on these creator-focused machines. You can even confirm this by how it only ships with a 170w brick. Most gaming laptops have 230+ watt bricks.

My P15 is pushing five years old, and definitely shows its age (the warranty ended last summer), but it absolutely feels like an extension of my workflow more than any prior laptop. The keys are the same "smiley" keys that they have had for over a decade now. I have a first gen OLED with my laptop (every laptop in 2021 with an OLED used the same 16:9 panel sold by Samsung). Not a trace of burn in, but it is very power hungry. I have a 10th gen Xeon which always turns the fans up, so you will need TPFanControl or a similar utility to turn down the noise.

I recommend adding 3 year onsite ($167) and the battery replacement ($40). You can always add accidental later...yes, you read that right. You can add it when you actually need it!

Basically, this is a slightly less hardcore desktop replacement, with repairability, durability, support, and ergonomics increased, but with raw performance decreased.

I should mention that I dont use any ISV software, but if you do any CAD, GIS, or financial calculations, then the benefits speak for themselves.

11 Comments

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Today 01:21 AM
107 Posts
Joined Sep 2015
-badbadbad-Today 01:21 AM
107 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank -badbadbad-

This is a highly upgradable mobile workstation. It can support four DDR5 RAM sticks (128Gb+ RAM), has a removable GPU daughter board, which you can replace for an RTX 5000 ADA if you need 16Gb VRAM. And two PCIe 4.0 NVMe slots.

Useful for offline AI generation.
3
Today 02:43 AM
140 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
PurpleSeed694Today 02:43 AM
140 Posts
I know a lot of consultants & contractors who need a powerful mobile workstation that they can bring to a customer site and work all day with a big screen, etc. this would be perfect for them, because they just need it portable enough to transport.
2
Today 03:40 AM
2,267 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
RedflyerToday 03:40 AM
2,267 Posts
Do not buy this unless you need a tank its weighs like one.
2
Today 04:51 AM
637 Posts
Joined Mar 2009
StrategyFreakToday 04:51 AM
637 Posts
Great deal. Once the Arrow Lake HX systems get to this price point, they will be incredible mobile workstations with their improved efficiency and performance.
Today 05:26 AM
3,668 Posts
Joined Sep 2003
starcaptorToday 05:26 AM
3,668 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank starcaptor

So I have used two lenovo P series laptops, and am typing on one right now. The first was the P51 that lasted me five years, and the second is this P15 Gen1. I didnt upgrade to the P16 because it lost ethernet, and I also now integrate a mini pc with more muscle into my workflow. But if that doesnt faze you, this is an excellent machine.

Pros:
four RAM slots...and 64gb is already in the $700+ range on its own, making the laptop $1000, and it really is $1000 worth of kit. I have all four of mine populated (two under keyboard, two under bottom cover).
The 3500 Ada is somewhere between a 4070 and a 5070 (laptop versions). Quadro class cards have ECC memory and do not particularly enjoy (read: cannot) be overclocked. But they are dead stable. Afterburner wont do much with it unless theres some beta version out which can tinker with the pro class cards.
The LCD is actually higher than 4k and covers full gamut. It is accurate (again, pros care about this stuff).
The absolute best support in the PC business. Parts are overnighted to you without much fuss, or you will get a technician to call you within a few hours to schedule a repair. They pick up calls 24/7/365 domestically (usually from NC or VA). You need to upgrade to on-site to get these perks. There is usually a coupon floating around on their banner ads to get a discount. worth the $200 or so to do so, as thinkpad parts are obscenly expensive to buy on your own.
LIkely the usual stainproof and drop resistant and spill resistant build that comes with thinkpads. Your foot will likely break before this does if you break it.

Cons:
Heavy - but what do you expect? This is similar to a gaming laptop.
No ethernet jack - this is a major deal for workstations.
60 Hz screen - Usually this is the default option unless you go down to 2k (basically the same screen from the Legion 5 Pro)..and no OLED at 165 hz.
Despite the MXM board letting you swap graphics...you will likely have to get boards specifically for this model from Lenovo because the BIOS are not compatible between manufacturers. I was looking to use an RTX 5000 board from a Dell Precision in my P15...no go. And the only 5000 boards for P15 are like $600...not worth it for four year old tech.

You can theoretically get faster graphics for this money if you get a dedicated gaming laptop, but definitely not with this amount of memory. Gaming is secondary on these creator-focused machines. You can even confirm this by how it only ships with a 170w brick. Most gaming laptops have 230+ watt bricks.

My P15 is pushing five years old, and definitely shows its age (the warranty ended last summer), but it absolutely feels like an extension of my workflow more than any prior laptop. The keys are the same "smiley" keys that they have had for over a decade now. I have a first gen OLED with my laptop (every laptop in 2021 with an OLED used the same 16:9 panel sold by Samsung). Not a trace of burn in, but it is very power hungry. I have a 10th gen Xeon which always turns the fans up, so you will need TPFanControl or a similar utility to turn down the noise.

I recommend adding 3 year onsite ($167) and the battery replacement ($40). You can always add accidental later...yes, you read that right. You can add it when you actually need it!

Basically, this is a slightly less hardcore desktop replacement, with repairability, durability, support, and ergonomics increased, but with raw performance decreased.

I should mention that I dont use any ISV software, but if you do any CAD, GIS, or financial calculations, then the benefits speak for themselves.
6
Pro
Today 05:59 AM
916 Posts
Joined May 2012
lacosa2006
Pro
Today 05:59 AM
916 Posts
Gpu outdated for $1700+??
1
Pro
Today 06:18 AM
1,124 Posts
Joined Jun 2013
abstractedpudding
Pro
Today 06:18 AM
1,124 Posts
Quote from lacosa2006 :
Gpu outdated for $1700+??
It's only one generation back. It's not that outdated, especially in the mobile workstation space. When you compare that to a P16 Gen with a comparable configuration, you're looking at around $4K to get something with a 12 gig Blackwell card.

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Today 06:31 AM
414 Posts
Joined Mar 2011
PBougeToday 06:31 AM
414 Posts
Solid work laptop, I do BIM tevit modeling and this is a perfect on the go laptop for doing it.
Today 08:38 AM
307 Posts
Joined Apr 2012
-Uncharted-Today 08:38 AM
307 Posts
Quote from Redflyer :
Do not buy this unless you need a tank its weighs like one.
It's a workstation. Of course it's going to be heavy
Today 10:33 AM
275 Posts
Joined Apr 2013
snydertalonToday 10:33 AM
275 Posts
Quote from abstractedpudding :
It's only one generation back. It's not that outdated, especially in the mobile workstation space. When you compare that to a P16 Gen with a comparable configuration, you're looking at around $4K to get something with a 12 gig Blackwell card.
You must be new to slickdeals. This is the site where people want tomorrow's tech for last year's prices and often have no idea why. The other dude probably needs the highest end GPU so that notepad displays those Sarif fonts super crispy!! Suprised he didnt complain about not having USB 6 yet.
1
Today 11:37 AM
1,378 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
paulk11087Today 11:37 AM
1,378 Posts
Quote from Redflyer :
Do not buy this unless you need a tank its weighs like one.
Kind of the point of these workstations, to be a tank in all ways.

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