
The ThinkPad X12 Detachable is Lenovo’s
latest take on the Surface Pro
A convertible laptop for ThinkPad fans
You could line up most ThinkPad models of the past few years and the average laptop buyer might have difficulty telling the difference between them. Lenovo has the look, feel, and features of its premium business line down to a science, and it has attracted a devoted base of fans in doing so.
Over
the past year, Lenovo has made several attempts to move the ThinkPad package
into less traditional, more portable form factors, from the razor-thin X1 Nano to
the pricey but groundbreaking X1 Fold.
With the ThinkPad X12 Detachable, the company is once again taking direct aim
at Microsoft’s Surface Pro line.
As you probably figured out from its name, the X12 Detachable is a
ThinkPad-branded and ThinkPad-looking 12.3-inch Windows tablet with a
detachable keyboard deck.
Once
you’re aware of that information, there’s not much about the X12 Detachable
that will surprise you. It has many of the same strengths that its ThinkPad
siblings do, including the camera shutter, the discrete clickers, the keyboard
nub, and the black-and-red color scheme that ThinkPad fans will know and love.
It also comes with some unique drawbacks that are inherent to its form factor —
small screen, shallow keyboard, limited ports, and so on. But if you’re in the
market for a detachable PC with business features and strong specs, there’s no
reason the X12 Detachable shouldn’t be on your list.
LENOVO THINKPAD X12
DETACHABLE SPECS
- Display: 3:2 12.3-inch FHD+
- Dimensions: 11.15 x 8.01 x 0.34 inches (tablet only), 11.15 x
8.01 x 0.57 inches (with keyboard)
- Weight: 1.67 lbs (tablet only), 2.4 lbs (with keyboard)
- Processor: Intel Core i5-1130G7
- RAM: 16GB LPDDR4x
- Storage: 512GB PCIe NVMe
- Wireless: Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX201, Bluetooth 5.1, optional WWAN LTE
4G CAT9
- Ports: one Thunderbolt 4, one USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C, one 3.5mm
audio jack, optional Nano SIM slot
MSRP: $2,219
Buying
a portable, detachable machine sometimes means compromising on specs and
performance, but that’s certainly not the case here. The X12 Detachable comes
with Intel’s latest 11th Gen processors and runs Windows 10 Pro. The base model
has an MSRP of $1,819 but is currently listed at
$1,091. (This is just how Lenovo does their pricing — don’t think about it too
hard.) It comes with a Core i3-1110G4, 8GB of RAM (soldered), and 256GB of
storage. I’m testing a more expensive Core i5 model with 16GB of RAM and 512GB
of storage, which is currently listed at $1,331.40.

The
most comparable Surface Pro 7 Plus models are currently listed at $849.99 and $1,399.99 respectively.
Those prices are deceptive, however, because all of the X12 Detachable models
currently listed on Lenovo’s site include a stylus and keyboard cover in the
box; you have to buy them separately for the Surface Pro 7 Plus, and they add
at least an extra $99.99 and $97.49 to the price. That means my X12 model is
actually a couple hundred bucks less expensive than the most comparable Surface
Pro (which also has less storage).
The
Core i5-1130G7 in my test unit offers the various amenities of the 11th Gen
line, including Intel’s powerful Xe integrated graphics and support for
Thunderbolt 4 and Wi-Fi 6. Using it was a good, smooth experience: I can’t
imagine that anyone using the X12 for standard business work with Chrome tabs,
streaming, Zoom calls, and the like will encounter any performance issues. The
ThinkPad’s fan was consistently running during my use, but it wasn’t loud enough
to be bothersome, and the device never heated up.
This
isn’t a laptop you’d want to use for any kind of heavy gaming, but the Iris Xe
graphics can lend a hand with lighter creative work. I used the device to
process and lightly edit a batch of photos, and while it wasn’t the snappiest
experience I’ve ever had, it was workable for my amateur needs. Anyone who does
professional graphic work should consider a system with a GPU, of course.
The
X12’s keyboard and pen are both fine, and among the better accessories I’ve
used with detachable PCs. The stylus, which lives in a handy loop on the right
side of the keyboard deck, didn’t give me any problems and has two buttons that
you can map to your taste in Lenovo’s Pen Settings software. The keys are a bit
cramped and flat, as is often the case with folio keyboards, but typing was a
comfortable experience overall. They’re also backlit, which you don’t see on
every detachable keyboard.
The
touchpad is a bit small (I often hit the clickers while scrolling) and not the
smoothest around, but that’s also par for the course with this sort of device.
If the touchpad isn’t your thing, you can use the TrackPoint in the center of
the keyboard.

One
other part of the chassis worth calling out is the 1920 x 1280 display. Like
the Surface Pro line, the X12 has a 3:2 aspect ratio, which is my favorite
aspect ratio (yes, I have a favorite). It’s much roomier than a traditional
16:9 display, providing noticeably more vertical space. The top and side bezels
are chunky, which may put some people off, but that’s understandable since the device
is also meant to function regularly as a tablet (and you need something to
hold).
The
panel itself is also quite nice. It gets decently bright, maxing out at 380
nits in my testing, which should be enough for use outdoors and in other bright
settings (provided that you’re not doing creative work). It covers 73 percent
of the DCI-P3 spectrum, which is on par with what we’ve seen from the Surface Pro 7 Plus.
Videos and webpages all looked great, with bright colors and not too much
glare.
The
X12 has a number of modern security features, which will mostly be of interest
to business customers. There’s a match-on-chip fingerprint reader, which
enables all enrollment, storage, and authentication to happen within the sensor
itself, as well as a dTPM 2.0 chip and Lenovo’s self-healing BIOS, which Lenovo
guarantees “will recover and self-heal when corrupted or maliciously attacked.”
Like previous ThinkPads, the X12 also has an IR camera that supports Windows
Hello facial recognition and includes a physical shutter to block it for
privacy. I will note that the shutter is a bit small and difficult to swap back
and forth, even with my tiny fingers. (There’s also no shutter for the rear-facing
camera.)
The
X12 Detachable has a fairly small 42Wh battery. So I was pleasantly surprised
to see how long it lasted — especially since the X1 Fold, the last
ThinkPad-branded tablet I reviewed, averaged under five hours to a charge. With
the screen around 200 nits of brightness, using the X12 as my daily driver for
Chrome tabs, Spotify streaming, Zoom calls, and the like, I averaged around
seven hours and 50 minutes to a charge. This is right around what my colleague
Tom Warren got out of the Surface Pro 7 Plus, and it means you’ll get close to
a full day out of the X12 if your workload is similar to mine.
I
think Lenovo’s done what it set out to do with the ThinkPad X12 Detachable. The
device makes a clear case for itself as a system with the performance, build
quality, and business features of a ThinkPad in a uniquely portable and
versatile form factor. Its areas of weakness aren’t disasters, and they’re not
areas where other detachables do much better. And it comes with some unique
benefits, including Lenovo’s suite of business features and the bundled
keyboard and stylus.



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