Fujitsu Celsius H780 or Lenovo Thinkpad P 52?

Gi
- in Lenovo
8

I'm currently looking for a laptop for CAD applications and MS Office.

It should be a NVIDIA Quadro P2000 graphics card with 4 GB. I would not care about RAM and hard drive, because I could upgrade it myself.

I have these two models in mind.

Fujitsu workstation CELSIUS H780
15.6 "Full HD, i7-8850H vPro, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD, NVIDIA Quadro P2000 graphics card 4096MB GDDR5, Windows 10 Pro 64 bit, weight 2.70kg
Lenovo ThinkPad P52
15.6 "Full HD IPS Display, i7-8850H, 16GB DDR4, 512GB SSD, Video Card NVIDIA Quadro P2000 4096MB GDDR5, Win10Pro, Weight 2.45kg
Now my question which would you recommend from the processing, performance, everyday life, resilience, etc.

Please only people who have worked or experience with it.

I would be very happy about an exhaustive answer and please do not half know how Lenovo is better and Fujitsu is bad.

It's just about these two models and no other.

Mi

Although I can't report from my own experience, but https://www.notebookcheck.com/...#toc-fazit writes:

Although the Fujitsu Celsius H780 can't be described as a total failure, there are too many weaknesses in our opinion for a 2,500 Euro device. The competitors in the form of the Lenovo ThinkPad P52 and the Dell Precision 7530 simply convince us more.

ex

I've upgraded the P52 for work, but bigger (more RAM, more SSD, Xeon).

I'm hauling around 3-5 days a week all over Europe, in a normal, stuffed laptop bag since I got it at the beginning of the year, he's always on the train and on the plane. Looks like new and does what he should. Robust and suitable for everyday use, only last week worked outside with sun from the side to enjoy the last little late summer.

He is also powerful, although I can't speak for the equipment you have chosen. Since the two models you have selected do not take much, at most in the heat or in the display quality.

Does the Fujitsu have a trackpoint / nipple? They are on the way very handy, if times jerky and you still have to work.

And yes, I'm talking about dragging, the 170W PSU alone is as heavy as some other laptop…

People always look sympathetic in the train, because they think the thick, heavy part would be 10 years old… I always grin to myself.

Gi

Thanks for the quick feedback matmatmat.

Unfortunately, he does not have a trackpoint / nipple.

ex

These are handy, I use for years. You have to get used to it, but hang up your forearm on the device with your fingers "zooming in" and pressing the mouse button with your thumb is very good when it jerks in the train. Much better than the wireless mouse and better than free-floating hand over the trackpad.

IBM invented (now Lenovo) hats, DELL copies that I believe in the high-end devices.

Gi

Yes, I had also read the test, but I wanted to the people who have worked so ausgeibig and can share the experience with me, if it really so much significant.

ex

I've just briefly looked at the CELSIUS H780. Advantage could be that still has the VGA instead of just a display port and HDMI? Otherwise the one in the pictures has significantly fewer connections…

Gi

Thanks for the tip:-)

Gi

The connections such as VGA / HDMI would not be so relevant for me, except USB Type C. The Celsius H780 I would get very cheap than the Thinkpad. Therefore, I wanted to make sure that the difference would be worthwhile, such as durability, resilience etc.

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