Display

The review unit that arrived came with an upgraded display. Lenovo offers a 1600x900 panel, but for not very much more you can outfit the device with a 1920x1080 IPS panel. This is going to be a significant upgrade since the 1600x900 version is not IPS, and should therefore be avoided if at all possible. On the configuration page, Lenovo is charging just $60 to upgrade to the better panel which is a good enough deal that I have to question why they even offer the other one at all, but I’m sure there are very price conscious buyers out there. What is not quite as good of an upgrade offer is the $235 upgrade ($175 over the standard 1080p offering) for 1920x1080 with touch which is a lot to pay for touch, and considering the ThinkPad T450s is not a convertible notebook, it’s really not needed.

Because of a resolution that is fairly standard, there is no need for any sort of funky subpixel arrangement on the panel which is a good thing. Lenovo also has an anti-glare coating even on the touch model. The exact panel model is not known because of the way Lenovo overwrites the string, but it has good viewing angles, and consistent lighting levels on the display without any obvious signs of backlight leakage.

To test for color accuracy and display performance, we use SpectraCal’s CalMAN 5 suite with a custom workflow. Brightness and contrast readings are done with an X-Rite i1 DisplayPro colorimeter, and color accuracy is tested with an X-Rite i1Pro Spectrophotometer. Lenovo is one of the few companies that actually includes a default icc profile, so the display was tested with that profile set as active. Displays are tested at 200 nits.

Brightness and Contrast

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The overall panel does not get very bright. At just 265 nits, it is on the lower end of the scale. This is not great for use outdoors, although the anti-glare coating should help this somewhat. The black levels though are very good, resulting in an excellent contrast ratio of 1263:1. For those that need to or want to work in very dark environments, the T450s has a display that goes all the way down to 2.2 nits output which is perhaps too extreme, but it should be no problem to find a level that is suitable for a dark environment.

Grayscale and White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Display - White Point

Looking at the grayscale, we see an overall average that is under 3, which is a great result. The grayscale does creep up though higher in the range, and full white is closer to an error level of 5 which could be better. On the whole though the grayscale is quite good and the gamma is also decent, coming in at an average of 2.2. The display is a bit cool though, with the reds dropping off as the output gets higher.

Saturation Accuracy

Display - Saturation Accuracy

Saturations are once again very good, with an overall average error of just 2.2. Values under 3 are considered a good result in this test, and the T450s does very well. Even at 100% saturation the values are all very close to correct, and CalMAN shows that this display can do 96% of the sRGB color space.

Gretag MacBeth

Display - GMB Accuracy

The Gretag MacBeth colorchecker is the most comprehensive test, and it scores once again under 3 which is a good result. There is certainly some drift especially on magenta, but overall this is a well calibrated display with an icc profile which helps keep the grayscale in check.

Relative Color Comparator

This is something that we are bringing back to our display testing. The images show a relative color comparison between what the display is supposed to produce and what it actually does. You can see that there is certainly some blue in the whites due to the cool color temperature, but the colors themselves are very close to correct. Please remember that any inaccuracies in your own display will shift these results, so do not take them as absolute values but as relative results.

Display conclusion

Generally the testing would conclude with creating an icc profile and trying to get better results, but there is little need with the T450s. It already has an icc profile which really only helps out grayscale unless you have a 3D LUT which most notebooks lack. The T450s is an overall excellent display and really only has an issue with overall display brightness. If Lenovo could squeeze another 100 nits out of the panel, it would be right up there with the top displays. Just remember to avoid the base 1600x900 panel.

GPU Performance Battery Life and Charge Time
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  • Soulwager - Saturday, September 19, 2015 - link

    I don't think it matters what device the scandal involved, because it fundamentally breaks the trust between the consumer and the company. There simply isn't anything Lenovo can do to regain that trust, except maybe open source all the software and firmware they provide.
  • Bronek - Thursday, September 17, 2015 - link

    I like that they pause charging of the rear battery at 80%. This means that the battery can be disconnected during this period and safely stored for extended period, without the risk of degradation.
  • BobCollins - Thursday, September 17, 2015 - link

    Can you explain your conclusion that "the i5-5300U is a reasonable upgrade over the base offering?"

    Every discussion I have read suggested that mid-level processor upgrade was so marginal as to be not worth it.
  • thisch - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

    One really bad point though: these T440s / T450s are awfully hard to maintain. Separating the bottom part of the casing from the rest is almost impossible, using a screwdriver will dent the plastic, using one's nails does not work, I spent 15mn trying and was not successful. Compare this to HP for instance (one latch to open, direct access to all the components in 2 seconds)
  • zhenya00 - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

    The fact that you neglect to use the correct tools completely invalidates your arguments. With the correct tool you can have the bottom case off in less than a minute. If removing the bottom without damaging it is outside of your skillset, you have no business opening the laptop in the first place.
  • Top10Ultrabooks - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

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  • topultrabooks - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

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  • zhenya00 - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

    Late to this, but we have been buying the T4x0s models as our standard configuration for years. The T450s is the best one by far. Still, despite the power bridge tech, your battery charts really illustrate the tradeoff that we get by Lenovo's insistence on sticking with traditional removable batteries. 46wHR for a laptop of this size is TINY today, and the run times prove it (the 12" retina MacBook has 40wHR in a 2lb device!) I'm sure there are a *few* users who actually require the ability to continuously trade out batteries, but the reality is that the *vast* majority of users would be far better served by putting in a built-in battery with ~60-70wHR capacity, giving 10+ hours of run time. Only a tiny niche of users can possibly require more battery life than this. It's too bad the rest of us are being held hostage by that vocal minority.
  • nerd1 - Sunday, September 20, 2015 - link

    That's why you have option to put larger sized batteries I think..
  • Harry_Wild - Saturday, September 19, 2015 - link

    Still not HDMI output but still a VGA output? How stupid is that? Is this a business computer or what? All the big monitors are HDTVs and many monitors have HDMI inputs!

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