Lenovo announces new ThinkPad P Series mobile workstations.

Lenovo has announced the next generation of its P Series mobile workstations. The newest members of the P Series family promise improved performance and include the ThinkPad P15 (a follow-up to the ThinkPad P53), the ThinkPad P17 (ThinkPad P73), ThinkPad P1 Gen3 (ThinkPad P1 Gen 2), and ThinkPad P15v (ThinkPad P53s). Lenovo has also announced the new ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 3for its premium X1 Series.
Ultra Performance Mode
The biggest change to the P Series ThinkPads is the addition of what Lenovo calls Ultra Performance Mode. This is a new setting that users will find in the BIOS. Enabled by default, Ultra Performance Mode allows ThinkPads to loosen restrictions on certain performance limits.
For instance, according to Lenovo, traditional ThinkPads are designed not to exceed 38dB of fan noise. The way to limit fan noise is to limit temperature, and the way to limit temperature is to limit power draw, and the way to limit power draw is to settle for lower performance.
Presumably, Ultra Performance Mode reduces those limits on performance. Of course, temperature requirements don’t just disappear, so Ultra Performance Mode is backed by a complete reengineering of the thermal design on the P15 and P17. According to Lenovo, these mobile workstations now have 13 percent more airflow, a 30 percent larger CPU sink, larger vents, and a new thermal mesh for faster heat dissipation.
The ThinkPad P15 and P17

The ThinkPad P15 and P17 offer 10th gen Intel CPUs and a choice of GPUs up to the NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000.Lenovo has also added a new modular daughter card design that will allow for four times more CPU/GPU configurations than the previous generation. With Ultra Performance Mode, the P15 and P17 will support higher GPU wattage as well—up to 90W for the P15 and 110W for the P17.
Another thing has also increased on these workstations—the price. The base models of the P15 and P17 are a few hundred bucks more than their previous generation counterparts (compared to the current pricing on Lenovo’s website).
Spec |
ThinkPad P15 (new) |
ThinkPad P53 (old) |
ThinkPad P17 (new) |
ThinkPad P73 (old) |
CPU |
10th Gen Intel Core or Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 5.3GHz) |
9th Gen Intel Core or Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 4.8GHz) |
10th Gen Intel Core or Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 5.3GHz) |
9th Gen Intel Core or Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 4.8GHz) |
GPU |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000 (16GB VRAM) |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000 (16GB VRAM) |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000 (16GB VRAM) |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro RTX 5000 (16GB VRAM) |
Memory |
Up to 128GB DDR4 |
Up to 128GB DDR4 |
Up to 128GB DDR4 |
Up to 128GB DDR4 |
Storage |
Up to 4TB |
Up to 6TB |
Up to 4TB |
Up to 6TB |
Display type |
OLED touch, IPS |
OLED touch, IPS |
IPS |
IPS |
Display resolution |
Up to 4K |
Up to 4K |
Up to 4K |
Up to 4K |
Display brightness |
Up to 600 nits |
Up to 500 nits |
Up to 500 nits |
Up to 400 nits |
Battery (Wh) |
94 |
90 |
94 |
99 |
Ultra Performance Mode |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
No |
GPU wattage (W) |
90 |
80 |
110 |
90 |
Base price (USD) |
$1,979 |
$1,539 |
$2,119 |
$1,530.27 |
The ThinkPad P1 Gen 3

[Update Jan 20, 2021: Click here for our hands-on review of the ThinkPad P1 Gen 3.]
The new ThinkPad P1 is Lenovo’s thinnest and lightest 15-inch mobile workstation. It improves on the P1 Gen 2 with a new anti-smudge coating to reduce fingerprints, upgraded speakers, and a new, brighter display. It also offers optional LTE wireless WAN (WWAN) for mobile data.
As with the P15 and P17, the P1 Gen 3 base price is a few hundred dollars more expensive than the previous generation.
Spec |
ThinkPad P1 Gen 3 (new) |
ThinkPad P1 Gen 2 (old) |
CPU |
10th Gen Intel Core or Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 5.3GHz) |
9th Gen Intel Core or Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 4.8GHz) |
GPU |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro T2000 (4GB VRAM) |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro T2000 (4GB VRAM) |
Memory |
Up to 64GB DDR4 |
Up to 64GB DDR4 |
Storage |
Up to 4TB |
Up to 4TB |
Display type |
OLED touch, IPS |
OLED touch, IPS |
Display resolution |
Up to 4K |
Up to 4K |
Display brightness |
Up to 600 nits |
Up to 500 nits |
Battery (Wh) |
80 |
80 |
Ultra Performance Mode |
Yes |
No |
Base price (USD) |
$2,019 |
$1,675.17 |
The ThinkPad P15v

The P15v is Lenovo’s entry-level P Series ThinkPad. It offers less powerful graphics compared to the P15, but adds the same processor bump up to the 10th gen Intel H Series.
Spec |
ThinkPad P15v (new) |
ThinkPad P53s (old) |
CPU |
10th Gen Intel Core and Xeon (up to 8 cores, for up to 5.1GHz) |
8th Gen Intel Core (up to 4 cores, for up to 4.8GHz) |
GPU |
Up to NVIDIA Quadro P620 (2GB VRAM) |
NVIDIA Quadro P520 (2GB VRAM) |
Memory |
Up to 64GB DDR4 |
Up to 48GB DDR4 |
Storage |
Up to 4TB |
Up to 2TB |
Display type |
IPS, IPS touch |
IPS, IPS touch |
Display resolution |
Up to 4K |
Up to 4K |
Display brightness |
Up to 600 nits |
Up to 500 nits |
Battery (Wh) |
68 |
57 |
Ultra Performance Mode |
Yes |
No |
Base price (USD) |
$1,349 |
$969 |
The ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 3

Finally, the ThinkPad X1 Extreme Gen 3 adds 10th gen processors, a brighter display, and new Wi-Fi 6 and CAT16 LTE-A WWAN.
Spec |
X1 Extreme Gen 3 (new) |
X1 Extreme Gen 2 (old) |
CPU |
10th Gen Intel Core (up to 8 cores, for up to 5.3GHz) |
9th Gen Intel Core (up to 8 cores, for up to 4.8GHz) |
GPU |
Up to NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Ti (4 GB VRAM) |
Up to NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Max-Q (4GB VRAM) |
Memory |
Up to 64 GB DDR4* |
Up to 64GB DDR4 |
Storage |
Up to 1TB* |
Up to 1TB |
Display type |
OLED touch, IPS* |
OLED touch, IPS |
Display resolution |
Up to 4K* |
Up to 4K |
Display brightness |
Up to 600 nits |
Up to 500 nits |
Battery (Wh) |
? |
80 |
Ultra Performance Mode |
Yes |
No |
Base price (USD) |
? |
$1,475.40 |
*Estimated
Are You Thinking What I’m Thinking?
All five new models of ThinkPad will be available starting in July. For the most part, the new ThinkPads are a spec refresh rather than a revolutionary upgrade. Some specs—such as storage on the P15 and P17 and battery capacity on the P17—have actually come down, while others have taken an unwelcome ascent—namely, price.
Nonetheless, the ThinkPad’s new Ultra Performance Mode is a promising addition. In theory, it should allow the ThinkPads to utilize GPUs as well as, or better than, competing mobile workstations like the Dell Precision series (which Dell claims has best-in-class thermal design).
As I type this on my ThinkPad P1 Gen 2, you know what I’m thinking? Might be time for an upgrade.