Display

Lenovo offers two displays in the Y700, but luckily both are IPS panels. Several low cost gaming laptops are still shipping with TN panels as the base offering, and that’s very unfortunate in 2016, so it’s great to see Lenovo offering IPS on all of the models. The display panel in the Y700 review unit is an LGD04A7, which is the 1920x1080 offering. This is a 6-bit panel, so it's still a lower-end IPS offering, and utilizes a full RGB stripe.

Since this laptop has Optimus, there is no option of G-SYNC on this panel, since G-SYNC is only possible if Optimus is not available. This is something I hope NVIDIA can solve, because the laptops that are more often going to benefit from G-SYNC are the same laptops with the less powerful GPUs like this model. Due to the way that Optimus works though, it may be very difficult to get this to function.

To test display accuracy, we use SpectraCal’s CalMAN 5 suite with a custom workflow. Contrast and brightness levels are measured with an X-Rite i1Display Pro colorimeter, and color accuracy is measured with an X-Rite i1Pro2 spectrophotometer. As a refresher, color accuracy is measured as a Delta-E, which is the “distance” between the correct color and the color portrayed on the display. Values under 1.0 are considered imperceptible, with values under 3.0 as what we would consider acceptable.

Brightness and Contrast

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The Lenovo Y700 has a display that is not very bright. 260 nits is enough for indoor use, but if you were to use it outdoors it would be a struggle. It also has only an average contrast ratio for an IPS panel. There have been some nice advances in LCD contrast in the last little bit, but they seem to be relegated to higher end devices like the Surface Book for the time being.

Grayscale

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Display - White Point

Here we start to see some issues with the Y700 display. At a targeted 200 nits, the Y700’s display has a pretty large drop off in both red and blue levels, causing the white levels to shift into the green spectrum. Amazingly the white shows as close to the target temperature of 6504K despite the color issues, highlighting the issues of using a single number to try to portray something with color.

Gamut

Display - Gamut Accuracy

Normally I don’t bother with Gamut graphs, but on the Y700 its worth taking a look at. On this test we can see the glaringly obvious issue of the backlight used in the Y700. This is a narrow-band LED backlight, and it can’t produce anywhere near the entire sRGB gamut. The blue levels are well under what is necessary to cover the entire range, and red and green are also well under. This doesn’t bode well for the rest of the tests.

Saturation

Display - Saturation Accuracy

With the saturation sweep you can more easily see the compressed nature of the narrow-band backlight. All of the colors are well under what they should be for any given point in the color space, with 100% blue topping out on the green side of about 75% of the range. This hurts magenta quite a bit, as does the red which tops out around 78% or so.

Gretag Macbeth

Display - GMB Accuracy

Our most comprehensive color test is the Gretag Macbeth test, which targets many more colors, including a lot of flesh tones. Although the overall average is about a dE of 6, there are large gaps in the results where its not even close.

Color Checker

To put the above numbers into a context that’s easier to understand at a glance, we use the Color Checker tests. The bottom of the color swatch is the correct color, and the top half shows what the display produced. Just as a reminder, the color checker results are a relative comparison, because any inaccuracies in your own display will skew the results.

On the grayscale swatches, you can clearly see the green coming out of the whites from quite early on. The color swatches make it very obvious in the shortcomings especially for blue. 100% blue on this display is far too light, and it’s very easy to see by eye.

Calibrated Results

We can use CalMAN to run a calibration of the display, but bear in mind that calibration on a display without an adjustable 3D Look Up Table (LUT) is not going to be able to do anything with the actual colors. Grayscale can be fixed, and sometimes this can pull some of the colors back a bit too, but sometimes it also hurts the color accuracy.

 

Once calibrated, the grayscale is much better behaved, but 100% white is not fixable because the display runs out of gamut. But as expected, the saturation and gamut results are basically unchanged. GMB does come down a bit due to the more accurate gray levels.

Overall this is a pretty disappointing display. It’s great that it is an IPS panel, so you don’t suffer from the terrible viewing angles of TN, but the backlight in the Y700 just can’t cut it. I wasn’t surprised that the display wasn’t calibrated at the factory when they are targeting this price point, but it would be great if it could come a bit closer to hitting more of the already small sRGB color space.

GPU Performance Battery Life and Charge Time
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  • JusSn - Friday, February 12, 2016 - link

    Really impressed with this laptop, got the 1 TB/8GB RAM model and put in an m.2 mSATA for less than $980 total. Other than the screen (which is indeed horrible and has terrible PWM flickering at lower brightness), the only thing that bothers me is that the trackpad is slightly uneven. Does the review unit also have this problem? Can't really tell from the photos.

    On my unit the upper-left corner is millimetrically higher than the surrounding wrist rest area. It's nitpicking but I'm wondering if I should get it exchanged once I get back to living with my desktop.
  • Timings - Tuesday, February 16, 2016 - link

    I was also disappointed the day I got this Y700 with just 1TB 5400 rpm drive. It was damn slow when booting as if it has Intel Celeron inside. I replaced the HDD with a Kingston hyper x SSD and then I liked it. Out of the box, the display is really horrible as you have said it. I peeled off the plastic on the screen the same day, still it did not impress me much. But here is a solution which you can do since you have already spent your money for it: calibrate it. 1. Go to Control panel then Intel HD graphics, then Display. Select colour settings then select Basic. Reduce brightness from 0 to -20. Leave gamma and contrast as default. Click Apply. Then select Advance. Increase hue from 0 to 16, increase saturation from 0 to 57. Click Apply and close Intel HD graphics. 2. While still on control panel window, select Display then select Calibrate colour. Click next next next until you reach Adjust colour balance. Move the Red and Green sliders from 100% to somewhere around 85% by eye. Leave the Blue slider at 100% (default) and click Next then Finish. If you thought of selling that laptop, you will now think twice after doing these settings.
  • Michael Bay - Saturday, February 13, 2016 - link

    Whatever OEM first makes a gaming laptop that doesn`t look any different from your run-of-the-mill machine will get incredible money.
    Those things aren`t just ugly, they scream loser.
  • GeorgeH - Saturday, February 13, 2016 - link

    "It does include a number pad, but it is compressed into the rest of the keyboard when there is plenty of space on the laptop deck to stretch it out a bit."

    I very much doubt that. If they did stretch it out there'd be no room for the ports on the side unless they made the laptop thicker.
  • ET - Sunday, February 14, 2016 - link

    I have a Y70-70, and I'm quite disappointed with it. Biggest problem is the laptop shutting down during gaming, probably due to overheating. The touch screen also acts occasionally, making the laptop non-responsive until I put it to sleep and out (with the power button). Keyboard isn't that great. In short, I'm weary of Lenovo's offerings right now.
  • medi03 - Sunday, February 14, 2016 - link

    Meh for no Carrize 380M... =(
  • horrorwood - Tuesday, February 16, 2016 - link

    It literally looks the same as the y50-70?

    Considering the GPU is the same and it comes with haswell instead of skylake (not much difference), I think the clearance prices on the y50-70 are a steal.
  • evolucion8 - Thursday, February 18, 2016 - link

    Seeing how close the GTX 960M with its 640 cores can get when compared with the GTX 870M with its 1344 cores shows how nVidia stopped optimizing for Kepler and considering that Maxwell is essentially a distilled Kepler, it will face the same fate once Pascal is launched, the fast aging syndrome.
  • deeps6x - Friday, February 19, 2016 - link

    Why is it so much heavier than the MSI GS60 with the same specs? 2.7kg vs 2.0kg. Or if you prefer, 5.7 lbs vs 4.4 lbs.
  • Billybadass - Monday, July 4, 2016 - link

    This is the dumbest article I've ever read in my entire life and this guy has no idea what he's talking about.

    The Lenovo y700 (every model) comes with a battery that lasts UP TO 5 hours (http://shop.lenovo.com/us/en/laptops/ideapad/y700-... but that lasts only 4 hrs 16 mins upon continuous web surfing (http://www.laptopmag.com/reviews/laptops/lenovo-y7... so there is NO WAY IN HELL this guy found it to last for EIGHT hours of continuous gaming.

    Not to mention since I just bought mine and have been using it for light customization and light web surfing the battery has lasted me at, yep... just above 4 hours. Can you IMAGINE if I had been gaming?

    Ignore this article.

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