Lenovo Launches Yoga 920 Convertible: 13.9” 4K LCD, 8th Gen Core i7, TB3, 3 Pounds
by Anton Shilov on September 2, 2017 3:00 PM ESTLenovo this week announced its new Yoga 920 convertible laptop that became more powerful due to Intel’s upcoming 8th generation Core i-series CPUs with up to four cores, better connected thanks to two Thunderbolt 3 ports, yet slimmer than its predecessor. The new model inherits most of the peculiarities of the previous-generation Lenovo Yoga 900-series notebooks and improves them in various ways.
The new Lenovo Yoga 920 is the direct successor of the Yoga 2/3 Pro, Yoga 900 and the Yoga 910 convertible laptops that Lenovo launched in 2013 – 2016. These machines are aimed at creative professionals, who need high performance, 360° watchband hinge, touchscreen, reduced weight and a long battery life. Over the years, Lenovo has changed specs and design of its hybrid Yoga-series laptops quite significantly from generation to generation in a bid to improve the machines. This time the changes are not drastic, but still rather significant both inside and outside.
The new Lenovo Yoga 920 will come with a 13.9” IPS display panel featuring very thin bezels and either 4K (3840×2160) or FHD (1920×1080) resolution, which is exactly the same panel options that are available for the Yoga 910. In the meantime, Lenovo moved the webcam from the bottom of the display bezel to its top. Besides, it reshaped the chassis slightly and sharpened its edges, making the Yoga 920 resemble Microsoft’s Surface Book. Changes in external and external design of the new Yoga vs. the predecessor enabled Lenovo to slightly reduce thickness of the PC from 14.3 to 13.95 mm (0.55”) and cut its weight from 1.38 kilograms to 1.37 kilograms (3.02 lbs).
Internal differences between the Yoga 920 and the Yoga 910 seem to be no less significant than their external designs. In addition to the new Core i 8000-series CPU (presumably a U-series SoC with up to four cores and the HD Graphics 620 iGPU), the Yoga 920 also got a new motherboard that has a different layout and feature set. The new mainboard has two Thunderbolt 3 ports (instead of two USB 2.0/3.0 Type-C headers on the model 910) for charging, connecting displays/peripherals and other things. In addition, the new mobo moves the 3.5-mm TRRS Dolby Atmos-enabled audio connector to the left side of the laptop. Speaking of audio capabilities, it is necessary to note that the Yoga 920 is equipped with two speakers co-designed with JBL as well as with far field microphones that can activate Microsoft’s Cortana from four meters away (13 feet). As for other specifications, expect the Yoga 920 to be similar to its predecessor: up to 16 GB of RAM (expect a speed bump), a PCIe SSD (with up to 1 TB capacity), a 802.11ac Wi-Fi + Bluetooth 4.1 module, a webcam, as well as a end-to-end encrypted Synaptics fingerprint reader with Quantum Matcher compatible with Windows Hello.
The slightly thinner and lighter chassis as well as different internal components made Lenovo to reduce capacity of Yoga 920’s battery to 66 Wh from 79 Wh, according to TechRadar. When it comes to battery life, LaptopMag reports that it will remain on the same level with the previous model: 10.8 hours on one charge for the UHD model and up to 15.5 hours for the FHD SKU.
Lenovo Yoga Specifications | ||||
Yoga 900 | Yoga 910 (up to) |
Yoga 920 (up to) |
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Processor | Intel Core i7-6500U (15W) | Intel Core i7-7000 series | Intel Core i7-8650U | |
Memory | 8-16GB DDR3L-1600 | Up to 16 GB | ||
Graphics | Intel HD 520 (24 EUs, Gen 9) |
Intel HD Graphics 620 | ||
Display | 13.3" Glossy IPS 16:9 QHD+ (3200x1800) LED |
13.9" 4K (3840 x 2160) IPS 13.9” FHD (1920x1080) IPS |
||
Hard Drive(s) | 256GB/512GB SSD (Samsung ?) | Up to 1 TB PCIe SSD | Up to 1 TB PCIe 3 x4 SSD Samsung PM961 |
|
Networking | Intel Wireless AC-8260 (2x2:2 802.11ac) | 2x2:2 802.11ac | ||
Audio | JBL Stereo Speakers Dolby DS 1.0 TRRS jack |
JBL Stereo Speakers with Dolby Audio TRRS jack |
JBL Stereo Speakers with Dolby Atmos TRRS jack |
|
Battery | 4 cell 66Wh | 79 Wh | 66 Wh | |
Buttons/Ports | Power Button 2 x USB 3.0-A 1 x USB 3.0-C Headset Jack SD Card Reader DC In with USB 3.0-A Port |
Power Button 1 x USB 3.0-A 1 x USB 3.0-C 1 x USB 2.0-C for charging Headset Jack |
Power Button 1 x USB 3.0-A 2 x Thunderbolt 3 Headset Jack |
|
Back Side | Watchband Hinge with 360° Rotation Air Vents Integral to Hinge |
|||
Dimensions | 12.75" x 8.86" x 0.59" 324 x 225 x 14.9 mm |
12.72" x 8.84" x 0.56" 322 x 224.5 x 14.6 mm |
13.95 mm (0.55”) thick | |
Weight | 2.8 lbs (1.3 kg) | 3.04 lbs (1.38 kg) | 3.02 lbs (1.37 kg) | |
Extras | 720p HD Webcam Backlit Keyboard |
|||
Colors | Platinum Silver Clementine Orange Champagne Gold |
Platinum Silver Champagne Gold Gunmetal |
Silver Bronze Copper |
|
Pricing | $1200 (8GB/256GB) $1300 (8GB/512GB) $1400 (16GB/512GB) |
Starting from $1299 | Starting from $1329 |
Lenovo will offer an optional Lenovo Active Pen 2 with 4,096 levels of pen sensitivity with its Yoga 920. The stylus will cost $53 and will enable people to draw or write on the touchscreen.
The Lenovo Yoga 920 convertible laptops will be available in silver, bronze and copper colors later this year starting from $1329 (a slight price bump over the predecessor). By contrast, the Yoga 910 came in silver, gold and dark grey (which the manufacturer called gunmetal).
Related Reading:
- Lenovo Reveals Yoga 910 Convertible: Intel’s Kaby Lake Meets 4K Display and Ultra-Thin Form-Factor
- The Lenovo Yoga 900 Series Launched: The ‘Thinnest’ Core Laptop and a 27-inch Portable All-In-One
- Lenovo’s Yoga Book Convertible Scraps Physical Keyboard in Favor of Touch-Sensitive Surface
- Lenovo Yoga Tab 3 Plus: Snapdragon 652, 10-Inch 2K Display, JBL Speakers and USB-C
- Lenovo Updates The X1 Lineup: Thin Bezel X1 Carbon, X1 Yoga And X1 Tablet Updates
- The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Yoga Review: OLED and LCD Tested
Source: Lenovo
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Gigaplex - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link
Dell quality is no better than Lenovo.ddriver - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link
A tad better and a significantly higher price.HStewart - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link
This maybe just my personal experience but I never waste my money on Lenovo - I guess you get what you pay.Bateluer - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link
The Intel 8G series still uses the HD620 IGP? I love my Yoga 900, but I'd want to see more of an improvement over its HD520.Miro90 - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link
I have yoga 900 but with iris graphic 540 the i7 6560 with iris 540 and 64MB edram is awesome if you know how to tap the power i increase the power limit to 20-25 watts so i can play bf1 smoothly on it.flyingpants1 - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link
My friend had a Yoga 2 Pro or whatever it was. It was the flimsiest thing I have ever seen, and the screen was yellow.flyingpants1 - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link
Dell XPS 12 was probably the best convertible so far, you could close it up and it was sealed like an iPad, no keyboard on the back, no fragile base, no detaching. Just make one the same thickness as this Yoga thing, use magnesium or CF or something to keep the weight down.http://www.umpcportal.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/...
Miro90 - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link
My yoga 900 is magnesium the drawback that its powder coated not real metal finish but its light and can withstand punctures unlike aluminium but its not as cold touch as aluminium. any way anything less than 15 watt cpu is a waste especially if its unlocked.Miro90 - Sunday, September 3, 2017 - link
but i am sure since yoga 910 they are aluminium uni-body.milkod2001 - Monday, September 4, 2017 - link
Have Yoga 13'' earlier model with i7 U6200. It has active cooler which spins like crazy , it is very loud and that is just with Chrome opened, 2-3 tabs. Never ever will fall into this super thin designs.None of the reviews seem to mention things like this. I guess we live in the fake pre-paid reviews time all over the internet.So sad...