Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 review nice but not enough Digital Trends
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AMD Ryzen 7 6800HX Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 RAM 16GB LPDDR5
32GB LPDDR5 Display 16.0-inch 16:10 WQXGA (2,560 x 1,600) IPS 165Hz Storage 512GB PCIe Gen4 SSD
1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD Touch No Ports 1 x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2
1 x USB-C 4.0
2 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
1 x HDMI 2.1
1 x 3.5mm audio jack
1 x SD card reader Wireless Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2 Webcam 1080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello Operating system Windows 11 Battery 71 watt-hour Price $2.359+ The ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 starts at $2,359 for an AMD Ryzen 5 6600H CPU, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 GPU. Increase to a Ryzen 7 5800H, and you’ll spend $2,619. My review unit with 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD hasn’t been released or priced yet, but will likely approach $3,000. That makes this a surprisingly expensive 16-inch laptop. Yes, it has nice components, but it’s more expensive than other premium machines like the Dell XPS 15 and XPS 17.
(single / multi) Handbrake
(seconds) Cinebench R23
(single / multi) Pugetbench
Premiere Pro Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3
(Ryzen 9 6900HX) Bal: 1,486 / 9,041
Perf: 1,487 / 9,206 Bal: 91
Perf: 81 Bal: 1,549 / 12,736
Perf: 1,457 / 13,342 Bal: 624
Perf: N/A Asus Slim 7 Pro X
(Ryzen 9 6900HS) Bal: 1,493 / 8,941
Perf: 1,493 / 9,288 Bal: 99
Perf: 86 Bal: 1,552 / 12,139
Perf: 1,548 / 13,164 Bal: 548
Perf: N/A HP Envy 16
(Core i9-12900H) Bal: 1,839 / 11,187
Perf: 1,811 / 11,387 Bal: 83
Perf: 84 Bal: 1,919 / 12,538
Perf: 1922 / 12,525 Bal: 814
Perf: 932 MSI Creator Z16P
(Core i9-12900H) Bal: 1,769 / 14,034
Perf: 1,835 / 14,051 Bal: 71
Perf: 69 Bal: 1,844 / 15,047
Perf: 1,837 / 16,084 Bal: 717
Perf: 1,042 Dell XPS 15 9520
(Core i7-12700H) Bal: 1,470 / 9,952
Perf: 1,714 / 11,053 Bal: 100
Perf: 77 Bal: 1,509 / 11,578
Perf: 1,806 / 13,313 Bal: 760
Perf: 729 Apple MacBook Pro 16
(Apple M1 Pro) Bal: 1,773 / 12,605
Perf: N/A Bal: 95
Perf: N/A Bal: 1,531 / 12,343
Perf: N/A Bal: 977
Perf: N/A The ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 ships with Nvidia Studio drivers, meaning it’s optimized for performance and reliability in certain demanding applications (e.g. Adobe Creative Suite) as opposed to gaming. Even so, the laptop performed well in all our benchmarks and was faster than some other creator-focused laptops we’ve reviewed. It was particularly fast in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, and it tied for first in Cyberpunk 2077. You’ll find gaming laptops that are faster, but for a non-gaming machine, the results were pretty impressive. Stick with 1080p gaming, and you’ll get 60+ frames per second (fps) in many modern titles with graphics turned up, and you won’t have to turn them down much to play at 1440p. Assassin’s Creed
Valhalla
(1080p/1200p
Ultra High) Cyberpunk
2077
(1080p/1200p
Ultra) Civilization VI
(1080p Ultra) Fortnite
(1080p/
1200p Epic) 3DMark
Time Spy Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3
(RTX 3060) 85 fps 51 fps 99 fps 75 fps Bal: 7,010
Perf: 7,636 HP Envy 16
(RTX 3060) 70 fps 40 fps 125 fps 45 fps Bal: 7,645
Perf: 8,040 Asus ZenBook Pro 16X
(RTX 3060) 24 fps 51 fps N/A 65 fps Bal: 7,047
Perf: 8,221 MSI Creator Z16P
(RTX 3080 Ti) 55 fps 30 fps 60 fps 60 fps Bal: 9,251
Perf: 10,054 MSI Creator Z16
(RTX 3060) 50 fps N/A 92 fps 56 fps Bal: 6,322
Perf: N/A Dell XPS 17 9720
(RTX 3060) 23 fps 45 fps 111 fps 77 fps Bal: 6,757
Perf: 6,958
Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 review nice but not enough
By Mark Coppock October 16, 2022 Share Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 review: nice, but not enough MSRP $2,359.00 Score Details "For a laptop of this price, the Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 still lacks the standout features it needs." Pros Strong productivity performance Good productivity display Solid 1080p gaming Comfortable keyboard Cons Inferior build quality Touchpad is small Expensive When you have an incredibly wide lineup of laptops, like Lenovo, you need to segment them somehow. The ThinkBook, for example, is aimed narrowly at small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs), looking to offer the kind of aesthetics and prices that consumers look for with some of the enhanced security and services that businesses demand. Presumably, that’s differentiated from the ThinkPad line that’s all-business in its looks and features. Contents SpecsA fresh design that sort of worksFaster at fun than it is at workWrapping upNot a bad laptop but not special either Indeed, the ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 is an interesting member of the lineup, being a 16-inch machine with high-end components and a smattering of features that SMB buyers will appreciate. It’s a strong performer, if not class-leading, but its build quality is suspect, and it’s quite expensive. That makes it hard to stand out from the rest of the lineup.Specs
Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 Dimensions 13.96 inches x 9.92 inches x 0.73 inches Weight 4.38 pounds Processor AMD Ryzen 5 6600HXAMD Ryzen 7 6800HX Graphics Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 RAM 16GB LPDDR5
32GB LPDDR5 Display 16.0-inch 16:10 WQXGA (2,560 x 1,600) IPS 165Hz Storage 512GB PCIe Gen4 SSD
1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD Touch No Ports 1 x USB-C 3.2 Gen 2
1 x USB-C 4.0
2 x USB-A 3.2 Gen 2
1 x HDMI 2.1
1 x 3.5mm audio jack
1 x SD card reader Wireless Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2 Webcam 1080p with infrared camera for Windows 11 Hello Operating system Windows 11 Battery 71 watt-hour Price $2.359+ The ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 starts at $2,359 for an AMD Ryzen 5 6600H CPU, 16GB of RAM, a 512GB SSD, and Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 GPU. Increase to a Ryzen 7 5800H, and you’ll spend $2,619. My review unit with 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD hasn’t been released or priced yet, but will likely approach $3,000. That makes this a surprisingly expensive 16-inch laptop. Yes, it has nice components, but it’s more expensive than other premium machines like the Dell XPS 15 and XPS 17.
A fresh design that sort of works
Mark Coppock/Digital Trends The ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 enjoys what’s become an identifiable ThinkBook aesthetic, particularly on the is two-toned lid that has a bold ThinkBook logo. That differentiates it from the rest of Lenovo’s lineup and gives the laptop a bit of panache. Otherwise, the look is a typical business laptop with a dark grey colorway and a standard Lenovo chassis. The lid does connect at a spot that’s set in about half an inch from the rear, which is different, and the keyboard is darker as well. The result is a laptop that looks good and stands out just enough, without being unnecessarily glitzy for a business professional. It’s also an all-metal build, although it’s not as solid as the Dell XPS 15 or MacBook Pro 16. The lid feels bendable, and there’s some noticeable flex in the keyboard deck. At a price of well over $2,000, it’s hard to overlook the lack of rigidity. The hinge opens with one hand, but there’s a bit of wobble during hardcore typing sessions. Overall, I was a bit disappointed with the ThinkBook 16p’s build quality, and that’s a knock against the machine’s suitability for its target user. The ThinkBook 16p has reasonably small bezels, with only a larger lower chin making it about an inch deeper than the XPS 15 (which has a slightly smaller display). The ThinkPad X1 Extreme is almost the same size and identically thick at 0.78 inches, versus the XPS 15’s 0.73 inches. The ThinkBook 16p weighs 4.4 pounds, which makes it slightly heavier than the ThinkPad X1 Extreme and slightly lighter than the 4.62-pound XPS 15. It’s a large laptop for sure, but you get a 16-inch screen in exchange. Mark Coppock/Digital Trends In terms of other creature comforts, the ThinkBook 16p has plenty to attract. The keyboard is light and snappy, with less travel than the ThinkPad’s keyboard but also more comfortable switches overall. The XPS 15 has a slightly better keyboard, but many users probably wouldn’t notice it. The touchpad is smaller than it could be given the available space, but it works well with a smooth, responsive surface and reasonably quiet button clicks. There’s no touch display option, which I prefer to see on a premium laptop. The webcam is 1080p and provides a quality image that will please business users who need videoconferencing to get their work done. An infrared camera provides Windows 11 Hello passwordless login support, and there’s a fingerprint reader embedded in the offset power button for those who prefer that method for logging in. Lenovo has included Glance software with user presence detection that can put the laptop to sleep when the user steps away and provides digital wellness functionality, although it was disabled on my review unit. Lenovo’s ThinkShutter privacy screen is there to close off the webcam. In the most pertinent nod to business users, the ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 also incorporates Microsoft’s Secure BIOS. Finally, connectivity is strong, albeit with a port configuration that you don’t often see outside of larger gaming machines. You don’t get Thunderbolt 4 thanks to the AMD chipset, but everything else is there including USB-C, USB-A, HDMI, and a full-size SD card reader. Some of the ports are arranged along the back, which we don’t typically see, and it’s convenient once you get used to it. There’s a proprietary power connector matched with a massive 230-watt power brick, necessary to keep the high-end components running.Faster at fun than it is at work
Mark Coppock/Digital Trends Just because you’re a businessperson doesn’t mean you don’t want to play some games. The ThinkBook 16p, with its Ryzen CPU and RTX 3060 GPU, is more adept at play than at work. I’ll start with its productivity and creative performance, because of course, that’s what you’re paying for, but I’ll be sure to cover gaming as well. The ThinkBook’s thermal design was fine, with limited throttling but quite a bit of fan noise when the CPU and GPU spun up. Lenovo’s thermal utility didn’t make a huge difference in any of our usual benchmarks, but I’ve reported those scores where appropriate. My review unit packed in an eight-core/16-thread 45-watt AMD Ryzen 9 6900HX CPU. That’s top-of-the-line until AMD’s 7000 series comes out, and it’s a fast CPU for sure. Even so, it fell behind our comparison group in Geekbench 5, including machines running Intel’s 45-watt 12th-gen CPUs. As usual, AMD’s single-core scores lagged the most. The ThinkBook 16 was fast in Cinebench R23 multi-core, though, and it did well in our Handbrake test that encodes a 420MB video as H.265. The ThinkBook 16p was a solid performer, but it didn’t quite keep up with some newer Intel-based laptops. In the Pugetbench Premiere Pro benchmark that runs in a live version of Adobe’s Premiere Pro, the ThinkBook 16p was behind laptops like the HP Envy 16 that utilized the RTX 3060 CPU. This benchmark benefits from some Intel optimizations in Adobe apps that may or may not apply to a given workflow. Overall, the ThinkBook 16p meets the performance needs of the most demanding professionals no matter the business size, and it can meet the needs of creators as well. You’ll get better performance out of Intel’s latest 45-watt 12th-gen CPUs, at least in most of our benchmarks, and the Apple MacBook Pro 16 continues to dominate. Geekbench(single / multi) Handbrake
(seconds) Cinebench R23
(single / multi) Pugetbench
Premiere Pro Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3
(Ryzen 9 6900HX) Bal: 1,486 / 9,041
Perf: 1,487 / 9,206 Bal: 91
Perf: 81 Bal: 1,549 / 12,736
Perf: 1,457 / 13,342 Bal: 624
Perf: N/A Asus Slim 7 Pro X
(Ryzen 9 6900HS) Bal: 1,493 / 8,941
Perf: 1,493 / 9,288 Bal: 99
Perf: 86 Bal: 1,552 / 12,139
Perf: 1,548 / 13,164 Bal: 548
Perf: N/A HP Envy 16
(Core i9-12900H) Bal: 1,839 / 11,187
Perf: 1,811 / 11,387 Bal: 83
Perf: 84 Bal: 1,919 / 12,538
Perf: 1922 / 12,525 Bal: 814
Perf: 932 MSI Creator Z16P
(Core i9-12900H) Bal: 1,769 / 14,034
Perf: 1,835 / 14,051 Bal: 71
Perf: 69 Bal: 1,844 / 15,047
Perf: 1,837 / 16,084 Bal: 717
Perf: 1,042 Dell XPS 15 9520
(Core i7-12700H) Bal: 1,470 / 9,952
Perf: 1,714 / 11,053 Bal: 100
Perf: 77 Bal: 1,509 / 11,578
Perf: 1,806 / 13,313 Bal: 760
Perf: 729 Apple MacBook Pro 16
(Apple M1 Pro) Bal: 1,773 / 12,605
Perf: N/A Bal: 95
Perf: N/A Bal: 1,531 / 12,343
Perf: N/A Bal: 977
Perf: N/A The ThinkBook 16p Gen 3 ships with Nvidia Studio drivers, meaning it’s optimized for performance and reliability in certain demanding applications (e.g. Adobe Creative Suite) as opposed to gaming. Even so, the laptop performed well in all our benchmarks and was faster than some other creator-focused laptops we’ve reviewed. It was particularly fast in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, and it tied for first in Cyberpunk 2077. You’ll find gaming laptops that are faster, but for a non-gaming machine, the results were pretty impressive. Stick with 1080p gaming, and you’ll get 60+ frames per second (fps) in many modern titles with graphics turned up, and you won’t have to turn them down much to play at 1440p. Assassin’s Creed
Valhalla
(1080p/1200p
Ultra High) Cyberpunk
2077
(1080p/1200p
Ultra) Civilization VI
(1080p Ultra) Fortnite
(1080p/
1200p Epic) 3DMark
Time Spy Lenovo ThinkBook 16p Gen 3
(RTX 3060) 85 fps 51 fps 99 fps 75 fps Bal: 7,010
Perf: 7,636 HP Envy 16
(RTX 3060) 70 fps 40 fps 125 fps 45 fps Bal: 7,645
Perf: 8,040 Asus ZenBook Pro 16X
(RTX 3060) 24 fps 51 fps N/A 65 fps Bal: 7,047
Perf: 8,221 MSI Creator Z16P
(RTX 3080 Ti) 55 fps 30 fps 60 fps 60 fps Bal: 9,251
Perf: 10,054 MSI Creator Z16
(RTX 3060) 50 fps N/A 92 fps 56 fps Bal: 6,322
Perf: N/A Dell XPS 17 9720
(RTX 3060) 23 fps 45 fps 111 fps 77 fps Bal: 6,757
Perf: 6,958