Lenovo ThinkPad X61 Review

Lenovo ThinkPad X61 Review

by Kevin O’Brien

The Lenovo ThinkPad X61is an ultraportable business laptop geared to individuals who demand the best. Like its larger brothers of the ThinkPad line, it shares all of the same rugged features, as well as the creature comforts of a full-size keyboard. The X61 looks as if Lenovo took a ThinkPad T60and shrunk it down by 30 percent. Although it is much smaller than its counterparts, it is every bit as fast. This model came loaded with a 7200rpm hard drive, 2GHz Core 2 Duo processor, and 2GB of RAM. Light business travelers can rest easy knowing they didn’t sacrifice anything but weight when they bring the X61 on the road.

Specifications of the X61 being reviewed:

  • CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo 2.0GHz T7300
  • Chipset: Intel 965 Express
  • Memory: 2048MB DDR2 PC5300 (2x 1024MB)
  • Hard Drive: 7200RPM 100GB Hitachi (HTS721010G9SA00) SATA
  • Screen: 12.1″ 1024×768 LCD
  • Optical Drive: LG GCC-4247N DVD/CDRW (Through X6 UltraBase)
    • 8x DVD-ROM
    • 24x CD-R
    • 24x CD-RWX
  • GPU:  Intel X3100 Integrated
  • Network/Wireless: Intel Wireless 4965AGN, 1Gb Ethernet Card, Verizon WWAN Modem and Bluetooth
  • Inputs: 95 Key Keyboard with Three Button Touchpoint
  • Buttons: Power, ThinkVantage, Power, Volume Up and Down, Mute, and WiFi/Bluetooth On/Off Switch.
  • Slots: PCMCIA/PC-Card
  • Battery: Eight Cell
  • Dimensions:
    • Width: 10.58″, With WWAN Antenna: 10.91
    • Depth: 8.35,With 8 Cell Battery: 9.37
    • Height: 1.41″
  • Weight: 3lbs 10.6oz
  • Operating System: Windows Vista Business
  • Warranty: One Year Warranty
  • Price as Configured: $2033 ($1863 without UltraBase and Optical Drive)

Lenovo ThinkPad X61s on the left, X61 on the right (view large image)

Design and Build

ThinkPad X61 (view large image)

The X61 is a durable ultraportable computer. It shares many design characteristics with the rest of the ThinkPad line including its internal unibody structure, full-size keyboard, stainless steel display hinges, and complete port selection. The fit and finish is astounding, with no creaks anywhere (not even a small creak), as well as little unused space. The outside case is very strong giving it a good deal of protection when thrown into a briefcase or be even a tall purse. It really seems like a handbag sized ThinkPad down to the smallest detail.

Thickness of X61 compared to Blackberry Pearl (view large image)

For upgrades and repairs that might come up down the road, the X61 has the user in mind with easy to remove access panels and covers. The most frequent upgrade items being the HD and RAM are accessed through panels on the bottom and side of the X61. Other items such as the keyboard, wireless cards, and backup battery can be reached by removing a handful of labeled screws on the bottom, and easily popped out. For my first time taking it apart it took roughly three minutes to figure out how the panels came off once the screws were out. I found almost little to no risk of breaking other components during this process, unlike other laptops which are not so user friendly in this area.

One concern worth mentioning is the amount of heat that can build up below the palm rest after the computer has been powered up for about an hour. The right side was fairly warm to the touch, and when I took the laptop apart to find the cause of the heat, I found that both the WiFi and WWAN cards were directly under this area. Lenovo includes an additional fan with models equipped with the WWAN card, but this not activate if the card is not in use. During my testing, I was only using the WiFi card for internet access. Since items are packed quite densely in this ultraportable laptop, it is hard to win on all design points.

Input and Output Ports

Front

Front view of X61s and X61 (view large image)

The only items in the front of the laptop is the screen latch and wireless on/off switch

Left Side

Left side view of X61 on top of X61s (view large image)

Left to right we have the CPU heatsink output grill, USB Port, VGA connector, 1Gb LAN, PCMCIA Slot with SD card reader below it.

Right Side

Right side view of X61 on top of X61s(view large image)

Left to right we have the mini 4 pin firewire port, 2 USB connectors, headphone/mic jacks, HD access panel, 56k modem jack, power plug, and Kensington lock port.

Back

One really wide battery

Keyboard and Touchpoint

Keyboard view of X61s and X61 (view large image)

The most surprising thing about the 12 X series laptops is it has a full-size keyboard. The primary letters, numbers, and function keys are all the same size as the larger 14 and 15 models, with only the outer keys reduced in size. This gives you a comfortable typing surface, that once you get used to the odd size outer keys, becomes a pleasure to type on. Build quality is 2ndto none, and it shows with the very precise quiet clicks that each key press gives as feedback.

The touchpad or lack thereof will probably come as a shock to most users seeing only the red cap of the ThinkPad Touchpoint. To save space the X61 omits the touchpad system in favor of a touchpoint. I never really used the Touchpoint on my T60, falling back to the touchpad on almost all occasions. Even so I found transitioning to the Touchpoint to be painless, and I even found myself using it on my T60 without realizing it. The only problem that did come up is occasionally the pointer would start to drift without any input from me. I had to tap the Touchpoint a bit to make it stop. This be a result of the fine sensitivity I had it set to, but it was hard to duplicate the problem enough to pinpoint the cause.

Screen

The screen lacks defined blacks and good contrast. Vertical viewing angles are not that good — quickly inverting colors at the slightest change of angle from being perpendicular to the screen. Since this laptop will be close to you during normal use, this shouldn’t be too much of a problem. I found the brightness of the screen to be pleasant typing indoors, although it would be quickly washed out outside in the sun. For normal use inside, my comfortable viewing level was six or seven notches down from the max of 15.

Protection from the display cover is very good, requiring a ton of pressure before you start seeing any ripples on the screen. The hinges are strong, but they don’t feel as tight as other ThinkPad models. Normally it requires two hands to open up the display of a ThinkPad, but the X61 only requires one. Given that the hinges are so much smaller on this model, it could be that they have a much smaller friction surface.

The screen on my X61 had no defects like dead pixels or backlight leakage.

Speakers

The speakers inside the X61 are very weak, and I would have to suggest wearing headphones for watching movies. For better speaker performance, the optional X6 base provides much better sound quality. The differences between the 2 systems are pretty amazing. Playing music outside of the dock sounds like headphones with the volume cranked, then when docked it sounded like a boom box.

Performance

The X61 is very impressive when it comes to raw power in such a small package. As the following results show, it provided some very respectable benchmarks. Overall I think the 7200rpm hard drive provided the biggest benefit, giving it instantaneous load times. Windows Vista startup time from the moment I pressed the power button to no activity on the desktop was 46 seconds.

PCMark05 System Results

NotebookPCMark05 ScoreLenovo ThinkPad X61 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100)4,153 PCMarksLenovo 3000 V200 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300, Intel X3100)3,987 PCMarksLenovo T60 Widescreen (2.0GHz Intel T7200, ATI X1400 128MB)4,189 PCMarksHP dv6000t (2.16GHz Intel T7400, NVIDA GeForce Go 7400)4,234 PCMarksFujitsu N6410 (1.66GHz Core Duo, ATI X1400)3,487 PCMarksAlienware M7700 (AMD Athlon FX-60, Nvidia Go 7800GTX)5,597 PCMarksSony Vaio SZ-110B in Speed Mode (Using Nvidia GeForce Go 7400)3,637 PCMarksAsus V6J (1.86GHz Core Duo T2400, Nvidia Go 7400)3,646 PCMarks

Super Pi Comparison Results

NotebookTimeLenovo ThinkPad X61 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300)1m 01sLenovo 3000 V200 (2.0GHz Intel Core 2 Duo T7300)0m 59sHP dv2500t (1.80GHz Intel 7100)1m 09sLenovo ThinkPad T61 (2.00GHz Core 2 Duo Intel T7300)0m 59sLenovo ThinkPad T60 (2.00GHz Core 2 Duo T7200)1m 03sToshiba Satellite P205-S6287 (1.73 GHz Core 2 Duo Intel T5300)1m 24sToshiba Satellite A205 (1.66GHz Core 2 Duo)1m 34sHP Compaq 6515b (1.6GHz AMD Turion 64 X2 TL-52)2m 05sHP dv6000t (2.16 GHz Intel T2400)0m 59sDell Inspiron e1705 (2.0GHz Core 2 Duo)1m 02s

Battery Life

I found the battery life to net between four to five hours of use on the 8-cell extended battery. With Vista the system likes to occasionally go wild in the background almost pegging the processor, eating up precious power from the battery at times. I also had problems with the ThinkPad power management software competing against Vista’s power management settings. After every reboot settings such as HD spindown, standby, LCD shutdown, etc. were all changed back to the default Vista settings. Even though I had the Vista and ThinkPad settings both set to Never for every power option, it still returned to 5-10 minute intervals after every reboot. I found myself returning from a coffee break to the computer shutting itself down, only to have to spend another minute powering it back up. Compared to Windows XP, Vista has been horrible in my uses for power management or power efficiency. It was hard to ever have a moment just sitting where the HD didn’t start seeking like crazy, or the CPU going under load wearing the battery down.

When compared to other Lenovo laptops, the X61 recharges its battery extremely fast. I could easily say it was between 30-50% faster than my T60 trying to charge, especially as the battery got to a higher charge level. Around 90% the T60 slows down to about 40-50 minutes left, but the X61 takes 15-20 minutes from this point. Both systems were using their respective extended batteries, which were around the 80Ah capacity.

The power adapter is 65w model, measuring 4.134 x 1.709 x 1.138 and 8 oz in weight.  This was small enough to not add any real bulk to my carrying case, a great pair to the X61.

Heat and Noise

Heat output from the laptop is more than you would expect from such a small machine. Unless idle, the laptop usually had its fan spinning at a low speed outputting a fair amount of heat. Fan noise was minimal though, so when its one you not notice it.

The palm rest was also another heat source, with both wireless cards mounted under the right side. After being powered on for 30-40 minutes, the right side gets pretty warm. With a room temperature of 76F, the right side of the palm rest was measuring 97F, with the rest of the laptop around 90F. If you were typing for a couple of hours, your wrist start feeling some discomfort from the heat.

Wireless

This X61 was equipped with the Intel 4965AGN, and reception through the laptop was above average. The Atheros alternative (ThinkPad 11a/b/g) which I have in my T60 did manage to pull in wireless networks that the X61 could not see, and be a better option if you are customizing it on the Lenovo website yourself.

I wasn’t able to fully test the built-in Verizon wireless WWAN card since I don’t have that service, but I did check its reception in my house. Usually cell phones barely work and cutout frequently. The X61’s antenna saw a 30% signal, and didn’t seem to change if the antenna was fully seated, or extended all the way.

Conclusion

I found the ThinkPad X61to be a fantastic alternative to my larger 15 T60 in situations that I didn’t want to lug around the heavier machine. It had all the grunt of the much larger machine, but inside a much smaller package. I was also surprised by how easy it was to upgrade the ram in the X61, by removing a access panel on the bottom of the laptop. This is the only ThinkPad that doesn’t require you to remove the palm rest for this upgrade. Besides the screen, the only qualms I had with this laptop related back to Vista. For the ultimate travel machine, I personally would install XP Professional on it for better battery life.

Pros

  • Primary keyboard keys are full-size for easy typing
  • Extremely fast ultraportable
  • Lightweight, even with the 8 cell battery

Cons

  • The display has poor contrast and view angles
  • The palm rest gets very warm from the wireless cards mounted below it.
  • Touchpoint made mouse drift at random times


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