Wi-Fi Performance

Most Ultrabooks are at the point where they are too thin to even include a standard Ethernet port, and the Yoga 2 Pro is no exception. As a consumer device, this is generally not an issue as most laptops are used over Wi-Fi anyway, so a high quality wireless card is important. Unfortunately the Intel Wireless-N 7260 (an M.2 card which integrates Bluetooth 4.0) has some major features missing for a $1099 laptop. The lack of 802.11ac support might be forgivable, since 802.11ac is fairly new, but the fact that this card has only 2x2 TX/RX stream support at 2.4GHz can be a deal breaker for many people. It’s somewhat sad that in 2014, a premium device can be sold without 5GHz Wi-Fi.

I understand there are margins to maintain, but for a device that lives entirely on Wi-Fi, a small amount spent here would help a lot. On Amazon.com, the price difference between the Intel Wireless-N 7260 ($10) and the Dual-Band Intel Wireless-N 7260, which supports 5GHz, is $10, and moving up to the AC version is only another $10. It would be unlikely Lenovo is paying that much per card. On a $1000 laptop, this isn't acceptable Wi-Fi.

Let’s take a look at the Wi-Fi performance:

WiFi Performance

When running these performance tests, I could not get the device to connect at anything higher than 144 Mbps, even on a router with just this device connected. Troubleshooting that led me to a newer driver version for the Intel wireless card (dated June 2014) and once installed I was immediately able to connect at the maximum of 300 Mbps. Keep in mind however that interference on 2.4GHz is pretty high for most areas, so this is very much a best-case scenario.

Even with a 300Mbps connection, maximum transfer speed was not great with the Yoga 2 Pro only achieving 141 Mbps. This is a real disappointment on a device with a price tag of around the thousand dollar mark. A 5GHz connection should be the minimum acceptable level here.

While doing research on the wireless card choice, I found several people who recently purchased a Yoga 2 Pro which they claim comes with the Intel Wireless AC 7260 card which would improve this result quite a bit. I've reached out to Lenovo to verify this information and will post an update if they confirm it.

Tablet Performance

Due to the dual nature of the Yoga 2 Pro, we can also compare it to other two-in-one devices and tablet performance. Being an i5-4200U, it should easily outperform Bay Trail equipped two-in-one devices and be more in line with the Surface Pro offerings. Compared to ARM based tablets, it will be significantly faster.

SunSpider 1.0.2 Benchmark  (Chrome/Safari/IE)

Sunspider is a light workload that tests single-threaded performance. The Core i5 in the Yoga 2 Pro comes out on top.

Kraken 1.1 (Chrome/Safari/IE)

Kraken is similar to Sunspider, with the Core series pulling an even greater advantage over Bay Trail and ARM based tablets.

Google Octane v2  (Chrome/Safari/IE)

WebXPRT - (Chrome/Safari/IE)

The more complex the javascript load gets, the further the Core series pull away from everything else. The Core i5 pulls a pretty substantial lead over the i3-4020Y of the Surface Pro 3 due to the lack of Turbo Boost on the i3 model, even though the base clock speeds are similar.

3DMark Unlimited - Overall

3DMark Unlimited - Physics Score

3DMark Unlimited - Graphics Score

Graphics performance, while not spectacular as a laptop, is very good compared to tablet form factor devices.

As an outright tablet, the Yoga 2 Pro is plenty fast, but being based on a laptop it isn’t designed to imitate a pure tablet experience. For instance, it does not feature support for Connected Standby, so the standard sleep mode for this is to use S3 sleep instead, so wake from sleep can take several seconds.

These comparisons to tablets show that the Core series has a substantial performance lead over the competition, however it has to be noted that the ARM and Bay Trail competitors are in a completely different power envelope. These benchmarks show why you may want to use a device like the Yoga 2 Pro with touch. The performance is still quite a leap from the true tablet devices out there, making tasks like web browsing a better experience.

General Performance Battery Life, Temperatures, and Noise
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  • NeatOman - Tuesday, September 25, 2018 - link

    4+ years later, after two annoying issues and a new SSD which i wouldn't put against the machine as its normal wear IMO I still very much love the machine (i5, 4GB, 256GB, 3200x1800). The first issue that bothered me was the yellow tint which was fixed in a BIOS update. Then the Windows 10 update that caused flickering drove me nuts, not only did it take me a few days to figure out that the adaptive refresh rate was bugging out.. but that then with Automatic updates being forced on all Windows 10 machines (I upgraded ASAP to Win10) kept resetting my display driver settings every few months.

    But after that, upgrading the SSD because the old one died, upgrading the thermal paste (stays locked @2.3GHz under full load), and upgrading the WiFi to an Intel AC one it feels every bit as fast as any other machine for basic use. And the screen is on par with anything new, other than the very few HDR10/OLED screens out there. 3200x1800 on a 13" is GREAT for 200% scaling as its effectively the same text/graphical size as a 1600x900 screen at the same size (IMO 1080p is marginally too small at 13").

    I've never been satisfied with a laptop, and never kept one for over 2 years. From a beautiful Sony VAIO in 2004, with switchable Nvidia graphics then another Sony VAIO with a Blu-ray Burner lol to a Thinkpad to a 2008 13 MacBook Pro (kept that one on the side for a long time) then a ASUS UL30VT-X1 which had 10+ hours of real battery life, then the mistake of selling it and getting a 1st gen Surface Pro and getting another Thinkpad and landing at the Yoga 2 Pro.

    That's my story for the day HAHAHA I'm sitting on a job waiting for an Invoice to be processed typing away on my Yoga 2 Pro and just thought how much i enjoy it.

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