A
thinner and lighter version of Lenovo's popular ThinkPad T430 business
notebook, the 14-inch ThinkPad T430s provides equal doses of power, portability
and usability. With its light-weight chassis, industry-leading keyboard,
high-res screen and more than 8 hours of battery life, this $1,145 business
system ($779 to start) is well worth the price for anyone who cares about
productivity.
Specifications
Lenovo ThinkPad T430s
CPU
|
2.6-GHz
Intel Core i5-3320M
|
Operating
System
|
MS
Windows 7 Professional (64-bit)
|
RAM
|
16GB
|
RAM
Upgradable to
|
4GB
|
Hard
Drive Size
|
500GB
|
Hard
Drive Speed
|
7,200rpm
|
Hard
Drive Type
|
SATA
Hard Drive
|
Display
Size
|
14
|
Native
Resolution
|
1600x900
|
Optical
Drive
|
DVD+/-RW
DL
|
Optical
Drive Speed
|
|
Graphics
Card
|
Nvidia
NVS 5200M
|
Video
Memory
|
1GB
|
Wi-Fi
|
802.11
a/g/n
|
Wi-Fi
Model
|
Intel
Centrino Advanced-N 6205
|
Bluetooth
|
Bluetooth
4.0
|
Mobile
Broadband
|
|
Touchpad
Size
|
3
x 1.75 inches
|
Ports
(excluding USB)
|
DisplayPort;
Ethernet; USB 3.0; VGA
|
USB
Ports
|
3
|
Warranty/Support
|
One
year standard parts and labor
|
Size
|
13.50
x 9.05 x 0.83 - 1.02 inches
|
Weight
|
4
pounds / 4.4 pounds with bay battery
|
Design
Click to EnlargeNo surprises here. The T430s has the same
black ThinkPad aesthetic as its predecessors. While some will find this design
boring, we like this classy and understated look. The soft-touch carbon-fiber
reinforced plastic lid and smooth magnesium alloy bottom feel luxurious to the
touch and resist fingerprints. The classic design theme continues on the
all-black deck and bezel, with only the red TrackPoint and small red stripes on
the TrackPoint buttons providing a splash of color.
At just 4 pounds (4.4 pounds with bay battery) and 13.50 x
9.05 x 0.83 - 1.02 inches, the ThinkPad T430s is significantly thinner and
lighter than the ThinkPad T430 (13.8 x 9.13 x 1.18 inches, 4.8 pounds / 5.2
pounds with 9-cell battery) and the Dell Latitude E6430 (13.9 x 9.5 x 1.3
inches, 5.2 pounds). When we tried picking up both notebooks, the 0.8-pound
difference between the larger T430 and the T430s seemed particularly great. We
would much prefer to travel with the T430s.
Keyboard
Click to EnlargeLike the T430 and W530, the ThinkPad T430s's
island-style, spill-resistant keyboard provides the best typing experience you
can get on a notebook. The keys provide extremely strong tactile feedback and
an audible clack that reminded us of the pleasant sound on IBM's old Model M
keyboards. Because of the excellent feedback and key spacing, we managed a 92
word-per-minute score on the Ten Thumbs Typing Test, which matched our all-time
best.
Click to EnlargeThe optional backlight provided bright
illumination even at the lower of its two settings. However, the glossy keys,
which are necessary for the backlight, seemed slippery in comparison to the
matte keys we've used on recent ThinkPads (like the T430), which came without
the backlight option. Because of this slight slipperiness, we got a
higher-than-normal 2 percent error rate. If you can live with the overhead
light that comes standard, we recommend choosing the non-backlit, matte keys
that are easier to grip.
Touchpad
and TrackPoint
Click to EnlargeLike all other ThinkPads, the T430s offers
two pointing devices: a TrackPoint pointing stick and a standard touchpad. We
prefer the TrackPoint because it offers the most accurate way to navigate
around the desktop and lets you move the pointer without lifting your hands off
the home row.
Users who don't like pointing sticks will appreciate the
comfort and accuracy of the 3 x 1.75-inch touchpad. In our testing, the pad's
textured surface provided just the right amount of friction as we navigated
around the desktop without a hint of jerkiness. We also appreciated the two
discrete mouse buttons that offered firm feedback.
The pad also supports multitouch gestures, including
pinch-to-zoom, rotate, three-finger flick and three finger press to launch an
app of your choice. While all of these gestures worked for us, we found
ourselves having to repeat the pinch and rotate gestures to make them work.
Display
Click to EnlargeThe 1600 x 900-pixel, 14-inch matte display
on the T430s offers sharp, bright images and wide viewing angles. When we
watched a 1080p Quicktime trailer for "The Man with the Iron Fist,"
the edges of objects were crisp and images barely washed out at even 90 degrees
to the left or right. However, colors such as the red in curtains and walls
appeared dull and pale.
At 249 lux on our light meter, the T430s's screen is about
20 percent brighter than the thin-and-light notebook category average and
double the brightness of the ThinkPad T430 (with 1366 x 768 screen). The Dell
Latitude E6430 comes close at 237 lux.
Audio
Click to EnlargeThe T430s's dual speakers - located on
either side of the keyboard - offer sound that's accurate, but a bit hollow.
When we played the bass- heavy "Forget Me Nots," the guitar-centric
"Shout at the Devil" and the synth-laden "Summertine Madness,"
audio was accurate but flat. Still, we were able to hear a separation of sound
between instruments as guitar twangs emanated from one speaker and drum beats
from the other.
Even at maximum volume, the music was loud enough only for a
small space. The bundled Dolby Home Theater v. 4 audio software has profiles
for music, movies and games, along with an equalizer and volume leveler.
Disabling the software, which is on by default, made music sound completely
hollow.
Heat
The ThinkPad T430s stayed pleasantly cool throughout our
testing. After streaming a video for 15 minutes, the keyboard measured a cool
85 degrees, the touchpad clocked in at a chilly 77 degrees and the underside
hit a reasonable 90 degrees Fahrenheit. We consider temperatures below 95
degrees comfortable and those under 90 degrees imperceptible.
Ports and
Webcam
Click to EnlargeThe ThinkPad T430s has a solid selection of
ports, but most of them are on the back where it's a little harder to reach
them. The back side contains a USB 3.0 port, a USB 2.0 port that can charge
devices while sleeping, a mini DisplayPort, a VGA-out and an Ethernet port.
Considering that many notebooks are ditching VGA and some Ultrabooks such as
Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon eschew the all-important Ethernet port, we
appreciated having these options on the T430s.
Click to EnlargeThe left side contains a single USB 3.0
port, a headphone / mic jack and a 5-in-1 card reader. The right side houses
the optical drive, which can be replaced with an Ultrabay battery.
The 1.3-MP webcam captured sharp, bright images even in low
light. When we shot pictures of our face both under the fluorescent lights of
our newsroom and the shadowy corner of an unlit conference room, the camera
captured bright, colorful images of our features.
Performance
Click to EnlargeConfigured with 2.6-GHz Core i5-3320M CPU,
an Nvidia NVS 5200M discrete graphics chip with 1GB of VRAM and Optimus
graphics switching, 500GB 7,200-rpm hard drive, and 4GB of RAM, our review configuration
of the ThinkPad T430s provided solid performance that's good enough for any
productivity task and even some light gaming.
On PCMark 7, a synthetic benchmark that measures overall
system speed, the T430s scored a solid 2,460, slightly less than the 2,555
thin-and-light notebook category average. On Geekbench, another measure of
total PC performance, the T430s scored 5,529, just slightly above the 5,425
category average.
The 7,200-rpm, 500GB hard drive booted Windows 7
Professional (64-bit) in a speedy 34 seconds, much faster than the 52-second
category average and quite strong for a notebook without an SSD. On our file
transfer test, where we duplicate a 4.97GB folder of multimedia files, the
drive took a reasonable 2 minutes and 25 seconds. That's a rate of 35.1 MBps,
slightly higher than the 33.7 Mbps category average, but far slower than
systems configured with SSDs such as our review configuration of the Dell
Latitude E6430. That notebook copied files at a rate of 169.6 MBps.
Its Intel 3rd Generation Core i5 CPU enabled the ThinkPad
T430s to transcode an HD video to iPod Touch format in just 18 seconds using
Cyberlink Media Espresso. That time is much faster than the 59-second category
average, but slower than the 15 seconds turned in by the Dell Latitude E6430
and its 2.9-GHz Core i7-3420M CPU.
The T430s completed the LAPTOP Spreadsheet Macro Test, which
matches 20,000 names with their addresses, in a strong 4 minutes and 26
seconds. That showing is considerably better than the 6 minute and 5 second
category average, but a little slower than the Core i7-powered Dell Latitude
E6430's time of 4:11.
Graphics
Click to EnlargeThe ThinkPad T430s's optional Nvidia NVS
5200M graphics chip gives it enough oomph to play some mid-range games, watch
HD videos and perform graphics-oriented productivity tasks. On 3DMark 11, a
synthetic benchmark that measures overall graphics prowess, the T430s returned
a strong score of 1,105, significantly better than the 763 category average.
When we played "World of Warcraft," the ThinkPad
T430s managed a strong frame rate of 97 fps on autodetect settings. When we
turned the effects up, that rate dropped to a still-strong 44 fps.
However, the much more graphically intense "Batman:
Arkham City" was barely playable at low settings, managing just 25 fps. At
high settings, the ThinkPad T430s provided only a slide show-like 10 fps.
Battery
Life
Click to EnlargeWith its optional bay battery attached, the
ThinkPad T430s lasted a strong 8 hours and 45 minutes on the LAPTOP Battery
Test, which involves continuous surfing over Wi-Fi. That time is a few hours
less than the ThinkPad T430's mark of 13 hours and 25 minutes and the Dell
Latitude E6430's time of 10 hours and 37 minutes. However, both of those
notebooks weigh significantly more and, on the configurations we tested, came
with large 9-cell batteries that jut out of their backsides.
However, without the bay battery, the T430s managed a more
pedestrian time of 5:09, more than an hour less than the 6:33 thin-and-light
notebook category average. Because of the 3.5-hour improvement in battery life,
we highly recommend the bay battery, even though it adds $130 to the system's
price and 0.4 pounds to its weight.
Configurations
Our configuration of the Lenovo ThinkPad T430s carries a
street price of $1,130. For that, you get the 2.6-GHz Intel Core i5-3320M CPU,
Nvidia NVS 5200 discrete graphics, a 500 GB 7,200 rpm hard drive, a 1600 x 900
screen, 4GB of RAM, and the bay battery. However, the T430s starts at just $789
and comes with a 2.5-GHz Core i5-3310M CPU, a 1366 x 768 screen, a 320GB hard
drive, and the same Nvidia graphics chip as our unit, but no bay battery and no
backlit keyboard.
If you buy the ThinkPad T430s from Lenovo.com, you can
configure your system to order with your choice of CPU, screen resolution,
storage device, backlit or not backlit keyboard, discrete or integrated
graphics, and more. Whatever you choose, we highly recommend the 1600 x 900
screen upgrade ($50) and the bay battery ($130).
Software,
Security and Warranty
Click to EnlargeThe ThinkPad T430s comes preloaded with
Lenovo's standard set of ThinkVantage utilities, including Power Manager,
Airbag Protection that stops the hard drive if you drop the notebook, Password
Manager and Enhanced Backup and Restore.
Lenovo's Web conferencing utility is particularly useful
because it not only controls the webcam, but also allows you to configure the
dual-array microphone for single or multiple voices and keyboard noise
suppression.
Lenovo also includes its SimpleTap UI, which provides a
simple but attractive, tile-based environment filled with three screens of
mini-apps that launch popular websites like Facebook and Wikipedia. Though this
is an attractive-looking shell, it doesn't serve much purpose on a device
without a touch screen.
ThinkPad T430's fingerprint reader allows users to power on
the notebook and log into Windows with just a single swipe. In our testing,
configuring the reader was fast and easy. We simply launched the ThinkVantage
Fingerprint software, entered our Windows password and then chose to enroll one
of our fingers.
After swiping a few times to register our right index
finger, we powered down the computer and confirmed that the fingerprint reader
remained on, with a flashing green light directly below it. The first time we
swiped our finger, the system immediately recognized it and booted us right to
the desktop without requiring further input.
Lenovo bundles the ThinkPad T430s with a standard one-year
warranty on parts and labor. As with other ThinkPads, Lenovo offers warranty
upgrades, the ability to extend your warranty to four years or get on-site
service.
Verdict
Click to EnlargeWith its high-res screen, speedy processor
options, discrete graphics and best-in-class keyboard, Lenovo's ThinkPad T430s
is a superb business notebook. Users who want longer battery life should
consider the ThinkPad T430, which weighs 0.8 pounds more but lasts 13 hours on
a charge. Those who want the ultimate in business portability should consider
the ThinkPad X1 Carbon, which weighs just 3 pounds but has fewer ports and
lacks discrete graphics. However, if you want a thin-and-light business laptop
that provides an optimal balance between mobility and heavy-duty productivity,
the ThinkPad T430s is your best option.
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