Lenovo’s new ThinkPads score 10/10 for repairability

2026-03-0323:34520248www.ifixit.com

Repair goes mega mainstream with the launch of Lenovo’s new T-series business laptops, which earned our highest honor with a 10/10 repairability score.

There are “repairable” laptops, and then there are ThinkPad T-series laptops: the ones corporate IT buys by the pallet, images by the thousands, and expects to survive years of all-day use. During their lives they’ll weather countless commutes, on-the-go presentations, and inevitable splashes of coffee.

That’s why Lenovo’s newest ThinkPads are such a big deal: the new T14 Gen 7 and T16 Gen 5 score an eye-popping 10 out of 10 on our repairability scale. It’s the first time the T-series has ever earned our top rating. (The score is provisional, for now—we’ll finalize it when official parts and instructions become available through Lenovo’s support site, which we fully expect will happen in the near future.)

This isn’t repairability as a niche feature for tinkerers. This is repairability showing up in the machine that practically defines the mainstream business laptop category.

A technician lifts the back cover off of the new ThinkPad T14 laptop
Come on in, the repairability is fine. No, really—getting inside these new ThinkPads is a breeze.

Repairability at this level doesn’t happen overnight.

Two years ago at MWC 2024, Lenovo introduced a repairability-focused generation of ThinkPad T14 laptops that scored an already-phenomenal 9/10. Our Solutions team had been working directly with Lenovo during development—disassembling, evaluating, and feeding back what we found. Lenovo listened, iterated, and shipped a ThinkPad that looked familiar on the outside, but took some big repairability leaps forward on the inside.

And then Lenovo did the thing you want a product team to do when they see a big improvement: they didn’t declare victory and go home. They kept pushing.

Repairability forces better engineering discipline. It requires clarity, intentionality, and empathy for the people who will actually service and use the device over its lifetime. 

Christoph Blindenbacher, Director, ThinkPad Product Management

As Lenovo puts it, “Lenovo’s collaboration with iFixit began with a shared understanding that repairability was becoming a core element of product excellence, not just a customer requirement or a service consideration.” They wanted “an independent, trusted partner who could challenge our assumptions, validate our progress, and help us identify blind spots.”

They weren’t wrong about the “challenge” part.

Going from a high score to the highest score isn’t usually about making minor tweaks. It requires fighting for every small, boring, consequential decision—the ones that determine whether a repair isn’t merely possible or practical, but within easy reach. We cheered Lenovo on as they pushed beyond “great,” kept refining, and arm-wrestled every last tenth of a repairability point into submission.

This is the treacherous, final-boss stage where repairability usually dies, and Lenovo refused to give up.

Lenovo tells us, “The biggest challenge in getting to a 10/10 was balancing repairability with all the other expectations of a commercial device: performance, reliability, thermal efficiency, form factor, and design integrity. Repairability isn’t achieved by a single change: it requires many small, intentional decisions across the entire system, and each of those decisions can introduce trade-offs. 

“One of the biggest challenges was shifting the mindset early in the design process. Serviceability is typically optimized later in development, often constrained by structural, material, or layout decisions that are already locked. To reach a 10/10, we had to bring those conversations forward and challenge long‑standing assumptions about what ‘good design’ really means. We addressed this by bringing design, engineering, service, quality, and sustainability together from day one.”

From our perspective, the results speak for themselves. The new T-Series repair ecosystem is built around accessible, replaceable parts:

  • An easily swapped battery with a nearly tool-free procedure
  • Industry standard M.2 SSD storage
  • One of the easiest keyboard replacement procedures we’ve ever seen
  • LPCAMM2 memory that’s fast, efficient, and easily serviced
  • Streamlined display repairs
  • A modular cooling system, with an independently replaceable fan
  • Fully modular Thunderbolt ports

All of that is soon to be backed by official, publicly available repair documentation and a replacement parts pipeline designed for real-world service. Bravo, Lenovo.

10/10 is the highest repairability score we award, and the new T-series earns it.

That said, there are always ways to improve—making repairs faster, simpler, more forgiving, with fewer tool requirements and more components that can be swapped without escalating into a major teardown.

Removing the modular Thunderbolt ports from inside a Thinkpad T14 Gen 7
One of the biggest repairability wins: fully modular, individually replaceable Thunderbolt ports.

For example, Lenovo made the high-wear USB-C/Thunderbolt-side of things meaningfully better by going modular where it matters most. That alone is a huge win. But not every port on this machine gets the same fully modular treatment yet—some of the lesser-used I/O still lives on the main board or on a smaller breakout board, rather than being a quick-swap module on its own.

We noted a similar lack of modularity on the Wi-Fi module, where repairs or upgrades will be impractical at best. And while whole display assembly replacements are thankfully straightforward, there’s still a bit of adhesive to navigate if you want to drill into the display itself for a panel swap or a webcam repair. 

These are not complaints—merely acknowledgments that 10/10 doesn’t necessarily mean “perfection,” and our scorecard doesn’t capture every nuance of the repair experience. That’s exactly why we treat repairability as an ongoing practice, rather than a singular end goal.

And to their credit, Lenovo seems to fully understand that distinction. They told us straight out: “10/10 isn’t the destination. From our perspective it’s the new baseline…. But the real opportunity is to go beyond the score. A perfect rating only matters if it leads to meaningful outcomes: quicker repairs, longer‑lasting devices, lower ownership costs, and less waste. Measuring success through customer experience and real‑world repair data will be just as important as external benchmarks. Ultimately, repairability will continue to evolve. As expectations, regulations, and technologies change, so must our approach.”

We couldn’t agree more, and we can only hope that other laptop makers are taking notes.

After going through this process, we wanted to know what Lenovo learned from their success (and what, we hope, other OEMs can emulate). 

Designing for repairability doesn’t mean compromising innovation or premium experiences; when done well, it actually drives smarter innovation, better modularity, and more resilient platforms.

—Lenovo

Christoph Blindenbacher, director of ThinkPad product management, tells us, “This journey fundamentally changed my perspective from seeing repairability as a ‘nice-to-have’ or customer-driven requirement to recognizing it as a core pillar of good product design. Repairability forces better engineering discipline. It requires clarity, intentionality, and empathy for the people who will actually service and use the device over its lifetime. 

“I also gained a deeper appreciation for the trade-offs involved. Designing for repairability doesn’t mean compromising innovation or premium experiences; when done well, it actually drives smarter innovation, better modularity, and more resilient platforms.”

We also asked if collaborating with iFixit for this process was an easy decision, or if it required winning over any internal stakeholders who might have been skeptical about the partnership. Christoph says, “Was there skepticism internally? Of course. Inviting an external expert into the development process, especially one known for being direct and uncompromising, naturally raised concerns. Teams worried about added complexity, design constraints, and the perception that we were exposing ourselves to criticism. 

“What changed minds was the way the partnership actually worked. iFixit approached the relationship as collaborators, not critics. Their feedback was practical, grounded, and focused on helping us build better products. And once teams saw how early insights could prevent downstream issues and how small design decisions could significantly improve repairability without sacrificing performance, the value became clear. The new T-Series perfect 10/10 score is a direct reflection of that trust and shared commitment.”

If you want repairability to go mainstream, it has to show up where the volume is. Lenovo is the largest PC vendor worldwide, and the ThinkPad T-series is their commercial backbone: the “trusted workhorse” line that large organizations rely on every day, where downtime costs real money and productivity. 

It would be one thing to make a highly repairable but low-volume niche device or concept. Instead, Lenovo just threw down a gauntlet by notching a 10/10 repairability score on their mainstream-iest business laptop.

This is how expectations change, and how repair goes from being an enthusiast’s “nice-to-have” to being baked into procurement checklists and fleet-management decisions. 

Our compliments to Lenovo for pulling this off. We can’t wait to see what they do next.

Full disclosure: iFixit has an ongoing business relationship with Lenovo, and we are hopelessly biased in favor of repairable products.

A fully disassembled ThinkPad T14 Gen 7 laptop, with the components neatly laid out

Read the original article

Comments

  • By tombert 2026-03-041:499 reply

    I have the ThinkPad p16s AMD gen 2. What it lacks in name it makes up for with being the most headache-free computer I have ever had (including a Macbook).

    Everything works pretty well out of the box, it never really overheats, Linux support required basically no effort with NixOS, the keyboard feels pretty nice, the screen is bright and easy to read, and fortunately I bought it when RAM prices weren't insane so I got the 64GB model.

    I haven't tried repairing it yet but considering how well it's been working I'm not even sure I'll need ever need to. If this laptop gets stolen, I will likely just buy another ThinkPad, I'm a complete convert.

    • By vbezhenar 2026-03-042:264 reply

      I own T14s Gen4 Intel and Linux support is perfect, even fingerprint reader works. Zero complaints. I'm mostly using it in clamshell mode connected via USB-C to display with backwards charging, it all just works! I'm also using secureboot with my keys, I cleared all MS keys and it didn't brick the laptop.

      My only grievance is a bit buggy firmware. When I turn laptop on or reboot, speakers will randomly be muted (not a problem after OS boots, but for example in UEFI it'll either beep or not beep and that's random). UEFI interface was a bit buggy regarding mouse control, for example I've used to touch and drag things in boot order, but it didn't work and I have to actually press touchbar button down and keeping it like that move cursor. But touch drag works in other places. Not a big issue bit the first time I encountered it, I spent good few minutes trying to make sense of it, as I thought it just does not allow me to reorder boot entries or something like that. But these are small issues and once you've installed OS, you never deal with that.

      Oh, and another complaint is that their BIOS update procedure is super weird. I have to find computer with Windows, download some exe, unpack things, find some BAT file and write to USB drive things, then boot from it. Theoretically they publish stuff to fwupd but I don't like this service. My best BIOS update experience was on Asus PC. I just put some bin file onto FAT32 USB drive, entered UEFI configuration, chose "update", selected that file and that's about it. Super easy, every manufacturer must implement this workflow.

      Anyway I'm satistfied owner and my next laptop will likely be Thinkpad. Mostly because its stellar Linux support, but also because I didn't have any major issues with my current laptop.

      • By bald 2026-03-044:38

        Re firmware updates, I've had the same problem and written a blog post about how to update the firmware on ThinkPad under Linux without a Windows computer. Find it here: https://random.xdiez.com/it/2024/02/03/Lenovo-BIOS-update-do...

      • By amluto 2026-03-043:271 reply

        What’s wrong with fwupd? I’ll admit that that the CLI is not exactly awesome, but it seems like a fairly clean implementation of the actual UEFI spec for updates.

        • By vbezhenar 2026-03-043:39

          I disabled possibility of updates in my BIOS, so I must first enter BIOS, enable updates in BIOS, then I have to tinker with my boot configuration as I'm using secureboot with custom keys and no bootloader, I also need to allow changing UEFI boot variables, well, lots of things I just don't want to do for my setup. A lot of moving parts with zero sense over something as simple as update from the USB drive.

          Basically right now my setup is super simple and restricted and I have to make it significantly more complicated and insecure to allow fwupd to work.

      • By russianGuy83829 2026-03-049:39

        Not sure if its intel specific, but for the amd variants you can download an .iso instead of an .exe and boot from that to upgrade. No need for windows

      • By 0xbadcafebee 2026-03-045:23

        T14s Gen4 AMD user here w/secureboot enabled. Just used fwupd to upgrade BIOS two days ago, because I didn't realize the BIOS boot-order lock was preventing it. Rebooted, changed setting, rebooted, upgraded firmware automatically, rebooted, changed setting back. Yes it took 30 minutes, but I don't expect I'll need to do it again.

        While most of the hardware works, hibernate doesn't, which annoys me. Fingerprint scanner also only works randomly at login, Linux issue I assume. Machine was crashing once a week (logs suggest it was AMDGPU related), but not since the firmware update, so fingers crossed that's fixed. In retrospect I wish I got the L14, didn't realize I would need more RAM at the time.

    • By cmxch 2026-03-051:01

      For me, that’s the older(?) T15g Gen2. Maxed out a reasonable i7 /4k screen/16GB 3080 mobile configuration when SSDs and memory were dirt cheap.

      Feels like the old A31p in practical grunt but thinner and easier to maintain.

    • By Cyph0n 2026-03-042:141 reply

      > Linux support required basically no effort with NixOS

      My main requirement for a next laptop is running NixOS (coming from Macbook land). It’s probably this or one of the new XPS models, but not clear what NixOS support looks like there.

    • By saratogacx 2026-03-0418:50

      I just got an L13 which is a convertible form factor with every feature they offered (like cell modem, dual cameras, smart card reader, stylus, etc).

      Tossed Kubuntu on it and every single piece of hardware was found and worked right out of the box. The hardware linux support has been fantastic.

    • By thrdbndndn 2026-03-041:532 reply

      Majority of laptops works "pretty well out of the box".

      • By tombert 2026-03-042:081 reply

        Not with Linux, typically. If you don't have drivers included in the kernel, it requires a lot of effort to get things working. I've done it many times, so now I will generally only buy laptops that have decent Linux support. [1]

        I've had the laptop for about two years now and it still runs just as well as the day I bought it. I'm very happy with it.

        [1] No I will not stick with Windows. Please feel free to read through my comment history to see why, but TL;DR I just don't like it.

        • By zdragnar 2026-03-043:521 reply

          I've had linux on every laptop I've owned for years, and I haven't really had a problem with any of them running linux, except for display port support on a dell xps.

          Aside from that one dell laptop, though, I generally avoid HP and dell entirely, so perhaps that's why.

          • By tombert 2026-03-044:411 reply

            In 2013 I bought a laptop that I kept five years that had an Nvidia Optimus.

            I never really figured out how to get the discrete card working consistently, and since then I haven't bought a laptop with an Nvidia card.

            I've had issues with wifi cards and sound drivers and the like as well, though it's going a lot better now than it was a decade ago.

            • By zdragnar 2026-03-056:05

              Weird. I must have uncommonly good fortune, as I don't think I've had Wi-Fi or sound issues for longer than that. I remember when I first tried out swaywm and having some sound issues because I also started moving to pipewore from pulseaudio, but nothing from an out of the box install of a decent distro.

      • By system2 2026-03-041:561 reply

        I urge you to try HP.

        • By cookiengineer 2026-03-042:091 reply

          ^ this comment is more relevant than people might think. HP regularly deploys broken BIOS updates and literally bricks your laptops. Happened in 2023 I think 7 times that year, and one time even right in the next week. Our IT got so fed up and ditched any HP laptops because of it.

          • By userbinator 2026-03-042:464 reply

            Never update your BIOS unless you have a specific bug that needs fixed.

            I remember a Thinkpad BIOS update ended up destroying both undervolting and overclocking, and required a "chip-clip" programmer to revert.

            • By wtallis 2026-03-043:122 reply

              That advice doesn't hold up very well when in recent years we've had multiple instances of a BIOS update being necessary to deal with the problem of "the CPU gets fed too high a voltage and dies prematurely". That's happened to both Intel and AMD desktop CPUs.

              It's a real problem that BIOS updates for consumer systems never come with a meaningful changelog, so evaluating whether a particular update is a good idea or not is basically impossible.

              • By Guestmodinfo 2026-03-044:14

                I would strongly advice against buying HP laptops if you want to install linux because MX linux worked well on mine pre-owned HP, Zorin OS worked well but somehow I could not install AntiX linux and secure boot of HP troubled me too much and I could install OpenBSD on it but each time I would restart then it would kernel panic and I would havento reinstall. Combined with a long holiday when I left it at home. Now my HP is practically bricked. It is not starting

              • By userbinator 2026-03-045:58

                That advice holds up very well when taken along with "don't buy the very first major release".

            • By cmckn 2026-03-043:18

              I built a tower several years ago and it had CPU temp issues from the start. I RMA’d the cooler, reapplied the thermal paste a couple times, reassembled the whole build, etc. It wasn’t my main machine, but every time I sat down to use it the CPU would run hot and thermal-throttle. It’s an i9 with P/E cores, so I just chalked it up to Linux power management woes. A couple months ago I was on the brink of selling it for parts, but updated the BIOS as a Hail Mary. Totally fixed it.

              I guess I did “ have a specific bug that needs fixed”; I just didn’t know it!

            • By cookiengineer 2026-03-045:56

              People don't have a choice to update their BIOS, as updates like this are automatically installed, by both Windows and the underlying Intel ME tools.

              (And I'm trying to avoid talking about microcode updates, which is a whole other story of fuckups)

              Regarding Thinkpad BIOS: I have a Raspberry Pi Zero and a self soldered RP2040 programmer [1] in my travel kit for a reason. When travelling, a lot of the Cellebrite rootkits rely on an OEM BIOS, so they typically reflash your BIOS in the "we gonna check your laptop" phase.

              [1] would totally recommend serprog, it's awesome: https://codeberg.org/Riku_V/pico-serprog

            • By cromka 2026-03-047:591 reply

              Most of the laptop BIOS updates are now for CVEs and other security fixes, from my experience. You don't have much choice but upgrade.

              • By userbinator 2026-03-051:26

                These are for "security" against the user, to be fair.

    • By Teknomadix 2026-03-045:47

      Second that. Both AMD p16 and p14 are amazing NixOS machines.

    • By MattPalmer1086 2026-03-048:26

      I have the same model, it's a nice machine!

    • By emeril 2026-03-042:41

      my dell is hot garbage from work

    • By huddert 2026-03-042:112 reply

      Why are they so allergic to >60hz displays though? There is zero chance that I'm buying a laptop with a slideshow display like that in current year.

      • By tombert 2026-03-042:301 reply

        I've never had an issue with 60hz. 30hz is unusable but 60hz has always been good enough for me; the Sega Genesis and SNES had 60hz and that's always been good enough for me.

        • By huddert 2026-03-044:043 reply

          [flagged]

          • By SR2Z 2026-03-046:43

            > Is there any other area where you would tolerate 35 year-old performance as "good enough"?

            Yeah. Speakers, printers, lightbulbs, garage doors, etc., etc.

            I can tell the difference between 60 Hz and higher rates, but I think that most people could not care less. You don't buy a Thinkpad to game on, the most intense workout the display is liable to get is scrolling down a page.

          • By nirava 2026-03-045:572 reply

            Even 50hz is fine. I'd go so far as to say, barring any medical or sensitivity issue, if any person prioritizes a 120hz screen they are a victim to habit or marketing.

            It adds zero value to the experience, and you're just looking for things to be annoyed by / brag about.

            Modern displays are already cutting edge. They have improved in every way that's meaningful in the last 35 years. Refresh rate is just not meaningful enough. "35 year old performance" it most certainly is not. You just seem hellbent on using this arbitrary (to most people) benchmark as a filter.

            FYI, I run my 17 pro almost exclusively on power saving mode to cap frame rates because the battery life extending by 30 mins is more infinitely more valuable than frame rate over 50. I've capped my fancy monitor's frame rate to 60 so it matches my macbook air. And it's all fine in this world, nothing here is "one notch above unusable".

            • By hulitu 2026-03-046:191 reply

              > Refresh rate is just not meaningful enough.

              Until the bloody compositor updates the screen based on it or worse based on half of it.

              • By nirava 2026-03-048:46

                :single_tear_frowning_emoji:

            • By huddert 2026-03-048:293 reply

              "Even 4gb of memory is fine", "even 720p is fine", "even 2ghz CPU is fine", "even a membrane keyboard is fine", "even USB 2.0 is fine", "even 2 hours battery life is fine"...

              Yeah it's all "fine". If these were the specs of the only laptop available to me then yeah it would be "fine". I could get things done. One or more of those things are deal-breakers for an awful lot of people.

              For me, a rubbish display is a deal-breaker. I can't accept that they would compromise in this aspect, presumably to save a few bucks.

              It's likely as difficult for me to understand how you could possibly prefer battery life over refresh rates as it is for you to do the opposite. And I'm not even talking crazy refresh rates here, 120hz or even 90hz at a minimum.

              Would you buy a high-end laptop with 15 minute battery life? I'm not buying a new laptop with a 60hz display.

              • By nirava 2026-03-048:431 reply

                You're entitled to your preferences. In my opinion:

                Functional: - battery life - screen resolution (binary, <2k and >2k for laptops), brightness (binary: works in the sun or not), viewing angles (binary: good enough vs not), color (binary, good enough vs not) etc - connectivity options - ram - build quality etc etc

                Aesthetic: - color - finish - refresh rate - OS theming, animations and all that - material

                When you say "why won't they do 120hz?" I hear "Why won't they release a magenta colored device". That's fundamentally different than "why won't they add usb c"

                I don't think there's any value in 120hz. Nearly all content I consume is in 30-60 fps anyway. I don't need to see marginally smoother os animatations lol and thats nearly all 120hz is good for.

                PS Gamers might actually functionally need high refresh rates. I'm not in that space, but I recognise that for some specializations it might be absolutely deal-breaker.

                • By huddert 2026-03-054:36

                  I understand it not being a priority for a lot of people but it's odd to me that there appears to be resistance to it. It is very easy for you to reduce the refresh rate if you need to maximise battery life, but I have no option to increase it beyond what the hardware supports.

                  I wonder how much reduction we could see in eye strain, nausea, fatigue and headaches if higher refresh rates were normalised.

                  I remember one time showing a non-techy person the difference between a "Pro Motion" iPad Pro vs a lower spec iPad. They probably had no idea what refresh rates were before I took a moment to scroll up and down in the web browser for about 5 seconds side-by-side. They had their "ohhhhh" moment and bought the much more expensive Pro on that basis alone.

                  Enjoy your blissful ignorance, I guess?

              • By batperson 2026-03-0411:20

                These are business class laptops, there's no dedicated GPU. Where are you're going to utilize this high refresh rate? I'm pretty sure 99% of the time the integrated graphics would be working hard to churn out 120 frames of static views.

                I bet the vast majority of people would be perfectly happy to have 60hz display, longer battery life, and save a few bucks at the same time.

                Funny bonus anecdote: I reinstall my OS in december, only a few weeks ago did I realize it wasn't set to 144hz but 60hz, since I was busy with work since and didn't play any games I did not even realize.

              • By tasuki 2026-03-048:38

                > "Even 4gb of memory is fine", "even 720p is fine", "even 2ghz CPU is fine", "even a membrane keyboard is fine", "even USB 2.0 is fine", "even 2 hours battery life is fine"...

                No these things aren't. 60 hz is fine though. What does it matter that it's "old"? It matters whether it's functional.

                I for one prefer battery life over refresh frequency and will always choose 60 hz when available.

          • By tombert 2026-03-044:32

            My toilet seems to work fine, and I think it's 35 years old.

            But in general I agree, just with different variables. I'm ok with 60hz but I won't use a screen less than 4K. Part of the reason I bought the ThinkPad is because it was one of the few I could find at a reasonable price that had a 4K screen.

      • By nine_k 2026-03-042:182 reply

        Are you a gamer? Otherwise it's really not easy to notice a "slideshow" at 60 Hz.

        • By iso-logi 2026-03-043:21

          Moving the mouse around at anything below 90Hz is pretty rough.

        • By huddert 2026-03-043:551 reply

          No. I guess everyone has different levels of sensitivity to refresh rates. It is immediately noticeable and very distracting to me when using a 60hz display.

          It's not acceptable on a high-end laptop nowadays (120hz minimum). Imagine the reduction in headaches, fatigue and nausea if we stopped tolerating this penny-pinching.

          • By hermanzegerman 2026-03-0415:48

            I think you are the outlier with Headaches, Fatigue and Nausea from using a 60hz Display

  • By Terr_ 2026-03-0323:527 reply

    > LPCAMM2 memory that’s fast, efficient, and easily serviced [0]

    Today I Learned about LPCAMM2, which is refreshing, seeing soldered-on memory always felt like some kind of slide into disposable barbarism.

    [0] https://www.ifixit.com/News/95078/lpcamm2-memory-is-finally-...

    • By orev 2026-03-043:151 reply

      When CAMM was announced, they (Dell) mentioned that one of the reasons for soldered RAM was due to electrical tolerances not being met anymore with regular DIMMs at the speeds they were reaching. CAMM was designed to avoid this, and ensures that each trace has the same length so there aren’t timing issues.

      I’m no expert but it sounds plausible to me. From a manufacturing perspective, it makes sense that they’d want modular RAM so they can configure them at point of sale instead of having to manufacture multiple motherboards with only RAM sizes being different.

      • By trinsic2 2026-03-045:38

        Yeah I read about that too. Makes sense as faster cpus demand faster responses from ram and the timing has to be right. I think it came up with a gamers nexus video on the steam machine.

    • By kristianp 2026-03-040:331 reply

      Looks like the T14 Gen 7 is the first T14 to have a CAMM socket. The previous model has SODIMM DDR5-5600, more power hungry? Prior to that it was the more expensive P1 Gen 7 that had LPCAMM2.

      Regarding the T14 and T16, I'm frustrated that in my market (AU), they don't sell better screens than 1920x1200. I'd like to have a brighter 3k or 4k screen.

      The LPCAMM2 seems to be limited to the Intel models, according to the pc mag article.

      https://www.pcmag.com/news/lenovo-thinkpad-t14-gen-7-hands-o...

      • By accrual 2026-03-0715:59

        I'm excited to see a CAMM socket on a Thinkpad. I remember reading about CAMM a few years ago and thinking "wow looks futuristic, when will I start seeing it in hardware I care about?" and that day finally arrived.

    • By ehnto 2026-03-040:392 reply

      It did worry me though, as I had also never heard of it. Is it highly available like more regular DIMM or SODIMM ram?

      That is usually my concern with things like the modular ports and replaceable keyboards too. By the time I actually need to replace anything it could be 10 years from now, could I actually source these parts easily?

      Regardless, that is a excellent problem to have compared to other less repairable laptops. I have been running my current laptop for 10 years, by the time it's unrepairable I might switch to this.

      • By idle_zealot 2026-03-041:48

        If this model of laptop is produced in high volume, at minimum it means that dead ones can be used for parts to cobble together a smaller number of functional ones. Well, unless it turns out that a design flaw means a few parts in particular are almost always the first to go...

      • By accrual 2026-03-0716:00

        > Is it highly available like more regular DIMM or SODIMM ram?

        I imagine it will be kind of like USB-C. It's new and uncommon for a few years until suddenly everywhere you look has piles of it.

        Edge connector RAM may one day be looked back on as "old style memory" like SIPP and DIPP is now.

    • By accrual 2026-03-0717:27

      I love how the LPCAMM2 slot and module looks on this board, almost futuristic/cyberpunk. Thick outline to mark it on the PCB, arrows pointing to screws, stamped metal heatspreader (reminds me of RDRAM), QR code, angular footprint, big "MEMORY" label affixed.

      Cool how memory converged on the same grid-of-pins solution as CPUs.

    • By aitchnyu 2026-03-049:19

      Can we expect laptops with removable memory modules to stay on top of AI workload benchmark?

    • By bmenrigh 2026-03-043:04

      Yeah I learning about LPCAMM2 memory was far more interesting than the repairability score.

    • By varispeed 2026-03-041:141 reply

      I thought the issue with the soldered on RAM wasn't the fact that it was soldered, but that manufacturers would use chips that are not easy to source and in some way serialised. So even if you got larger chips, you would still have to figure out other parts to swap that tell the CPU it's 32GB now, not 24GB.

      • By doubled112 2026-03-041:462 reply

        Being soldered on is a huge issue to 99% of people and businesses wanting to repair or upgrade something.

        I don’t have the tools or skills to replace soldered on memory chips when they fail. Nobody at my place of work does. Nobody was doing that type of work in a warranty centre I worked in either.

        I’d need to buy an entire motherboard which will much more expensive, and likely more time consuming, than swapping a couple of memory modules.

        • By varispeed 2026-03-0516:421 reply

          It's not about 99%, but enabling an industry of skilled repairers to do it for you for a small fee.

          99% of people will not be replacing the USB-C port, they'll just bin the device and buy a new one or live with a dead port. So the effort is 80% PR 20% actual usefulness.

          • By PennRobotics 2026-03-069:43

            I keep purchasing ThinkPads (Z13, X1 Gen 11, X1 Gen 12, T16) where the USB-C port breaks within a year (respectively: "no dock or external monitor", "no charge and only non-Thunderbolt enumeration" on a single port, "charge only, no USB enumeration at all" on both ports, "fries other devices during reverse PD"), and I'd love to be able to swap out a broken port rather than ship the entire machine to Poland for two weeks and get lectured by the support contact that, "maybe ports only stop working under Linux but we'll still repair the mainboard this time."

            I am waiting to jump ship to a different manufacturer, but nobody is challenging ThinkPad on keyboard quality/layout and Linux support, the two factors where I'm totally unwilling to compromise. (Tuxedo is close but still not the better alternative.)

        • By bigtex 2026-03-0412:354 reply

          In the almost 30 years of using Mac’s at home and various desktop pc’s in the workplace I don’t think I have ever seen ram fail. Replaced plenty of old school failed disk drives however.

          • By opan 2026-03-0414:48

            Failing RAM is rarer than it seems from posts online. My theory is that it's so easy to test for that everyone says to do it even if it's unlikely to be your problem. It reminds me of people who needlessly recap (replace capacitors) everything in hopes of it fixing a problem, often not even bothering to test each cap or exhausting other options first. IME dirt/corrosion/oxidation (often solved by cleaning) is a much more prevalent problem than bad caps. After that, solder that needs reflowing is still a more common issue than bad caps.

            That being said, I really did have one bad stick of RAM once in my life, and it really does cause strange seemingly random problems.

          • By drillsteps5 2026-03-0415:50

            I think it is less of a concern to the businesses buying these things brand new and more of a concern to the tinkerers who buy/repair/resell/use older models. There's a lot of people who still use ThinkPads made in early 2010s (and earlier). I had RAM module fail on an x270 and replacing it only required opening the laptop (RAM sticks just snap into place). If soldered-on RAM fails, it's game over, or at least full board swap.

            Plus, no way to put more RAM/replace RAM with larger module if it's soldered on.

          • By doubled112 2026-03-0413:12

            Lucky. Working in repairs I was only seeing the ones that didn’t work, and I’ve seen failures of just about everything. It probably skews my experience.

            One time upgrading workstations, 4 of the 20 Corsair kits were sent for RMA. Those aren’t great odds.

            I would guess that soldering them to the board reduces the points of failure, the slots can and do fail. However, I’ve also seen soldered components coming off as the cause of failures, but it is usually a part that gets hot combined with a design flaw.

          • By Terr_ 2026-03-050:23

            > I don’t think I have ever seen ram fail.

            I think making it impossible to upgrade is a somewhat bigger problem, at least while the machine is still in-warranty.

            Traditionally, RAM has been one of the more-common upgrades to make as needs or budgets change, so soldering it in looks like planned-obsolescence.

  • By mushufasa 2026-03-041:243 reply

    This commitment by Lenovo must have been driven by customer demand -- in this case, the IT departments. I wonder how much of that demand may be attributed to questions about comparisons to Framework. Even if Framework is not mainstream, it has mindshare among the IT-crowd.

    • By nine_k 2026-03-042:222 reply

      The replaceable Thunderbolt sockets connecting to an internal Thunderbolt socket are a direct... homage to Framework.

      • By opan 2026-03-0414:53

        Lenovo has long had a separate board for the power connector you could separately replace. This is likely a continuation of that idea. I had an X220 Tablet (Released in 2011) from eBay that was sparking when I plugged it in. IIRC I just unscrewed and rescrewed the charging board and then it worked again. I guess there was some short, maybe it was loose. It would've been easy to replace just that part if it had failed completely.

      • By TiredOfLife 2026-03-047:50

        Framework just made dongles be a part of case. Inside it's still soldered type-c connectors.

    • By 0x38B 2026-03-043:56

      For me, Framework is super cool as a brand, both for the quality of their product and the ethos that backs it. When everyone else in the coffee shop has an apple or another brand so widespread that you don't even notice it, the gear is something different. I like that.

    • By huddert 2026-03-045:182 reply

      Framework is a great concept but they will die due to poor execution. If I hadn't already recently bought a Framework (and knew what I do now about them) I would've held out for one of these new Lenovos. I don't think Framework can compete if one of the established players joins the game.

      • By leethargo 2026-03-046:45

        Could you share some of "what you now know bout them"?

        Was there some issue in customer support, or getting spare parts?

        Is it about the new products that have since come out?

        I'm also using a Framework notebook for the past two years and have been quite happy, but nothing needed replacement so far...

      • By Epskampie 2026-03-0412:30

        I've got a framework 13, pretty happy with it. Everything works as expected under the newest ubuntu. Build quality is good enough for me.

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