Legion 5 (2020) – AMD vs INTEL

[ntab Configuration]

Lenovo legion 5i banner

The Legion 5 is the direct successor of the Y540, Lenovo’s 2019 budget gaming laptop, and it is available in various configurations, with users being able to choose between AMD’s Ryzen 4 or Intel’s 10th gen processors, in combination with various dedicated graphics cards ranging from GTX 1650, all the way up to RTX 2060. We already did an in-depth review of the Intel variant, so if you want more general information about the laptop, please click this link for more info. Since both Intel and AMD versions have the same chassis, in this review we will focus more on the performance difference between the two.

Full name: Lenovo Legion 5 15 ARH-05
Configuration specifications:
Display 15.6-inch, 1920 x 1080 @ 144Hz, Matte, IPS NV156FHM-NY4
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 4800H @ 2.90 GHz
Memory Kingston 16GB DDR4 3200 MHz (dual-channel)
Video card NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 Ti 4GB GDDR6 (TU117)
Wireless card Intel Wi-Fi 6 AX200
Storage SK Hynix 512 GB M.2 PCIe SSD
Battery 80 WHr Li-Ion
Operating system Windows 10 Pro (Version 20H2)
Full specifications here
A local retailer provided the unit, and the machine was tested as Lenovo delivers it. No enhancements or changes were done to the laptop except for installing the operating system.

[ntab Display]

Lenovo Legion 5i display

Both displays are absolutely great, however, the AMD version is equipped with the BOE NV156FHM-NY4 IPS panel, which is brighter at 353 measured nits (versus 328 nits on the Intel version), has a higher refresh rate at 144 Hz (vs 60 Hz) and slightly better colour coverage of 99.1% sRGB, 70% Adobe RGB and 72.5% DCI P3. Also, we did not notice any backlight bleeding on any of the displays.

Here is a link to the calibrated display profile of the reviewed unit. Because each display is unique, this profile will not perfectly match other displays of the same model. Still, using this profile should give better overall colours.

 

sRGB profile and calibration
sRGB profile and calibration

[ntab Benchmarks]

3DMARK
NIGHT RAID AMD Intel
SCORE 32880 32060
Graphics score 44266 49059
Physics score 13380 10819
FIRE STRIKE
SCORE 9955 8983
Graphics score 10701 9673
Physics score 23144 18509
Combined score 4189 3895
TIME SPY
SCORE 4367 4011
Graphics score 3983 3712
Physics score 9647 7401
VRMARK
Orange Room AMD Intel
SCORE 5861 5777
Average frame rate 127.76 fps 125.93 fps
Target frame rate 109.00 fps 109.00 fps
Cyan room
SCORE 4055 3670
Average frame rate 88.40 fps 79.99 fps
Target frame rate 88.90 fps 88.90 fps
Blue Room
SCORE 1228 1133
Average frame rate 26.76 fps 24.69 fps
Target frame rate 109.00 fps 109.00 fps
PCMARK 10
AMD INTEL
SCORE 5767 5863
Web Score 8524 9098
Apps Score 10986 12212
Chat Score 7675 7482
Photo Score 9005 7380
Video Score 4498 5161
Writing Score 6848 7225
Spreadsheet Score 9627 9951
Essentials 8957 9402
Productivity 8119 8479
Digital Content Creation 7161 6862
OTHER BENCHMARKS
Geekbench 5 AMD Intel
Single-core score 1170 1213
Multi-core score 8235 6237
Geekbench 4
Single-core score 5318 5570
Multi-core score 31672 24942
Cinebench R20
Single Core 486 pts 457 pts
Multi Core 4724 pts 3132 pts
Blender
CPU blend time 3m 14s 4m 50s

[ntab AMD vs INTEL Gaming benchmarks comparison]

[ntab Gaming benchmarks]

Click on the banner to go to our youtube channel
HP Omen 15 en0 gaming benchmarks

[ntab Temperatures]

Lenovo Legion 5 cooling system
Lenovo Legion 5i cooling system

Both Legion 5 variants share the same chassis design so they have the same cooling solution consisting of three heat pipes (one of which is shared between the CPU and GPU), four heatsinks, two cooling metal plates that cover the VRMs and VRAM, and two medium-sized fans. The fans pull fresh air from underneath the laptop and push it out throughout its sides and back. Even though the bottom of the chassis looks like it has many holes through which the air can come in, opening the back panel reveals that a thin plastic plate blocks these holes. Therefore, the air comes in only through two areas on the bottom of the laptop, which are the same size as the fans.

Because the laptop pulls its fresh air from underneath itself, a cooling pad will make a noticeable difference for the laptop’s internal temperatures. Even though the machine has no problem keeping the temperatures in check, a cooling pad would be especially useful for improving the laptop’s long-term reliability.

The laptops were tested in both real-usage scenarios (like gaming) and synthetic benchmarks with their Thermal Profile set to Performance mode. After testing over 35 games from a wide variety of genres and on various graphical settings, it is clear that both laptops have excellent thermal management. We will focus more on AMD’s performance but we will also include Intel’s results for comparison reasons. If you want more details on how the Intel version behaved during the tests, please read the full review here .

Lenovo Legion 5 back vent
Lenovo Legion 5i back vent

All temperature measurements were performed at an ambient temperature of 26° C (78.8° F).

During the standard 30 minutes AIDA64 stress test (CPU, FPU, cache), the Ryzen 7 4800H reached an average temperature of 95.2°C (203.4°F), with a maximum of 103°C (217.4°F). Even though the maximum temperature may seem alarming, please keep in mind that Ryzen processors have a higher temperature limit of 105°C (221°F). Also, the CPU stayed at that temperature only for a few seconds until the fans kicked in, but it was enough for our tracking software to record it. Despite these temperatures, the processor managed to keep an average clock speed of 4.06 GHz, with a minimum frequency of 3.84 GHz, which is very similar to Intel’s i7-10750H results.

AIDA64 stress test
AMD INTEL
Theoretical all-core boost 4.30 Ghz 4.30 Ghz
Average Frequency 4.06 Ghz 3.95 Ghz
Min Frequency 3.84 Ghz 3.88 Ghz
Average Temperature 95.2°C(203.4°F) 81 °C (177.8 °F)
Max Temperature 103°C (217.4°F) 94 °C (201.2 °F)

Please keep in mind that this is a synthetic test that is meant to push the machines to their maximum limits, however, these limits will likely never be reached during normal use. This is also confirmed by the fact that during normal tasks like gaming, the laptops behaved differently, with the Ryzen 7 4800H temperatures hovering between 60-70° C (140-158° F) and constantly maintaining an all-core maximum boost of 4.30 GHz, while its Intel counterpart, the i7-10750H, ran hotter at 75-85° C (167-185° F) with its all-core maximum boost frequency being variable, sometimes dropping to 4.18 GHz.

After all the tests conducted by the Noteb review team, it is safe to conclude that Legion 5’s cooling solution is more than adequate for its components. The laptop manages to keep its temperatures in check in any scenario, allowing the processors and video card to reach their full potential, while also prolonging the laptop’s life span.

[ntab Battery life]

Battery details:
Device name: L19C4PC1
Manufacturer Name: Celxpert
Unique ID: 2018CelxpertL19C4PC1
Battery type: Li-Pol
Designed Capacity: 80000 mWh
Full Charged Capacity: 83170 mWh
Limited charging voltage: 17.6 V
Lenovo Legion 5 battery
Lenovo Legion 5i battery

Both laptops are rocking the same 80 Whr battery, and we tested them using a simulated continuous web browsing session over the WiFi. The browsing session involved checking emails/news, social media and accessing multimedia websites, similar to the behaviour of an average user. The level of brightness was set on both machines according to visibility and usability, at 60%. The sound volume was also set to 50%.

Lenovo Legion 5 charger
Lenovo Legion 5i charger

The AMD version lasted 4 hours with the Hybrid Mode turned on. This is considerably lower than the Intel version which lasted 5 hours and 30 minutes but it is understandable since the AMD version has a higher refresh rate display which is drawing more power. The machines were tested using both Firefox and Edge and yielded similar battery life results regardless of the browser.

Both laptops charged from 5% to 100% in 1 hour and 55 minutes with the 170W power adapter included in the box. The charging tests were done without activating the “Rapid charge” option, which fast charges 50% of the battery in 30 min.

[ntab Conclusion]

Pros:

  • good performance for 1080p gaming;
  • 144Hz refresh rate panel;
  • great color coverage display;
  • excellent RGB keyboard;
  • great cooling solution
  • competitive pricing;
  • a wide selection of peripheral ports
  • good upgradability.

Cons:

  • lack of a card reader.

So, which one is better? Well, both AMD and Intel versions performed very similar, with the Ryzen 7 4800H being better in multi-core intensive tasks, while the i7-10750H being slightly better in tasks where the single-core maximum frequency is more important. So in the end, the price is the deciding factor. Just get which one is cheaper in your region since there is no real gap in performance between the two versions, and in the end, they are both formidable machines, outclassing most budget gaming laptops out there.

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