#15
Post
by theterminator93 » Mon Dec 19, 2022 2:37 pm
I haven't chimed in on this topic yet, just needed to be in the right mindset and have the time.
T4xx and T5xx is really broad. Really broad. T400 was released in 2008, and T490 was manufactured well into 2020, possibly 2021 (I am not sure - the last T490 I had a client buy was mid-2020). Technology changed a LOT in those years, as has the ThinkPad lineup.
T400/T500 is very similar to the widescreen T60 and T61. The 10 series was a complete refresh, with the subsequent 20 and 30 series (and to a degree 40 series) being similar evolutions to the basic underpinnings. 50 series was another ground-up refresh, with the underpinnings lasting through the 80 series. The 90 series introduced the latest ground-up chassis refresh which remains in use, AFAIK, to this day.
Each generation/chassis design has its benefits and drawbacks to serviceability and upgradeability. As the industry pushed users to "thinner and lighter" designs, serviceability and upgradeability suffered; to make laptops thinner and lighter, optical drives were omitted, thicker CPU and RAM sockets were abandoned in favor of soldered designs, batteries were made progressively smaller/thinner, TDPs plummeted to allow for smaller heat sinks, ports were removed etc.
The 00 series has the "roll cage" design that requires a good degree of disassembly to get at certain components, though there are service doors that grant easy access to the most commonly replaced components. The 10-40 series have a much beefier magnesium frame but again, service doors (and removing the keyboard) get you access to the big 3 components - RAM, CPU and HDD. The 50-80 series have a top cover with a "tray" the keyboard sits in, and a cover over the bottom that, when removed, exposes the entire motherboard. Very easy to service. The 90 series is also built this way.
To satisfactorily answer your initial question, I think we need to know some goals or preferences. If you intend to use it as a primary machine you'll need something newer - I'd say 80 series or newer as all models got 4-core CPU as standard. Another benefit of 80 series is the external battery (options), WQHD displays, as well as reasonably user-serviceable components (e.g. 90 series and newer have soldered WLAN cards and RAM; 80 series and older use 2 or more RAM sockets, M.2 cards for WLAN/WWAN etc. as we are accustomed to).
If you want something older for nostalgic purposes, or need an optical drive, you're limited to 40 series or older as the "ultrabook" 50 series and newer left no provisions for that.
As far as multi-GPU systems... I have a few with the iGPU as well as a GeForce or Quadro. I very rarely use the dGPU - when I do it's when I do video encoding or video/photo editing. It's hotter and uses a lot more power - if I'm plugged in I'm usually at home, and if I'm at home, I'll want to use my desktop for things like that.
The
recovery sets guy
T480 with T25 keyboard | T25 | W520 | T601F | T420 | X220
T61p·T61·43·42p|X13 Yoga G3·220T·301·41T·24·23·22|G41|A31p·22m|i1200|TransNote
600|770Z|770|760XD|760EL|701C|755C