Wireless

Lenovo has leveraged the Intel Wireless AC-7265 solution for wireless connectivity, and this has been a very popular M.2 card in many notebooks this year. It has 802.11ac capabilities with 2x2:2 which means it has a maximum connection speed of 866 Mbps. We have seen it not being able to deliver much more than about 400 Mbps transfer speeds in other notebooks.

WiFi Performance - TCP

On the T450s, I was only able to get 346 Mbps which is below average in transfer speed even with this wireless card. It is not a fantastic result. For those that need faster connections, The T450s does have a Gigabit Ethernet port which is the Intel I218-LM controller. For many businesses, Ethernet is still the only way to go so it’s great to have a built in port. It of course also supports Ethernet with the optional Docking station.

Speakers

Like many Ultrabooks, The T450s has stereo speakers which are downward firing at the front of the notebook. It’s not ideal for frequency response to have the speakers fire downward.

The speakers on the T450s are adequate but not overly loud. I measured a maximum SPL of just 83 dB(A) which is certainly middle of the road compared to most notebooks. Sound quality was ok though even at maximum volume, but as usual with speakers this small the T450s lacked any low end at all.

Temperatures and Noise

As a notebook gets thinner, cooling it becomes more difficult. Because this notebook has a Broadwell-U series processor, it needs to be actively cooled unlike some devices with Core M. There is 15 watts of TDP to account for, and as devices get thinner it gets more difficult to expel that heat. The T450s, being slightly thicker than most Ultrabooks, has one of the better cooling systems I have seen on this class of system.

At idle and low impact workloads, the cooling fan is either not running or not audible. I was unable to detect any noise at all with a sound meter at idle, which to me is a great feature. This isn’t the only device to do this at idle though. What is even more impressive is how the T450s responds under load. In order to stress the system to the full 15 watt TDP, I ran our DOTA 2 benchmark for an hour. During that time, the maximum temperature of the SoC peaked at just 67°C, which is pretty cool for an Ultrabook. But perhaps the most interesting part of that is the cooling fan slowly ramped up in speed, peaking at close to 4000 rpm but the sound pressure was just over 39 dB(A) measured just over the trackpad. Many notebooks can be well over this, hitting 41-44 dB(A) in the same workload. For those that like a quiet notebook but don’t want to compromise performance with a fanless model, The T450s is one of the best around.

Battery Life and Charge Time Final Words
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  • bug77 - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Neat. Hopefully they upgrade their lineup to Skylake by November, which is when I have an opportunity to replace my old laptop.
  • chris9000 - Thursday, September 17, 2015 - link

    Yeah, I don't expect to see much changed. Lower TDP (7.5w?) and DDR4 SODIMMs. Mine runs slightly warm in most environments and I expect the upcoming generation to run cooler.
  • Fiernaq - Tuesday, September 15, 2015 - link

    Does it still connect to the dock with the 72Wh battery installed?
  • fb1996 - Tuesday, September 15, 2015 - link

    Yes, it's (of course) still possible to use the docking station when you have the 72Wh 6-cell battery installed.
  • kepstin - Tuesday, September 15, 2015 - link

    Interestingly, the docking stations usually comes with a larger power brick (mine has 95W). I wonder if this provides any improvement to battery charge times.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, September 15, 2015 - link

    Since this is a business class laptop, do we know if Lenovo left the spyware and crapware out of the default install because they're counting on corporate IT to install it for them; or did they bake it in anyway because they know that while most businesses will use a clean image they don't want to miss out on snooping on any consumers who buy them.
  • retrospooty - Tuesday, September 15, 2015 - link

    ThinkPads didn't have the spyware. There is some crapware, but they never had the spyware. That was some misguided... "whatever" on some consumer products.
  • jasperjones - Wednesday, September 16, 2015 - link

    Fool me once, fool me twice..

    The problem is Lenovo kept quiet about Superfish and the Lenovo Service Engine and third parties had to uncover the crap they were doing.

    Besides, there are some nasty bits on the Thinkpads, too. I'm talking Coreboot for instance.
  • retrospooty - Friday, September 18, 2015 - link

    Yeah, it was a dick move by Lenovo for sure... Also, I should back off what I said. When I said it wasnt on Thinkpads, I should have said it wasnt on the main workhorses, the ThinkPad T series (or W). It may have been on some other lower models.
  • extide - Saturday, October 3, 2015 - link

    Wait, you consider Coreboot a nasty thing..?

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