The Lenovo Yoga C930 Review: Atmos Acoustics
by Brett Howse on March 1, 2019 8:00 AM ESTBack when laptops were just finding their way into the new world of touch, Lenovo’s Yoga design ended up inspiring the industry, and Lenovo has moved their 360° hinge across their lineup, from laptops starting at $199.99, all the way to their ThinkPad lineup with the X1 Yoga. Today we are taking a look at the Lenovo Yoga C930 which was announced a few months ago. This is Lenovo’s premium offering for Yoga in their consumer lineup, and brings some new innovations to the game that will once again make the industry play catch-up.
Lenovo has some very interesting ideas that are packed into this convertible notebook. The biggest change is the removal of the beautiful watchband hinge we’d admired on previous generations, but although it was beautiful and functional, Lenovo has instead opted to replace it with a Dolby Atomos sound bar, which can rotate with the display to provide 3D spatial sound no matter which way the display is pointing. Audio on Yoga-style laptops has been kind of a mixed bag. For one thing, there’s very little room inside a modern laptop to provide space for speakers to start with, and for another, they tend to fire in the wrong direction, which is an issue that convertibles like the Yoga have to deal with more than typical laptops. The rotating sound bar not only provides space that would otherwise be unused, but it also keeps the speakers pointed in a consistent direction to the user. Much like the original Yoga hinge, expect other OEMs to imitate this idea soon, because it is really a smart solution.
The rest of the Yoga C930 is no slouch either. This isn’t a one-trick pony. It’s also a premium Ultrabook, offering a great design coupled with powerful internals, all in a package that is thin, and weighs just 1.36 kg / 3.0 lbs. It also offers thin display bezels on the sides, allowing this 14-inch laptop to still be fairly compact, and the top bezel is just large enough to house the Webcam, which also has a manual shutter. Display options are 1920x1080 IPS, or 3840x2160 IPS.
Lenovo outfits the Yoga C930 with Kaby Lake Refresh processors, in either the Core i5-8250U, or the Core i7-8550U. Our review unit is the Core i7. Memory options are 8, 12, or 16 GB of DDR4-2400, which is somewhat unusual in an Ultrabook form factor, since most manufactures opt for LPDDR3 still. With Lenovo opting for DDR4, it’s a bit strange they haven’t used that as an opportunity to provide 32 GB of RAM as an option. Where they do provide plenty of options though is the NVMe storage, where you can get up to 2 TB of PCIe NAND.
Lenovo Yoga C930 | |||||
Reviewed: Core i7-8550U 12GB RAM 256 GB SSD 1920x1080 | |||||
CPU | Core i5-8250U 4C/8T 1.6-3.4 GHz 6MB Cache 15W TDP Core i7-8550U 4C/8T 1.8-4.0 GHz 8MB Cache 15W TDP |
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GPU | Intel UHD 620 | ||||
RAM | 8 / 12 / 16 GB DDR4-2400 | ||||
Storage | 256 GB to 2 TB PCIe NVMe SSD | ||||
Display | 13.9" 1920x1080 IPS Multi-Touch with Dolby Vision 13.9" 3840x2160 IPS Multi-Touch with Dolby Vision |
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Battery | 60 Wh 65W AC Adapter |
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Network | Intel Wireless-AC 9260 2x2:2 802.11ac 160 MHz channels Bluetooth 4.1 |
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I/O | 2 x USB-C Thunderbolt 3 1 x USB 3.0 Headset jack |
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Dimensions | 322 x 227 x 14.5 mm 12.7 x 8.9 x 0.57 inches |
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Weight | 1.36 Kg / 3.0 lbs | ||||
Extras | Wacom AES Active Pen (Included) Fingerprint Reader Dolby Atmos Sound Bar Webcam Shutter |
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Price | Starting at $1069.99 Price as tested: $1270 |
Lenovo offers not one but two Thunderbolt 3 ports over Type-C on the left side, along with a USB 3.0 port as well. The Type-C is used not only for expansion, but also as the charging port, which makes the Lenovo very easy to power up from a variety of sources.
Lenovo also offers an active pen, which is housed inside the laptop, and can be accessed on the rear of the device. It’s great for quick note taking, and having it inside the laptop protects it, charges it, and makes sure it’s always available.
In addition, Lenovo offers a good-sized battery at 60 Wh, in addition to the Intel Wireless-AC 9260 wireless card.
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eastcoast_pete - Wednesday, March 6, 2019 - link
@Brett: Not 100% related to this specific article, but could you or one of your AT colleagues also do a "best used notebooks" article? I don't mean the classics from 1992, but which 2017/2018 notebook held up well and has good reliability. Also stratified by price and use range. Might be interesting for some of us here.LJS - Wednesday, October 9, 2019 - link
Its unclear how the reviewers test the battery; however, just looking at emails and a little web searching-no videos-no plug in in browser using edge I only have 3 hours usage on battery. This is a brand new computer. Once I turned off bluetooth, USB power, prevented background apps from running, put on battery saver, reduced brightness to 70% which is as low as I can go an still be able to see the details on my screen without straining (UHD monitor) I still only get about 4.5 hours. The battery is significantly smaller than Yoga 910 and 920, also the screen brightness is less compared to my Yoga 910 the Yoga 930 at 100% is equal to 70% on the Yoga 910. Although the speakers are better and it comes with a pen which is not very useful, would recommend think pad 1x carbon or another brand of computer. Yogas tend to be glitchy.