Thanks so much for watching! Also a big thanks to Ulefone for sending over their tank of a smartphone. Use code "ARMOR18T" for $50 off www.ulefone.com/power-armor-18t.html
heyo, maybe bring this up with your sponsor but the webpage isint fully working(cant switch to cad, and i had to download chrome)! although i love the phone itself i cant buy one lol
I still use one of these as a daily driver. I pretty much maxed the specs out over the years after getting it second hand, right now it has 56GB RAM, 2*1TB M.2 SSD and a 480GB SATA SSD, along with a i7-6820HQ processor and an Nvidia Quadro M2000M 4GB GPU. Wonderful machine, still very reliable, and even with an old battery, has 4+ hours of battery life. If I replace it anytime soon, I'll surely buy something newer from the ThinkPad P series.
@@jbritain Is there anything wrong with a 6th gen i7 that isn't power limited? In fact, assuming a similar power limit, it's basically as fast as any H series cpu 10th gen and earlier. Also, for a lot of use cases 56 GB ram is pretty normal. For the work that I do, 64 GB ram is the minimum.
Used Thinkpads are always a bargain. Companies buy them in bulk, and when they're no longer needed they sell them in bulk, and for dirt cheap prices. My old company sold off their entire 300+ inventory of used Thinkpads for $100 a pop, and they all cost ~$1k each. Insane value lol.
Used HP ProBooks and EliteBooks also tend to be good options. It is kind of shocking how crappy most consumer laptops are when you compare them to business models from the same manufacturers.
This model is my main workstation since early 2017. It was $1.5k at the time. Still kicking, and I have no intention of changing it anytime soon. It’s surprisingly good for casual gaming too.
I got one for a great deal back in 2016 for college. I got the i7-6700hq, m1000m, 1080p, and upgraded it myself to 32gb of RAM and added a 512gb Sata ssd. I think total then was around 1100 after all the upgrades and it was fantastic for what I needed it for (dual booting with Linux, programming, and 3D modeling). Still have and use today, haven’t had the urge to get a new laptop yet.
I have a P51 that's only a year newer. It has a Xenon processor, 64 Gb of ECC RAM and 8Tb of SSD storage. Very few laptops could match those specs. The keyboard is great, the screen is fine and it's plenty quick for anything that I use it for, especially as everything is running from RAM. These are built like tanks, and I expect to be using it for quite a while. Very highly recommended.
My first laptop was Lenovo e330, and it has similar features: very tough build (it fell several times and still working fine) and same keyboard layout with red joystick. I really liked that laptop, and even though it was way older and less powerful than the one in video, it was still very convinient for work. I think one of it's greatest feature is how easy it is to upgrade -- I'm not really good with electronics maintenance, but I was able to change the CPU by myself. It would be really cool to see something like that in modern devices.
Very interesting, I recently got myself a used P51s, which, is not as good as the P50 or P51 due to the compromises done in the name of slimness. But I got a good deal for my country, given that it had bad RAM, a small SSD, and no external battery. When I got that sorted I now have a machine that I use for studying at home, dabbling in odd computer related projects, and the occasional gaming session when I feel like it. And with the new external battery I am easily getting 10+ hours of general use. Some days I have forgotten to plug the charger in and only notice late in the afternoon after classes, still having 30% left. Yes, the P50/P51 are better if you find a good local deal, but the "s" versions are pretty stellar in their own way.
This is a really interesting rabbit hole. I've been paying attention to these old mobile workstations on the used market. There's not much info out there on how Quadros perform in games though, so I find the value really hard to assess. Would love to see more of these videos! One of these for cheap might be a nice alternative to packing up my desktop for LAN parties. A Maxwell era machine at that price is a steal! Most options I've seen around that price point have a K2000M at best.
To get a rough idea on how they perform you can compare the chip to their consumer counterpart. For example, the quadro m2000m has the GM07 with 640 shaders, this is the same as the regular gtx 960m so it performs similarly (clocks speed can vary).
@@zadkielalfano Thank you! I am aware, but info on which GeForce is equivalent to which Quadro is still not that easy to come about. The T2000 on my work machine should perform between a 1050 and a 1050Ti according to my research. I got about 30 fps playing Valheim on it.
Explain to me why I am amazed by each new video. Each machine is chosen with great attention (history, IT culture, reliability, etc.), it's all so beautiful 🤩
I still use these at my company (i7 6820HQ, 48GB RAM, 512 GB M2 SSD, Quadro 2000M) for programming in AI field. A little note : The USB C port is not just a USB port but a thunderbolt 3 port, so you can use a thunderbolt E-GPU for more graphical power
The money also didn't go to getting a not shit screen this is a 2004 quality screen so if you watch more than 20 minutes of TH-cam or Netflix a day on your laptop this is not good.
Daily drove this thing for years, and it was quite the workhorse. I still miss the Knub and the amazing keyboard. Mine also had a Pantone color sensor for recalibration, so if you're buying one, keep an eye open for that? It'll be to the left of the touchpad, pretty much in the lower left corner iirc. The only thing I really wasn't happy with is the fans. When they're clean, they're ok for the most part, but if you have pets, some hairs will inevitably get stuck in the fans. The latter were advertised as "self-cleaning", and opening them up yourself would have voided the warranty (seriously - I asked). As you can see in the video, you can technically do it, but it's a bit of a hazzle. Still, it was a great machine overall - probably one of the best I've ever worked with. Edit: those things weigh just as much as it looks, and they sure aren't compact, either, but they did that for a reason. It really is designed as a workstation, and was among the best in its class at the time if memory serves. And if one looks as it may have taken a beating, then it just might have. I think I once watched a video of someone pouring half a bottle of water over theirs and it just kept running. The only weak point on the outside is the bottom cover. I've had multiple parts break off from that...
Consider some thicker paste that locks in place against thermal pumping of heat cycling. Something like Ceramique. When you get it open and the die is almost dry with all the paste off the sides, it was thermal pumping. Also consider setting 'discrete mode' in BIOS if abailable. It takes nVidia Optimus out of the equation, resulting in a nice boost.
@@The_Red_pandas Yep! Keep in mind it is a workstation, so it is bulky and kinda heavy. But performance-wise is super value. Also the screen is a pleasant surprise
I just bought this same computer refurbed on Amazon for 320. It is a great upgrade from what I was using. I am upgrading again in a couple of months and my nephew has dibs on this one. He will love it too!!
I'm a simple man. I see a ThinkPad, I click like. In all seriousness I still have a T430 from 2012, with a few upgrades it is still *very* capable and I have no doubt the P series will be very usable for years to come. As for the less than stellar display it is fairly easy to replace the stock panel with something of better quality, such as a 4K panel with better brightness and colors (battery life will take a hit compared to the 1080p panel).
I plan to do the same thing with my old girl (Latitude laptop purchased in 2013). Rather than retire her, I'll pass it to my folks who'll use it for web browsing, a few reports, video calls etc etc. Folks already have a monitor, keyboard, and mouse; I'll grab a Dell docking station so the folks can turn the laptop on and off at the docking station (rather than opening up the lid). Spec wise, it's got 16GB ram, 4800MQ processor, 250GB SSD. It's got more than enough grunt to do everything they want, and with a fresh install of W11, new paste and a good clean it'll (hopefully) provide many more years of service.
Hehe nice! I paid mine a few hundred bucks 3 years ago. Intel Xeon CPU, upgraded to 32GB RAM and an M2000 GPU. Added some m.2 SSDs and it's a blast working with that thing. Awesome and sturdy Workstation. Yours is optically in very bad condition. Mine looks brand new still today.
I purchase one of these about a year ago for about $400 USD. It had little physical wear and it was the Xeon E3 version CPU, and Quarto 2000M vid card. I picked this unit because my company has a boat load of the older docks for the older X200 laptops. This one was the absolute best unit with that bottom dock connection. Anyways is my primary go to unit. I currently has (2) 2TB NVMe drives, with 48GBs RAM. It flys with everything. Not one issue. Its by far one of the best Laptops I have purchased.
My employer replaced my current Lenovo P52, i7-8700, 32GB Ram, with a new dell precision. I talked them into letting me keep the P52 and its still the best laptop I've ever had. I really like the two sets of touchpad buttons and its just overall made really well. Currently running server 2019 with wds on it dual booting with kali linux.
As soon as I found out it has 4 ram slots paired with the 4GB dedicated GPU and the keyboard with the number keys, I realised this is an absolute unit. Though I have seen big Thinkpads before on YT, but this one is relatively new compared to those. Well I "found" one in my area just by googling. Expensive 3.48 times as much as I paid for my T480 though I sniped that on a auction. There's a P15 with a i7 10850H for sale for less than it. Though I wouldn't mind getting a P50.
P60 was and is a very nice computer. Buying a P50 second hand, puting the SSD and upgrading the memory for up to 64Gb the machine becomes probably the best equation price-quality in the notebook market.
You can do a max of 128gb on the non xeon p50 and p51. The 32gb ddr4 sticks were not out when those laptops were released. There's a few threads on the ThinkPad subreddit and forums of people successfully using 128gb of ram.
@@eobardthawne6962 Tks a lot. Will explore. I bought two units to make a cluster and simulate a main server in my office. Not because I really "need" but for the fun of it. Tks for the clue. I will be able to do 128Gb*2 then ... Will check !
Used one of these for at least 6years professionally. Xeon proc, M2000, 64gb ram, 2x 1tb ssd's and 4K screen. Absolute unit. And now used as daily home pc with Win11 on it. Still flying.
anyone looking for one of these in Australia , a seller on eBay is selling a few of them for $540 in A grade condition, I bought one myself and has no scratches, was advertised as b grade but it is in absolute mint condition ! great video Psivewri
MX4 is a pretty good paste for desktops but I wouldn't run it on a laptop or other small form factor machines. I've noticed that past 80-85 degrees it kind of cooks itself and loses thermal efficiency.
The feeble 8GB was the "placeholder" spec for people who immediately bought aftermarket RAM in order to avoid expensive Lenovo RAM. Usual for private owners was do what I did and install a more reasonable 32GB or more (my P52 have 96 and 128GB). The spinner hard disk was also a placeholder on those so equipped. If you want to populate all the slots I'd buy used RAM that passed Memtest since Ebay has plenty of takeout SODIMMs.
Watching this video as I just bought a refurbished P52 Workstation, which although I opted to go for a newer model as I found it on a discount, I am still impressed of these old P50 and P51 models.
I just picked a Dell Precision 5530 with a 4k touch screen, 32GB, and a 8th gen i9 for $400 on eBay. $3800 new in late 2018. Off-lease engineering laptops are the best computing deal period.
I brought one of these already refurbished with 32gb of ram and use it in my shed/workshop to control things and to run a bigger screen it also has a thunderbolt external drive chassis on it and it performs some file server tasks
Your video inspired me to buy a used P50 with xeon processor and M4000 quadro card. I maxed out the ram to 64gb. I use it daily for Meshmixer, Blender and my Einscan scanner. It is an excellent value for today's prices.
There is some additional performance to be had with machines of this era with the right ram upgrades as they'll use faster ram than what is documented but from personal testing some are not stable with four modules installed. As for gaming on Quadros they are ok have been gaming on them for nearly a decade now and driver issues are pretty rare.
These old Lenovo laptops were great. It's a pity they don't make them like they used to, with the easy upgradability. I used to have a T-420 and it was great. It's underpowered for todays internet, but back in the day it was such a good machine. Not having to open the entire cover to change the RAM or HD is so much better. You could even remove the optical drive and replace it with something else, like another hard drive. It also had literally every port known to man on it. I miss PCMCIA cards but I get that USB is far superior now.
I used to think the same, but in reality the upgradability isn't the most useful thing for most people. Take a t430 I can upgrade the ram, cpu, display, and hd to an SSD. Or I can find a t470s with a broken screen and fix it up for less than a couple hundred. I will have a laptop that is leagues lighter and way more energy efficient for about the cost of just the cpu upgrade for the t430. Of course this comparison isn't the greatest, but because businesses and schools regularly dump these laptops, it is usually cheaper and easier to just get a new model than trying to hunt down the best obsolete RAM configuration to squeeze more life out of your old laptop.
The stock display panels are rather uninspiring, and if you intend to keep using a used P50 for some time you could replace the keyboard to get a "new feeling" and replace the stock poor panel with a better one, like B156HAN01.2. Aliexpress can provide these at reasonable cost. Great job on repaste and disassembly. I did the same yesterday on a P51 with a broken fan. (without separating the display from the frame, just like you did). The P51 can also be a suitable option, similar CPU capacity, but the M2200 is a slightly better GPU compared to M2000M (or M1200 as it is called on P51)
~$150 is an absolute steal for something like that, considering they usually go for about $300. I bought one a few months ago for school and I don't regret a single cent.
I am gifting one of these to a student of mine, it was my workhorse until I needed to upgrade last year for a project that needed a specific GPU. I love the machine, it is build solid and works like a champ. Lenovo workstations are always a solid investment even 5 years past their release date.
4:30 "...I am using some Isopropyl-alcohol..." Heads up - many commercial versions of this contain other substances to "soften" the effects for regular use on hands. These chemicals do not help with cooling and leave an invisible film on the surfaces you have cleaned. I have done testing with these "supermarket" variants and they are markedly worse than the pure version you can get a pharmacy. Ignore the 70% and search for words like "With Moisturiser" - avoid these. The one you want is often called "Rubbing Alcohol" and is devoid of extra-nasties.
Amazingly well built laptop, I remember my T430s , never had one like that ever again. Also, this is the most environmental thing to do, re use the old but functional laptop instead of buying a new one for a few more years!
I have two of them. one from my office and then I got used with Intel Xeon + 40 GB Ram + 512GB NVMe SSD - 3 yrs of ownership and still get software updates..
My ex employer had a dozen of service P50, they are probably the best machines I had to care for, when they switched to P51S I got the chance to scoop all the used p50's for absolutely free!
I bought a P50 four months ago and the thing is very impressive. For $150USD it came with 2.9Mhz Intel Xeon processor, 8GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD. I added a 1TB Samsung MVNe M.2 and a 32GB Samsung DIMM and this thing is definitely a BEAST now. Great keyboard, performance and impressive graphics just like you said. It's not the most portable laptop especically with the 170w power supply though. But overall, I see myself using it for a long time after spending just $300USD for it and the (open box) upgrades.
I'm looking for one but the Zbook 15 G3 from HP looks so tempting. Then again, I have never seen a Thinkpad with a full sized keyboard. If it has backlighting, I'm sold
I've recenty got ThinkPad P51, which has similar specs and form factor to ThinkPad P50. It is great. It's not as thin or light nor small as my daily driver XPS 9520 with i9 CPU, but i7 7820HQ as well as Quadro M2200M with 4 gigs of VRAM in this P51 is still very respectable to this day. Keyboard is joy to use, as well as TrackPoint, which is something I really feel not having on my Dell. The ThinkPad model I have even has 4G connectivity and UHD screen! I can easily work outside with this bright screen and cellular. Battery lasts for about 4 hours of light use. When I push it harder, I have to look for a power outlet. 32GB of RAM is great to have. I got this laptop from my dad who upgraded to ThinkPad P16 Gen1. These laptops are proud of being called workstations.
Greetings! I recently won this on the auction too. Everything's great, couldn't be happier after I got it. Almost perfect laptop, like everything I wanted for a long time! BUT! I decided to do the same steps you did - to disassemble it and to clean the fans, repaste it, etc. After I assembled it back, everything was OK, _except_ the touchpad! On boot it beeps and shows the "PS/2 Mouse Not Detected" text for a short time. I've noticed that this is a common problem for Lenovo users, especially for the ThinkPad users. Some say that it's the software problem, and some on Reddit say it's gone after the cable replacement, mentioning specifically P50. After I opened the case with the touchpad, I noticed that the cable was kinda glued on. But there's no way I could damage it? I tried to check the pins with the multimeter, and everything seems to be fine… I don't know, I've ordered the cable replacement and see what's gonna happen, but maybe do you know what exactly an issue can it be?
THE CABLE REPLACEMENT DID IT!!! IT'S SO GOOD TO HAVE A COMPLETE LAPTOP AGAIN!!! 🤤🤤 But this is very-very-very, extremely odd. The old cable looks OK. Have no idea how could I damage it. Hopefully that'll never happen again!
Core i7, 4GB video card and 16GB of system ram, that system should be screaming fast. Either you have too many processes running in the back ground, corrupt windows files or bad motherboard.
I bought a Dell workstation with a Quadro and installed a GTX 980m to make a little gaming laptop. It was pretty cheap during the GPU crisis but nowadays you can get an old stock gaming laptop with a GTX 1070 for the same price.
I bought a used T series Thinkpad last week. It came with no os or license sticker anywhere, but I was pleasantly surprised it still had a digital pro license tied to the motherboard. No need to use MAS like I was planning.
Great video, Psivewri What a beauty. Yes, they are built like tanks and it's pretty intentional. Should it ever knock over by accident, have a drop, experience a spill, etc. the machine will be well-equipped to handle the damage inside and out. There are many videos out there nowadays of people testing the integrity of ThinkPads by running over them with their vehicles and they still usually survive. It's a testament to their quality. The magnesium structure frame they put in as shown in the video that is underneath the keyboard is what really helps give it a nice, satisfying, sturdy feel with *very* minimal flex. A lot of my ThinkPads have one, and some do not. The difference is quite noticeable. My T480s that I'm typing on right now has one and I love the keyboard feel as a result. Those peak temperatures are great results as well. The screens can be disappointing historically from Lenovo, but there is a 4K option available for the P50 with better gamut coverages. It will probably tank a lot of the graphical performance, though. For anyone thinking of acquiring one of these, here is the platform specification psref.lenovo.com/syspool/Sys/PDF/ThinkPad/ThinkPad_P50/ThinkPad_P50_Spec.PDF
After watching this video I dug around some auctions for this model. I bet some units, I ended up wining one for nearly $190 (US). But unfortunaly I forgot the fact that I am in Europe and have to pay postages plus import charges that are something around 140€. So, $330 for this exact model with 512Gb SSD and 16Gb Ram and M2000m. Not so good deal, but for sure I can't get better deal here in Portugal for something similar. Thank you for this review. I learned from you the existence of this laptop and I loved it at first glance
I got my Lenovo P50 a month ago for my work (Developer) And I can say this is a powerful laptop for everything I do. With 16GB RAM it work flawless with Linus Ubuntu (for work) and Windows 11 (for personal use) and love it so much. I dont bought this for gaming and I dont think I will use it for that. But for editing Videos, photos and other things its just what I always wanted.
I still daily drive mine. 4k display, Nvidia m2000m gpu, i7 6820HQ processor, 2* 1tb nvme SSD's and a 1tb sata SSD upgraded wifi 6e card and upgraded the ram to the actual max of 128gb since 32gb sticks where not released when the p50 came out.
I had a thinkpad t410, it was an amazing laptop until my aunt spilled coffee on it, could handle some older titles pretty well, didn't get too hot, shame the mobo was completely fried
I've got a kitted out P70 myself, great machine in almost every regard. The one huge issue is the battery, when it dies, you're stuck with a laptop with no battery. Lenovo will not sell you the batteries for these, the aftermarket batteries rage from non-working to non-fitting, and if you don't have a working battery in the machine you can't install chipset drivers.
From a fellow Aussie, you got lucky there. The thing I DO like about these machines is that if you can get a docking station from somewhere, these are an awesome machine and linux will run on them no problem
Thinkpads and dell latitudes are the best for linux. The lineup is mainly targeted by the people who write the drivers for the distro and kernel, so expect better compatibility relative to other laptops.
Dirt cheap way to really make a ThinkPad top lid almost like brand new. 1. Pour some water on the lid 2. Use magic eraser and scrub for about 2-3 minutes in different directions 3. Remove water with microfiber cloth 4. Add some Nivea cream on the lid 5. Gently rub it with microfiber cloth 6. Remove excess cream Tested many times. Of course if won't remove any deep scratches, but it will nonetheless make the lid really good looking.
the t570 is also good laptop. i use lenovo t570 with 2gb Nvidia card it also very good. and has two battery in it. it has usb c Thunder blot and andio jack usb a 3 and hdmi so modern connectors. with intel core i7 7th gen cpu my i have 24gb if ram since there only 2 ram slots
I am not a fan of Lenovo's consumer desktop or laptop. Many years ago, I had bought many USED workstations from Lenovo, those machine never broken down. I recently bought a X1 Yoga (3rd Gen) and really impressed with it. End up got P50. 16GB RAM, 500 M.2 MVMe. I am lucky that I got my from a eBay seller who I bought X1 Yoga (14" is too small for me) from him last year. The condition is really look like a 1-2 year old. He still has one on sale with 32G. I love this machine. a little heavy but is better than I expect. P70 would be too big to carry around. But the built quality is amazing. Losing 25% of battery life, and 20% of NVMe life. For a 6 year old machine, that is acceptable. Amazing value for low $200 including tax and shipping. P50 is still not well know by consumer, not too many bidding those units. T480 is nice but screen of 14" is too small for me.
I just bought a t580 with a 4k screen, 16gb of ram, an mx150 and a broken HDD connector for $200AUD. Mainly bought it to mess around on linux and play cdda. I'm an addict.
Thanks so much for watching! Also a big thanks to Ulefone for sending over their tank of a smartphone. Use code "ARMOR18T" for $50 off www.ulefone.com/power-armor-18t.html
That phone looks awesome
What usb do you use? And if you use Time Machine for Mac which usb would you recommend for that?
heyo, maybe bring this up with your sponsor but the webpage isint fully working(cant switch to cad, and i had to download chrome)! although i love the phone itself i cant buy one lol
also keep up the good pc reviews, Love em
Lol the box was upside down 😅
I love that there’s a drainage hole for the keyboard for spills.
I still use one of these as a daily driver. I pretty much maxed the specs out over the years after getting it second hand, right now it has 56GB RAM, 2*1TB M.2 SSD and a 480GB SATA SSD, along with a i7-6820HQ processor and an Nvidia Quadro M2000M 4GB GPU. Wonderful machine, still very reliable, and even with an old battery, has 4+ hours of battery life. If I replace it anytime soon, I'll surely buy something newer from the ThinkPad P series.
56GB RAM? HOW? 😳
Why the hell would you need that much RAM on a 6th gen i7
I have 3 16GB sticks, and also an 8GB one.
I work with large amounts of textual data, so I often need a lot of RAM. :)
@@jbritain Is there anything wrong with a 6th gen i7 that isn't power limited? In fact, assuming a similar power limit, it's basically as fast as any H series cpu 10th gen and earlier.
Also, for a lot of use cases 56 GB ram is pretty normal. For the work that I do, 64 GB ram is the minimum.
@@vivek_v I don't know enough about the kind of workloads that amount of RAM is used for so I made an assumption, I guess I assumed wrong!
Used Thinkpads are always a bargain. Companies buy them in bulk, and when they're no longer needed they sell them in bulk, and for dirt cheap prices. My old company sold off their entire 300+ inventory of used Thinkpads for $100 a pop, and they all cost ~$1k each. Insane value lol.
I bought one for 200 Euros with 2y of guarantee. Looks like new.
Used HP ProBooks and EliteBooks also tend to be good options.
It is kind of shocking how crappy most consumer laptops are when you compare them to business models from the same manufacturers.
True. I bought a ThinkPad T570 3 years ago for very cheap and it's still solid.
This model is my main workstation since early 2017. It was $1.5k at the time. Still kicking, and I have no intention of changing it anytime soon. It’s surprisingly good for casual gaming too.
Does yours have some cracks near the palm rest?
I got one for a great deal back in 2016 for college. I got the i7-6700hq, m1000m, 1080p, and upgraded it myself to 32gb of RAM and added a 512gb Sata ssd. I think total then was around 1100 after all the upgrades and it was fantastic for what I needed it for (dual booting with Linux, programming, and 3D modeling). Still have and use today, haven’t had the urge to get a new laptop yet.
How does it fair with VR Gaming?
I have a P51 that's only a year newer. It has a Xenon processor, 64 Gb of ECC RAM and 8Tb of SSD storage. Very few laptops could match those specs. The keyboard is great, the screen is fine and it's plenty quick for anything that I use it for, especially as everything is running from RAM. These are built like tanks, and I expect to be using it for quite a while. Very highly recommended.
we need more videos like this. Old laptop restorations
Gt 740m
My first laptop was Lenovo e330, and it has similar features: very tough build (it fell several times and still working fine) and same keyboard layout with red joystick. I really liked that laptop, and even though it was way older and less powerful than the one in video, it was still very convinient for work.
I think one of it's greatest feature is how easy it is to upgrade -- I'm not really good with electronics maintenance, but I was able to change the CPU by myself. It would be really cool to see something like that in modern devices.
It's worth noting that this model has a thunderbolt 3 port! if the GPU isn't enough for you, there is always an option for an easy eGPU!
Very interesting, I recently got myself a used P51s, which, is not as good as the P50 or P51 due to the compromises done in the name of slimness. But I got a good deal for my country, given that it had bad RAM, a small SSD, and no external battery. When I got that sorted I now have a machine that I use for studying at home, dabbling in odd computer related projects, and the occasional gaming session when I feel like it. And with the new external battery I am easily getting 10+ hours of general use. Some days I have forgotten to plug the charger in and only notice late in the afternoon after classes, still having 30% left.
Yes, the P50/P51 are better if you find a good local deal, but the "s" versions are pretty stellar in their own way.
This is a really interesting rabbit hole. I've been paying attention to these old mobile workstations on the used market. There's not much info out there on how Quadros perform in games though, so I find the value really hard to assess. Would love to see more of these videos! One of these for cheap might be a nice alternative to packing up my desktop for LAN parties.
A Maxwell era machine at that price is a steal! Most options I've seen around that price point have a K2000M at best.
To get a rough idea on how they perform you can compare the chip to their consumer counterpart.
For example, the quadro m2000m has the GM07 with 640 shaders, this is the same as the regular gtx 960m so it performs similarly (clocks speed can vary).
@@zadkielalfano Thank you! I am aware, but info on which GeForce is equivalent to which Quadro is still not that easy to come about. The T2000 on my work machine should perform between a 1050 and a 1050Ti according to my research. I got about 30 fps playing Valheim on it.
Landed a precision 7710 for $136 shipped a couple months back with an m5000m installed and pretty nice so far.
Pp0
its about the equivalent of the laptop version of a gtx 1050
Explain to me why I am amazed by each new video.
Each machine is chosen with great attention (history, IT culture, reliability, etc.), it's all so beautiful 🤩
Congratulations you’ve been selected for our giveaway please send me a message on telegram to claim your price ✅
Im still using predecesor, Thinkpad W541, i7 4gen, 16gb of ram, 512 ssd - great piece of tech!
I still use these at my company (i7 6820HQ, 48GB RAM, 512 GB M2 SSD, Quadro 2000M) for programming in AI field.
A little note : The USB C port is not just a USB port but a thunderbolt 3 port, so you can use a thunderbolt E-GPU for more graphical power
48 gigs of ram?
@@molotovick 2x16gb+2x8gb
I believed he mentioned it being Thunderbolt 3 in the video.
@@SebisRandomTech glad to see you back and active again
@@TheotanyaSama is quadro capable?
Interesting how much performance you can get out of an unimpressive looking device.
Well look at it this way, the budget not spent on look is going to the performance. I'll take performance over look anyday.
This laptop was probably not less than 2000$ new. It has a quad core 6th gen i7 when average laptops have 6th gen dualcore.
The money also didn't go to getting a not shit screen this is a 2004 quality screen so if you watch more than 20 minutes of TH-cam or Netflix a day on your laptop this is not good.
Good looking laptop normally means sacrificed performance
yap is the most powerful gaming laptop in the world.
I agree - older business / worktation Lenovos and Dell laptops are still great value, quite common and easy to open for self repairs or cleaning.
Daily drove this thing for years, and it was quite the workhorse. I still miss the Knub and the amazing keyboard. Mine also had a Pantone color sensor for recalibration, so if you're buying one, keep an eye open for that? It'll be to the left of the touchpad, pretty much in the lower left corner iirc.
The only thing I really wasn't happy with is the fans. When they're clean, they're ok for the most part, but if you have pets, some hairs will inevitably get stuck in the fans. The latter were advertised as "self-cleaning", and opening them up yourself would have voided the warranty (seriously - I asked). As you can see in the video, you can technically do it, but it's a bit of a hazzle.
Still, it was a great machine overall - probably one of the best I've ever worked with.
Edit: those things weigh just as much as it looks, and they sure aren't compact, either, but they did that for a reason. It really is designed as a workstation, and was among the best in its class at the time if memory serves. And if one looks as it may have taken a beating, then it just might have. I think I once watched a video of someone pouring half a bottle of water over theirs and it just kept running. The only weak point on the outside is the bottom cover. I've had multiple parts break off from that...
Consider some thicker paste that locks in place against thermal pumping of heat cycling. Something like Ceramique. When you get it open and the die is almost dry with all the paste off the sides, it was thermal pumping.
Also consider setting 'discrete mode' in BIOS if abailable. It takes nVidia Optimus out of the equation, resulting in a nice boost.
I remember when I had Thinkpads. Glad to see more of them on the channel!
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20 minutes after watching this video I bought my P50. Currently waiting for delivery but I'm sure it will cover every need I'll have
Would you recommend buying it?
@@The_Red_pandas Yep! Keep in mind it is a workstation, so it is bulky and kinda heavy. But performance-wise is super value. Also the screen is a pleasant surprise
I just bought this same computer refurbed on Amazon for 320. It is a great upgrade from what I was using. I am upgrading again in a couple of months and my nephew has dibs on this one. He will love it too!!
I'm a simple man. I see a ThinkPad, I click like.
In all seriousness I still have a T430 from 2012, with a few upgrades it is still *very* capable and I have no doubt the P series will be very usable for years to come. As for the less than stellar display it is fairly easy to replace the stock panel with something of better quality, such as a 4K panel with better brightness and colors (battery life will take a hit compared to the 1080p panel).
I've used one of these recently at my engineering class! Brand new! there was 16GB on my unit. it is a snappy laptop.
I plan to do the same thing with my old girl (Latitude laptop purchased in 2013). Rather than retire her, I'll pass it to my folks who'll use it for web browsing, a few reports, video calls etc etc.
Folks already have a monitor, keyboard, and mouse; I'll grab a Dell docking station so the folks can turn the laptop on and off at the docking station (rather than opening up the lid).
Spec wise, it's got 16GB ram, 4800MQ processor, 250GB SSD. It's got more than enough grunt to do everything they want, and with a fresh install of W11, new paste and a good clean it'll (hopefully) provide many more years of service.
Hehe nice! I paid mine a few hundred bucks 3 years ago. Intel Xeon CPU, upgraded to 32GB RAM and an M2000 GPU. Added some m.2 SSDs and it's a blast working with that thing. Awesome and sturdy Workstation. Yours is optically in very bad condition. Mine looks brand new still today.
I love this laptop it's the perfect combo of modern and classic laptop and it sorta matches the ulefone not gonna lie perfect video and sponsor
I purchase one of these about a year ago for about $400 USD. It had little physical wear and it was the Xeon E3 version CPU, and Quarto 2000M vid card. I picked this unit because my company has a boat load of the older docks for the older X200 laptops. This one was the absolute best unit with that bottom dock connection. Anyways is my primary go to unit. I currently has (2) 2TB NVMe drives, with 48GBs RAM. It flys with everything. Not one issue. Its by far one of the best Laptops I have purchased.
My employer replaced my current Lenovo P52, i7-8700, 32GB Ram, with a new dell precision. I talked them into letting me keep the P52 and its still the best laptop I've ever had. I really like the two sets of touchpad buttons and its just overall made really well. Currently running server 2019 with wds on it dual booting with kali linux.
As soon as I found out it has 4 ram slots paired with the 4GB dedicated GPU and the keyboard with the number keys, I realised this is an absolute unit.
Though I have seen big Thinkpads before on YT, but this one is relatively new compared to those.
Well I "found" one in my area just by googling. Expensive 3.48 times as much as I paid for my T480 though I sniped that on a auction.
There's a P15 with a i7 10850H for sale for less than it.
Though I wouldn't mind getting a P50.
P60 was and is a very nice computer. Buying a P50 second hand, puting the SSD and upgrading the memory for up to 64Gb the machine becomes probably the best equation price-quality in the notebook market.
You can do a max of 128gb on the non xeon p50 and p51. The 32gb ddr4 sticks were not out when those laptops were released. There's a few threads on the ThinkPad subreddit and forums of people successfully using 128gb of ram.
@@eobardthawne6962 Tks a lot. Will explore. I bought two units to make a cluster and simulate a main server in my office. Not because I really "need" but for the fun of it. Tks for the clue. I will be able to do 128Gb*2 then ... Will check !
Used one of these for at least 6years professionally. Xeon proc, M2000, 64gb ram, 2x 1tb ssd's and 4K screen. Absolute unit. And now used as daily home pc with Win11 on it. Still flying.
I have the same. I didn't know that it is windows 11 supported. How did you do it? Thanks
@@mingcuangcu just bypass it
Will love to see an upgrade with case painting and customisation
I did pretty much the same thing a few years back but with a T440S. Just put in a cheap M.2 SSD and another stick of ram. Still using it to this day.
anyone looking for one of these in Australia , a seller on eBay is selling a few of them for $540 in A grade condition, I bought one myself and has no scratches, was advertised as b grade but it is in absolute mint condition ! great video Psivewri
MX4 is a pretty good paste for desktops but I wouldn't run it on a laptop or other small form factor machines. I've noticed that past 80-85 degrees it kind of cooks itself and loses thermal efficiency.
The feeble 8GB was the "placeholder" spec for people who immediately bought aftermarket RAM in order to avoid expensive Lenovo RAM. Usual for private owners was do what I did and install a more reasonable 32GB or more (my P52 have 96 and 128GB). The spinner hard disk was also a placeholder on those so equipped. If you want to populate all the slots I'd buy used RAM that passed Memtest since Ebay has plenty of takeout SODIMMs.
Watching this video as I just bought a refurbished P52 Workstation, which although I opted to go for a newer model as I found it on a discount, I am still impressed of these old P50 and P51 models.
I just picked a Dell Precision 5530 with a 4k touch screen, 32GB, and a 8th gen i9 for $400 on eBay. $3800 new in late 2018. Off-lease engineering laptops are the best computing deal period.
Wow it has MXM-A 3.0 GPU interface.
Which means technically you can use MXM External GPU dock and hook it up to GTX 1080 Ti
we need more content like this
A psivewri video really hits different!
i've never seen such nice lighting. got u lookin majestic
I brought one of these already refurbished with 32gb of ram and use it in my shed/workshop to control things and to run a bigger screen it also has a thunderbolt external drive chassis on it and it performs some file server tasks
Your video inspired me to buy a used P50 with xeon processor and M4000 quadro card. I maxed out the ram to 64gb. I use it daily for Meshmixer, Blender and my Einscan scanner. It is an excellent value for today's prices.
There is some additional performance to be had with machines of this era with the right ram upgrades as they'll use faster ram than what is documented but from personal testing some are not stable with four modules installed. As for gaming on Quadros they are ok have been gaming on them for nearly a decade now and driver issues are pretty rare.
This the most underrated channel
Good job!
These old Lenovo laptops were great. It's a pity they don't make them like they used to, with the easy upgradability. I used to have a T-420 and it was great. It's underpowered for todays internet, but back in the day it was such a good machine. Not having to open the entire cover to change the RAM or HD is so much better. You could even remove the optical drive and replace it with something else, like another hard drive. It also had literally every port known to man on it. I miss PCMCIA cards but I get that USB is far superior now.
I used to think the same, but in reality the upgradability isn't the most useful thing for most people.
Take a t430 I can upgrade the ram, cpu, display, and hd to an SSD. Or I can find a t470s with a broken screen and fix it up for less than a couple hundred. I will have a laptop that is leagues lighter and way more energy efficient for about the cost of just the cpu upgrade for the t430.
Of course this comparison isn't the greatest, but because businesses and schools regularly dump these laptops, it is usually cheaper and easier to just get a new model than trying to hunt down the best obsolete RAM configuration to squeeze more life out of your old laptop.
Kindly post more of this content... Very educative
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The stock display panels are rather uninspiring, and if you intend to keep using a used P50 for some time you could replace the keyboard to get a "new feeling" and replace the stock poor panel with a better one, like B156HAN01.2. Aliexpress can provide these at reasonable cost. Great job on repaste and disassembly. I did the same yesterday on a P51 with a broken fan. (without separating the display from the frame, just like you did). The P51 can also be a suitable option, similar CPU capacity, but the M2200 is a slightly better GPU compared to M2000M (or M1200 as it is called on P51)
~$150 is an absolute steal for something like that, considering they usually go for about $300. I bought one a few months ago for school and I don't regret a single cent.
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@@psivewri0_tgram935 thats the most retarded scam i think ive ever seen
I am gifting one of these to a student of mine, it was my workhorse until I needed to upgrade last year for a project that needed a specific GPU. I love the machine, it is build solid and works like a champ. Lenovo workstations are always a solid investment even 5 years past their release date.
4:30 "...I am using some Isopropyl-alcohol..." Heads up - many commercial versions of this contain other substances to "soften" the effects for regular use on hands. These chemicals do not help with cooling and leave an invisible film on the surfaces you have cleaned. I have done testing with these "supermarket" variants and they are markedly worse than the pure version you can get a pharmacy. Ignore the 70% and search for words like "With Moisturiser" - avoid these. The one you want is often called "Rubbing Alcohol" and is devoid of extra-nasties.
I have a thinkpad similar to this. It's perfect for my needs. Also the case and hinges don't break, which is nice.
Thanks for the surprisingly informative video.
One question : "is eucalyptus oil good for wiping carbon fiber surfaces?"
It's actually, really nice, and appears to have had an active and happy life. I cant believe Skylake was almost 9 years ago.
Amazingly well built laptop, I remember my T430s , never had one like that ever again. Also, this is the most environmental thing to do, re use the old but functional laptop instead of buying a new one for a few more years!
Working for IBM I serviced several of these, always a lot of fun to replace system boards in these. Lol very solid laptops though.
i've been looking for a tank portable pc like that for 2 years, and i still haven't found one.
you lucky dog, you!
Those ThinkPads are pretty solid laptops
Brilliant video, found every info i was looking for 🤝
I have two of them. one from my office and then I got used with Intel Xeon + 40 GB Ram + 512GB NVMe SSD - 3 yrs of ownership and still get software updates..
My ex employer had a dozen of service P50, they are probably the best machines I had to care for, when they switched to P51S I got the chance to scoop all the used p50's for absolutely free!
Magic eraser and some water cleans the rubber coating very well! Basically sands off a tiny top layer. Made my 6th gen X1 Carbon lid look brand new.
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I bought a P50 four months ago and the thing is very impressive. For $150USD it came with 2.9Mhz Intel Xeon processor, 8GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD. I added a 1TB Samsung MVNe M.2 and a 32GB Samsung DIMM and this thing is definitely a BEAST now. Great keyboard, performance and impressive graphics just like you said. It's not the most portable laptop especically with the 170w power supply though. But overall, I see myself using it for a long time after spending just $300USD for it and the (open box) upgrades.
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I use this for schoolwork. Love it.
I'm looking for one but the Zbook 15 G3 from HP looks so tempting. Then again, I have never seen a Thinkpad with a full sized keyboard. If it has backlighting, I'm sold
They do have backlighting on the newer versions.
They're certainly solid devices and well made for dissembly. Did you record fresh benchmarks are unit temperatures after your cleanup work?
Amazing review love your work true legend never forgot love older tech great stuff keeping the faith 💞
When it comes to ThinkPad, it means everything you need on a laptop
I bought an old 2015 HP Z440 for $240 in Sydney. E1620v3 16 g ddr4 500 g SSD Quadro K2200. Very good upgrades available.
These Magic Erasers are really great for removing scratches on the rubber finish.
I've recenty got ThinkPad P51, which has similar specs and form factor to ThinkPad P50. It is great. It's not as thin or light nor small as my daily driver XPS 9520 with i9 CPU, but i7 7820HQ as well as Quadro M2200M with 4 gigs of VRAM in this P51 is still very respectable to this day. Keyboard is joy to use, as well as TrackPoint, which is something I really feel not having on my Dell.
The ThinkPad model I have even has 4G connectivity and UHD screen! I can easily work outside with this bright screen and cellular. Battery lasts for about 4 hours of light use. When I push it harder, I have to look for a power outlet. 32GB of RAM is great to have.
I got this laptop from my dad who upgraded to ThinkPad P16 Gen1. These laptops are proud of being called workstations.
how did you get the 4g Connectivity? Is it included in p51?
If you are a gamer and you want an affordable laptop but you can't afford one, I recommend this laptop.
I love your videos so much, becouse you show some old stuff that can still be used and not only the shiny new things
if its not going to the bin then its awesome! well done sir!
My P50 runs arch flawlessly. Mainly running i3wm, FireFox Aurora, tmux / vim, mainly for XSLT and server side swift development.
Greetings!
I recently won this on the auction too. Everything's great, couldn't be happier after I got it. Almost perfect laptop, like everything I wanted for a long time!
BUT! I decided to do the same steps you did - to disassemble it and to clean the fans, repaste it, etc. After I assembled it back, everything was OK, _except_ the touchpad! On boot it beeps and shows the "PS/2 Mouse Not Detected" text for a short time.
I've noticed that this is a common problem for Lenovo users, especially for the ThinkPad users. Some say that it's the software problem, and some on Reddit say it's gone after the cable replacement, mentioning specifically P50. After I opened the case with the touchpad, I noticed that the cable was kinda glued on. But there's no way I could damage it? I tried to check the pins with the multimeter, and everything seems to be fine… I don't know, I've ordered the cable replacement and see what's gonna happen, but maybe do you know what exactly an issue can it be?
@@hicham5778 Nope. Tried to rollback to the BIOS version it had when arrived to me - didn't help + keeps updating back to version 1.70.
@@hicham5778 Nothing yet, have ordered the touchpad cable in China, will arrive in about 2 weeks. Will see.
THE CABLE REPLACEMENT DID IT!!! IT'S SO GOOD TO HAVE A COMPLETE LAPTOP AGAIN!!! 🤤🤤
But this is very-very-very, extremely odd. The old cable looks OK. Have no idea how could I damage it. Hopefully that'll never happen again!
Best TH-cam and content award goes to you
Core i7, 4GB video card and 16GB of system ram, that system should be screaming fast. Either you have too many processes running in the back ground, corrupt windows files or bad motherboard.
I bought a Dell workstation with a Quadro and installed a GTX 980m to make a little gaming laptop. It was pretty cheap during the GPU crisis but nowadays you can get an old stock gaming laptop with a GTX 1070 for the same price.
I have affinity of early P series ThinkPads, as they're closest thing to original IBM æsthetic, until Lenovo redesign that shape in current P16
I just googled P16 - look like cheapest E series ....
@@abeard1 …and red accent around port location that looks cheap
I bought a used T series Thinkpad last week. It came with no os or license sticker anywhere, but I was pleasantly surprised it still had a digital pro license tied to the motherboard. No need to use MAS like I was planning.
Great video, Psivewri
What a beauty. Yes, they are built like tanks and it's pretty intentional. Should it ever knock over by accident, have a drop, experience a spill, etc. the machine will be well-equipped to handle the damage inside and out. There are many videos out there nowadays of people testing the integrity of ThinkPads by running over them with their vehicles and they still usually survive. It's a testament to their quality.
The magnesium structure frame they put in as shown in the video that is underneath the keyboard is what really helps give it a nice, satisfying, sturdy feel with *very* minimal flex. A lot of my ThinkPads have one, and some do not. The difference is quite noticeable. My T480s that I'm typing on right now has one and I love the keyboard feel as a result.
Those peak temperatures are great results as well.
The screens can be disappointing historically from Lenovo, but there is a 4K option available for the P50 with better gamut coverages. It will probably tank a lot of the graphical performance, though.
For anyone thinking of acquiring one of these, here is the platform specification psref.lenovo.com/syspool/Sys/PDF/ThinkPad/ThinkPad_P50/ThinkPad_P50_Spec.PDF
After watching this video I dug around some auctions for this model. I bet some units, I ended up wining one for nearly $190 (US). But unfortunaly I forgot the fact that I am in Europe and have to pay postages plus import charges that are something around 140€. So, $330 for this exact model with 512Gb SSD and 16Gb Ram and M2000m. Not so good deal, but for sure I can't get better deal here in Portugal for something similar. Thank you for this review. I learned from you the existence of this laptop and I loved it at first glance
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Ok Mr Corteks
I got my Lenovo P50 a month ago for my work (Developer) And I can say this is a powerful laptop for everything I do. With 16GB RAM it work flawless with Linus Ubuntu (for work) and Windows 11 (for personal use) and love it so much. I dont bought this for gaming and I dont think I will use it for that. But for editing Videos, photos and other things its just what I always wanted.
I still daily drive mine. 4k display, Nvidia m2000m gpu, i7 6820HQ processor, 2* 1tb nvme SSD's and a 1tb sata SSD upgraded wifi 6e card and upgraded the ram to the actual max of 128gb since 32gb sticks where not released when the p50 came out.
I had a thinkpad t410, it was an amazing laptop until my aunt spilled coffee on it, could handle some older titles pretty well, didn't get too hot, shame the mobo was completely fried
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Love watching these kind of videos
I've got a kitted out P70 myself, great machine in almost every regard.
The one huge issue is the battery, when it dies, you're stuck with a laptop with no battery.
Lenovo will not sell you the batteries for these, the aftermarket batteries rage from non-working to non-fitting, and if you don't have a working battery in the machine you can't install chipset drivers.
From a fellow Aussie, you got lucky there. The thing I DO like about these machines is that if you can get a docking station from somewhere, these are an awesome machine and linux will run on them no problem
Thinkpads and dell latitudes are the best for linux. The lineup is mainly targeted by the people who write the drivers for the distro and kernel, so expect better compatibility relative to other laptops.
You missed the opportunity to add aditional fins to the heatpipes to aid in cooling and future proofing for potential overclocking!
I have p71 thinkpad, has 64 gb ram, 6 gb p3000, 32 gb integrated, 4k display and xeon processor and it works good.
Dirt cheap way to really make a ThinkPad top lid almost like brand new.
1. Pour some water on the lid
2. Use magic eraser and scrub for about 2-3 minutes in different directions
3. Remove water with microfiber cloth
4. Add some Nivea cream on the lid
5. Gently rub it with microfiber cloth
6. Remove excess cream
Tested many times. Of course if won't remove any deep scratches, but it will nonetheless make the lid really good looking.
which watch are you wearing in this video? It looks very nice
the t570 is also good laptop. i use lenovo t570 with 2gb Nvidia card it also very good. and has two battery in it. it has usb c Thunder blot and andio jack usb a 3 and hdmi so modern connectors. with intel core i7 7th gen cpu my i have 24gb if ram since there only 2 ram slots
Lenovo laptops are so good, I bought an Y730 in 2019 and it still looks like brand new
Gotta take it out of the box and start using lol
I’m trying to build a mobile workstation from a dell latitude 3330, I’m excited!
I am not a fan of Lenovo's consumer desktop or laptop. Many years ago, I had bought many USED workstations from Lenovo, those machine never broken down. I recently bought a X1 Yoga (3rd Gen) and really impressed with it. End up got P50. 16GB RAM, 500 M.2 MVMe. I am lucky that I got my from a eBay seller who I bought X1 Yoga (14" is too small for me) from him last year. The condition is really look like a 1-2 year old. He still has one on sale with 32G. I love this machine. a little heavy but is better than I expect. P70 would be too big to carry around. But the built quality is amazing. Losing 25% of battery life, and 20% of NVMe life. For a 6 year old machine, that is acceptable. Amazing value for low $200 including tax and shipping. P50 is still not well know by consumer, not too many bidding those units. T480 is nice but screen of 14" is too small for me.
I just bought a t580 with a 4k screen, 16gb of ram, an mx150 and a broken HDD connector for $200AUD. Mainly bought it to mess around on linux and play cdda. I'm an addict.