Lenovo P Series 30HH007TUS Review

The Lenovo ThinkStation P8 pairs a beastly Threadripper PRO CPU with a surprisingly weak GPU. It's a powerhouse for some, but a frustrating compromise for most at this price.

CPU AMD Ryzen 9 7945
RAM 32 GB
Storage 1 TB
GPU NVIDIA A400
Form Factor Workstation
Psu W 1400
OS Windows 11 Pro
Lenovo P Series 30HH007TUS desktop
81.2 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

A CPU powerhouse saddled with a mediocre GPU. Fantastic for pure number crunching, frustrating for anything else. Unless your job is compiling code all day, you can find a better-balanced workstation.

Overview

The Lenovo ThinkStation P8 is a serious machine for serious work, but it's got a weird identity crisis. On one hand, you've got a monster Threadripper PRO CPU and a 1400W power supply ready to crunch numbers for days. On the other, it's paired with an NVIDIA RTX A400, a workstation GPU that lands in the 44th percentile for its class. The one thing to know? This is a CPU-first beast. If your workload is all about cores, threads, and memory bandwidth, you're looking at a powerhouse. If you need serious 3D rendering or simulation muscle, the GPU is going to feel like a bottleneck.

Performance

The AMD Ryzen Threadripper PRO 7945WX is the star here. With 12 cores and 24 threads, it's in the 82nd percentile for CPU performance, and it shows. It'll tear through code compilation, complex simulations, and heavy multitasking without breaking a sweat. The 32GB of ECC DDR5 RAM is solid, and the 1TB NVMe SSD is fast. But the GPU performance is the surprise, and not a good one. The RTX A400 is fine for driving multiple 4K displays and basic 3D acceleration, but it's not the card you'd pair with this CPU for heavy visualization work. It's like putting economy tires on a race car.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 86.7
GPU 52.9
RAM 85.1
Ports 77
Storage 76.4
Reliability 71.9
Social Proof 47

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong cpu (87th percentile) 87th
  • Strong ram (85th percentile) 85th
  • Strong port (77th percentile) 77th
  • Strong storage (76th percentile) 76th

Cons

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU AMD Ryzen 9 7945
Cores 12
Frequency 3.7 GHz
L3 Cache 64 MB

Graphics

GPU A400
Type discrete
VRAM 16 GB
VRAM Type GDDR6

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 1 TB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Build

Form Factor Workstation
PSU 1400
Weight 22.7 kg / 50.0 lbs

Connectivity

HDMI 4x Mini DisplayPort 1.4
Wi-Fi WiFi 6E
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.3
Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet

System

OS Windows 11 Pro

Value & Pricing

At $4,289, the value proposition is shaky unless your needs are hyper-specific. You're paying a premium for the Threadripper platform and Lenovo's reliability, but you're getting a mid-tier workstation GPU. For pure CPU workloads, it might be justified. For anything requiring balanced CPU and GPU power, you can almost certainly get more for your money elsewhere.

Price History

$4,000 $4,500 $5,000 $5,500 Mar 9Mar 28Apr 11 $5,369

vs Competition

This sits in a weird spot. Compared to gaming desktops like the HP Omen 45L or Corsair Vengeance a7400, the P8 has a far more powerful CPU and professional-grade features like ECC RAM, but its gaming and creative performance will be hamstrung by the A400 GPU. Against other workstations, you need to ask if you need the Threadripper's core count. A Dell Precision or HP Z series with a Xeon or Intel Core Ultra and a better GPU (like an RTX A2000 or A4500) might offer better all-around performance for similar money. The P8 is a specialist, not a generalist.

Spec Lenovo P Series 30HH007TUS Dell Alienware Dell Alienware Aurora Gaming Desktop HP OMEN HP OMEN 45L Gaming Desktop, Intel Core Ultra 7 MSI EdgeXpert MSI EdgeXpert-11SUS AI Supercomputer Acer Nitro Acer Nitro 60 Desktop Computer ASUS ROG ROG NUC (2025) Gaming Mini PC with Intel Core
CPU AMD Ryzen 9 7945 Intel Core Ultra 9 285K Intel Core Ultra 7 265K NVIDIA GB AMD Ryzen 9 7900 Intel Core Ultra 9
RAM (GB) 32 32 32 128 32 32
Storage (GB) 1024 2048 2048 4096 2048 2048
GPU NVIDIA A400 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 NVIDIA NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080
Form Factor Workstation Desktop Desktop Mini Desktop Mini
Psu W 1400 1000 850 240 850 330
OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliabilitySocial Proof
Lenovo P Series 30HH007TUS 86.752.985.17776.471.947
Dell Alienware Aurora Gaming Compare 97.887.986.399.493.171.993.8
HP OMEN 45L Gaming Compare 96.587.979.58093.171.999.8
MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS AI Supercomputer Compare 99.19599.191.19841.285.9
Acer Nitro 60 Compare 86.884.779.57793.136.187.1
ASUS ROG NUC Gaming Compare 92.287.979.585.793.141.289.8

Common Questions

Q: Can I upgrade the GPU later?

Absolutely. That 1400W power supply has plenty of headroom, and the case is standard ATX. Swapping out the A400 for a more powerful NVIDIA RTX or AMD Radeon Pro card is one of the first things we'd recommend.

Q: Is this good for gaming?

No, don't buy this for gaming. The A400 GPU is built for professional applications, not games. You'd get much better gaming performance from a $1,500 gaming PC with an RTX 4070.

Q: What does the 3-Year Premier Support include?

It's Lenovo's top-tier business support. You get next-business-day onsite service, 24/7 phone support, and accidental damage protection. It's a big value-add if downtime costs you money.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you're a creative pro, gamer, or anyone who needs strong GPU performance. The A400 will hold you back. Instead, look at a high-end gaming PC with a Core i9 or Ryzen 9 and an RTX 4080, or a workstation from Dell or HP configured with a proper professional GPU like an RTX A4500.

Verdict

We can't recommend the ThinkStation P8 as configured for most buyers. It's a niche product. If you are a data scientist, engineer, or developer whose workflow is 90% CPU-bound and you need the absolute stability of ECC memory and Lenovo's support, this could be your machine. For everyone else—3D artists, video editors, simulation pros who need GPU acceleration—the underpowered graphics card is a deal-breaker. Look for a config with a better GPU, or look at a different system entirely.