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Lenovo Yoga 700 (14.1in) review: Flexible flaws

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £800
inc VAT

Lenovo's 14.1in Yoga 700 is a versatile convertible laptop that's marred by a rubbish display and equally terrible battery life

Pros

  • Wonderfully svelte build
  • A great performer

Cons

  • Dull screen
  • Terrible battery life
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Display and Speakers

This particular Yoga 700 has a 14.1in, 1,920×1,080 touchscreen display which uses an IPS panel. On my review model, there was a little bit of uneven backlighting from the left-hand side but nothing too serious. The 11.6in model I reviewed had a panel that distorted and rippled when you used the touchscreen, but thankfully this wasn’t evident again here.

What the display is lacking, however, is brightness. With white levels of just 190cd/m2, the screen isn’t very bright at all. Even indoors under office lighting, it left a lot to be desired. Outdoor use is just about viable but you’ll absolutely have to dial the brightness up to maximum, which will have an effect on battery life. The display is also very reflective, so overhead lighting and windows proved particularly problematic.

Lenovo Yoga 700 14in reflective screen

The lack of brightness is in part offset by its deep blacks of 0.16cd/m2, which is excellent as far as your average laptop goes, and a contrast ratio of 1,207:1 is very respectable. However, the display’s sRGB gamut coverage is lacklustre for the cost of the system at just 60.6%.

Out of the box, the display also appeared very warm, with a yellow tint to the whites. Uninstalling all of Lenovo’s pre-installed software (there’s no single piece of display software) seemed to do the trick, though, as this got rid of the yellow tint. When I retested the laptop under these conditions, the brightness improved marginally to 195cd/m2 according to our colour calibrator, but the perceived brightness was much greater, as I found it much easier to use indoors than I did before. The sRGB colour accuracy remained the same, however.

The speakers do a respectable, if unremarkable job at projecting sound. There’s a decent level of volume but like most laptop speakers, they lack any kind of bass. They’re fine for streaming Netflix or watching films, but they’re not particularly spectacular.

Performance and Battery Life

Inside is a 2.5GHz dual-core Core i7-6500U processor based around Intel’s latest Skylake architecture. This processor can Turbo Boost to 3.1GHz when conditions allow, and the processor is also paired with 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD. As a result, the 14.1in Yoga 700 is much better equipped to deal with more advanced tasks than its little brother, and is a much better fit for anyone looking for something that goes beyond basic computing tasks.

This was affirmed by our benchmark results which saw an overall score of 46, which shows the Yoga 700 is just as capable as Dell’s considerably more expensive XPS 13 and the Asus Zenbook UX303UA. Its overall score was brought down slightly by its multitasking score of 28, but provided you’re not using it for heavy media-intensive tasks or running several taxing applications simultaneously, you’ll get by just fine.

Lenovo Yoga 700 14in laptop teaser

Without dedicated graphics, this is never going to be a decent gaming system. The Yoga 700 uses Intel’s integrated Graphics HD 520 chip and you shouldn’t expect anything more than some very light gaming. Dirt Showdown at 1,280×720, 4x anti-aliasing and High graphics amounted only produced an average frame rate of 24.4fps, for instance, which is just short of what would be considered playable. Drop the quality to Medium and you’ll see 31fps, which is an improvement, but still not great. As long as you keep your expectations in check, you’ll be able to play older games at around medium graphics just fine, as well as modern 2D indie games.

Playing a video at 170cd/m2 brightness saw 4 hours 59 minutes of playback before the battery gave out. The 11.6in model saw 6 hours 54 minutes in the same test, but considering the smaller display and low-power processor, this should come as no surprise. However, the 14.1in Yoga 700’s battery life is still a little disappointing. It’s half an hour less than the XPS 13, and the latter has a higher-resolution 4K display to power, and it pales in comparison to the Zenbook UX303UA, which lasted another four hours. The Yoga 700 also comes up short when stacked against powerful and demanding laptops such as the Dell XPS 15 as well, as the XPS 15 lasted just over half an hour longer under the same conditions.

Conclusion

The 14.1in Lenovo Yoga 700 is a rather frustrating device. Its build quality and high performance levels make it a very capable system to take on the road, but other aspects like its screen and battery life let it down. We’d expect better at this price, but that’s not to say it’s necessarily a bad choice. It’s still a very versatile laptop for everyday use, and provides just as much speed as more expensive ultraportables. However, when you can get the equally convertible Toshiba Satellite Radius 15 for a lot less, which has a superior display and longer battery life, it becomes harder to justify choosing the Yoga. If you need the extra horsepower, the Yoga 700 will get the job done, for if you’d rather save some money, the Toshiba is a much better buy. 

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Core specs
Processor2.5GHz Dual-core Intel Core i7-6500U
RAM8GB
Memory slots (free)1 (0)
Max memory8GB
Dimensions334.9×229.5×18.3mm
Weight1.6kg
SoundRealtek HD Audio (3.5mm headset port)
Pointing deviceTouchpad, touchscreen
Display
Screen size14.1in
Screen resolution1,920×1,080
TouchscreenYes
Graphics adaptorIntel Graphics HD 520
Graphics outputsMicro HDMI
Graphics memoryIntegrated
Storage
Total storage256GB SSD
Optical drive typeNone
Ports and expansion
USB ports2x USB3, 1x USB (DC power combo)
Bluetooth4.0
Networking802.11ac Wi-Fi
Memory card readerSD
Other portsNone
Miscellaneous
Operating systemWindows 10 Home
Operating system restore optionRestore partition
Buying information
Parts and labour warrantyOne year RTB
Price inc VAT£800
Detailswww.lenovo.com
Supplierwww.pcworld.co.uk
Part number700-14ISK

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