PC Pro

Toshiba Tecra X40-E

Thick bezels mar its visual appeal, but this is a grown-up ultraporta­ble for serious work

- TIM DANTON

SCORE PRICE From £799 (£959 inc VAT) from toshiba.co.uk

Ireviewed the Toshiba Tecra X40-D seven months ago ( see issue 277, p63), and while broadly positive about its benefits for a mobile workforce I criticised its noise and lack of speed. I’d hoped for a little more than 55 in our benchmarks, and wondered if there were thermal issues that were cramping the processor’s performanc­e; while it was quiet in general use, the fans would occasional­ly kick in with abandon.

This refreshed version of the Tecra X40 comes replete with an eighthgene­ration Intel Core processor and an abundant 32GB of RAM. The result? A much stronger score of 70 in our benchmarks – and this time the fan noise was much less conspicuou­s. If you’re looking for a machine that can number-crunch on the move, your employees won’t be disappoint­ed.

I emphasise employees because, unlike the Dell XPS 13 with its consumer aspiration­s, this laptop is all about business. Even ignoring its conservati­ve dark blue finish, consider all the security layers on show: the touchpad integrates a fingerprin­t reader, there’s an IR camera for Windows Hello, and Tosh adds its own layer of encryption via its BIOS and a TPM 2 module. Naturally, Windows 10 Pro is at the helm, so you have the option of BitLocker for full-drive encryption as well.

Perhaps surprising­ly for a machine targeted at businesses, the Tecra X40-E includes a touchscree­n. I’m not convinced about this, in part because the screen doesn’t fold back 180-degrees so you can’t use it as a giant tablet to scrawl upon. There are counterarg­uments – perhaps your sales team uses a quotation tool that works best with finger prods – but only you will know if you’ll put it to good use.

If you’re a creative agency, though, forget about this Tecra. An average Delta E of 6.3 is way above the 1.5 or below anyone requiring colour accuracy would hope for. Likewise, its 58.2% sRGB gamut coverage reveals that it won’t reproduce all the colours necessary for photo-based work.

Neverthele­ss, if you pump the screen up to its maximum 251cd/m2 brightness then 90% of people won’t notice its technical shortcomin­gs. It’s true that an 886:1 contrast ratio isn’t the best either, but again this is only something you’d spot if watching a moodily shot film and wanting to see what was happening in the shadows.

The harman/kardon-branded speakers are capable of adding atmosphere to films, and can even accurately reproduce fine vocal performanc­es (Björk’s It’s Oh So Quiet in my test). Naturally, bass is missing, but that’s an inevitable characteri­stic of any laptop’s built-in speakers, let alone a machine that measures 16.9mm thick.

It’s a light little machine too, weighing 1.24kg when I put it on our scales. While rivals such as the Dell XPS 13 are more compact, you can sling this well-made laptop into your bag without worrying that it will add much of a burden. Note its full complement of ports too: two Thunderbol­t 3-enabled USB-C connectors on the right together with a full-size HDMI output, a microSD

“Unlike the Dell XPS 13 with its consumer aspiration­s, the Tecra X40-E is all about business – as shown by its security features”

slot and, over on the left, an ever-helpful USB-A port and 3.5mm jack. You should get a full day’s use out of the battery too. Even with the top-end specificat­ion, which will have some effect on power draw, it lasted 7hrs 11mins in our video-rundown test. So should you buy a Tecra X40-E? Although I wish the screen were better, Toshiba does very little wrong here. I haven’t gone into depth about the keyboard, for instance, because it’s a fine example of its type, while build quality is top notch – exactly what you’d expect from a Toshiba business laptop. The specificat­ion as tested is expensive, at £1,699 exc VAT, but Toshiba claims that final prices of the X40 series will start at £799 exc VAT. For a business laptop of this quality, that’s a good starting price, so the final buying decision will come down to whether you can find the right specificat­ion for the right cost. One thing’s certain: the Tecra X40-E is a solid upgrade on the X40-D and will be a huge upgrade on what your employees are currently using. SPECIFICAT­IONS Dual-core 2.7GHz Intel Core i7-8650U processor Intel HD Graphics 620 32GB RAM 14in IPS touchscree­n display, 1,920 x 1,080 resolution 1TB M.2 NVMe SSD 720p webcam 802.11ac Wi-Fi Bluetooth 4.2 2 x USB-C/Thunderbol­t 3 USB 3 HDMI microSD card slot Windows 10 Pro battery capacity not stated 332 x 229 x 16.9mm (WDH) 1.24kg 1yr RTB warranty

 ??  ?? ABOVE With a sleek magnesium chassis, the Tecra X40-E is designed to look good in boardrooms
ABOVE With a sleek magnesium chassis, the Tecra X40-E is designed to look good in boardrooms
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 ??  ?? ABOVE Toshiba packs in plenty of ports, including two USB-C, a microSD slot and a full-size HDMI port
ABOVE Toshiba packs in plenty of ports, including two USB-C, a microSD slot and a full-size HDMI port

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