Along with a refresh of the ThinkPad lineup, Lenovo is also offering several new accessories to compliment the new laptops. There are two new docks, and two new displays, each offering at a minimum USB-C connectivity to simplify connections.

ThinkPad Thunderbolt 3 Dock

It’s great to see more Thunderbolt 3 docking solutions on the market. Thunderbolt 3 offers up to 40 Gbps full duplex, which gives a lot more options for IO than ever before. It can natively support two DisplayPort 1.2 streams, for up to two UHD displays at 60 Hz each, and because it’s done over USB-C, it can leverage the 100 Watts of power delivery from that port.

Since the ThinkPad Thunderbolt 3 dock is meant for business uers, some of the port selections may seem odd, but are still required by many organizations. The Thunderbolt 3 dock offers two DisplayPort ports, HDMI, VGA, five USB 3.0 ports with one of these always powered, Gigabit Ethernet, headset jack, and a Thunderbolt 3 port over USB-C, meaning you won’t lose your USB-C port when docking with this.

The dock ships with a 135-Watt AC Adapter, which provides up to 65W of power to the laptop, and the remainder for powering the accessories. There is also a power button on the dock to control the ThinkPad power state when docked, which is nice since the laptop could easily be closed when docked.

As far as display outputs, this dock will drive up to three UHD displays, but in that scenario only one will be at 60 Hz, since both of the DisplayPort outputs are from a single DP 1.2 stream. The third display would be driven off the Thunderbolt 3 output. It can drive two UHD displays at 60 Hz though, which is a much more likely scenario anyway.

The Gigabit Ethernet port also supports PXE boot and Wake-On-LAN for select ThinkPad systems.

The ThinkPad Thunderbolt 3 Dock will be available in February for $279.99.

ThinkPad USB-C Dock

If your laptop has USB-C Gen 2, but not Thunderbolt 3, then this dock offers a subset of the Thunderbolt 3 versions features, due to the more limited bandwidth of USB 3.1 Gen 2. It still offers two DisplayPort outputs, along with VGA, and 3 USB 3.0 ports, 2 USB 2.0 ports, 1 USB Type-C port, Gigabit Ethernet, and a headset jack. This dock ships with a 90-Watt AC Adapter, offering up to 60W of power to charge the laptop.

The display options are much more limited than the Thunderbolt 3 option due to the limited bandwidth. A single UHD display can be driven but only at 30 Hz, or dual 1920x1080 displays at 60 Hz.

The Gigabit Ethernet port still offers PXE boot and Wake-On-LAN support for select ThinkPad systems.

The ThinkPad USB-C Dock will be available in January for $199.99.

ThinkVision P24h and P27h Displays

Lenovo is also launching two new ThinkVision displays, which offer the same features in either a 23.8-inch or 27-inch model. These thin bezel IPS displays both offer QHD (2560x1440) resolution and factory-calibrated sRGB color gamut. Whether this means per-panel or per-batch is unknown, but it’s good to see a focus on improved color accuracy rather than just quoting gamut coverage values.

Both displays offer two HDMI inputs, DisplayPort input, DisplayPort output for daisychaining, and a USB-C offering for a single cable connection. There are also five USB 3.0 ports, with four down and one up, with the USB now on the edge of the display for easier access.

The stand features adjustable height, tilt, swivel, and pivot of plus or minus 90° and there is a ThinkCenter TINY desktop connector as well.

With the USB-C option, and four USB 3.0 ports, the display could be easily used as a single cable docking solution, and the display will offer up to 45W of power delivery to charge a laptop.

Both of these displays will be available in March 2017, with the P24h priced at $259 and the P27h priced at $329.

Source: Lenovo

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  • adamto - Wednesday, December 28, 2016 - link

    Why all Thunderbolt 3 docks have one USB-C output port? I need a TH3 dock with 3 USB-C ports in additional of one TH3 output port ( to be used with Phone, Tablet, Storage, Monitor and so on)
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, December 28, 2016 - link

    Probably a combination of cost/bandwidth management. If you max out the video outputs, you've only got a single USB3-C ports worth of bandwidth left for everything else. Requiring anyone wanting to run multiple devices to provide a separate hub makes the limitation obvious. Only providing native support for a single downstream C port might also be a limitation of whoever is making the underlying controller chip. At the start of this year there was only one company selling a product in the space - their screwing the pooch on thermals killed the gen 1 TB3 docks Dell/HP launched at the start of the year, and presumably kept other companies (*cough*Apple and etc*cough*) from launching them at all. TB3 daisy chaining is a lot less practical in practice than theory in that the line between devices needing enough bandwidth to need TB3 instead of USB3.1g2 and devices capable of using enough bandwidth to cripple anything else in a daisychain is too narrow. (If you can saturate a 10Gb USB link and thus benefit directly from TB's higher bandwidth, you're already using >25% of the total.)
  • cl114c0777498d - Wednesday, December 28, 2016 - link

    Looks really good in general. If they had launched an external gpu enclosure/dock they would have probably kept me as a customer.
  • bill44 - Thursday, December 29, 2016 - link

    Can we have a dock with 2x DP; each on it's own stream?
    It's impossble to connect 2x 4k@60hz monitors without extra converters/dongles.

    Ideal Dock (for me)
    2x DP
    1x GBit Ethernet
    2x USB 3.1 G2 Type-C
    2x USB 3.0 Type-A
    1x Headphone out

    That's it. Have not seen one. I can't even find a way to connect 2x 4k@60hz monitors to 1x TB3 port on the nMBP, as the current adapters are only compatible with Windows. Until then, no MacBook Pro for me.
  • rob89353 - Saturday, December 31, 2016 - link

    So both docks use the same connector.

    If a laptop has USB 3 Type C but not Thunderbolt, can it still use the Thunderbolt dock but with reduced functionality? Say, only two monitors at a time, no HDMI, etc?
  • PaulBraren - Saturday, February 18, 2017 - link

    Seems mine will finally arrive around March 1, should be interesting to test with my 4K Dell Precision 5510's USB-C. https://TinkerTry.com/booting-your-windows-10-from...

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