The Lenovo LOQ 15AHP9 is a gaming laptop with a chassis measuring 359 mm wide, 258 mm deep, and 21 mm thick, with a total volume of 1,945 cm³ and a weight of 2,380 g. It features a backlit keyboard and relies on an active cooling system rather than a fanless design. The laptop is not weather-sealed, so it offers no splash protection. A two-year warranty is included with the device.
The laptop features a 15.6″ IPS LCD panel with LED backlighting, delivering a 1920 x 1080 resolution at a pixel density of 141 ppi. It runs at a 144Hz refresh rate, which is well-suited for gaming, and offers a typical brightness of 300 nits alongside an anti-reflection coating to reduce glare. The display does not support touch input, and the system can drive up to four connected displays simultaneously.
The system is powered by an 8-core, 16-thread CPU built on a 4 nm process, running at a base clock of 8 x 3.8 GHz and boosting up to 5.1 GHz, with multithreading support and 64-bit compatibility. It comes with 16GB of DDR5 RAM at 5600 MHz across two memory slots, expandable to a maximum of 32GB, paired with a 1024GB NVMe SSD for flash-based storage. The GPU operates at a base clock of 1605 MHz with a turbo of 2370 MHz, backed by 6GB of GDDR6 VRAM and delivering 12.13 TFLOPS of floating-point performance, a texture rate of 204.8 GTexels/s, and a pixel rate of 113.76 GPixel/s. The graphics subsystem supports DirectX 12 Ultimate and connects via PCIe 4, though it does not include XeSS support.
In CPU benchmarking, the laptop scores 11,009 in Geekbench 6 multi-core and 2,331 in the single-core test, reflecting the processor's multi-threaded and single-threaded capabilities respectively. The overall PassMark result stands at 28,497, with a single-core PassMark score of 3,738. On the graphics side, the PassMark G3D result reaches 17,148, representing the GPU's measured rendering performance.
The laptop's wired port selection includes one USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C port, three USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports, one HDMI 2.1 output, and one RJ45 Ethernet port, while there are no Thunderbolt 3 or 4 ports, no DisplayPort or mini DisplayPort outputs, and no VGA connector. There is no external memory card slot. For wireless connectivity, it supports Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) alongside Wi-Fi 5 and Wi-Fi 4, and includes Bluetooth 5.2. AirPlay is also supported.
The laptop is equipped with a 60 Wh battery and includes sleep-and-charge USB ports, allowing connected devices to be charged even when the laptop is powered off or in sleep mode. It does not use a MagSafe power adapter.
For audio, the laptop includes stereo speakers, a 3.5 mm headset jack, and two microphones, though it does not support Dolby Atmos and has no S/PDIF output. A front camera is present, but there is no fingerprint scanner, 3D facial recognition, or voice command support. On the graphics feature side, it supports ray tracing and DLSS, adding to its gaming-oriented capability set. The device does not include a stylus, an optical disc drive, or any motion and location sensors such as a gyroscope, accelerometer, compass, or GPS.
The discrete GPU is based on the Ada Lovelace architecture and features 2,560 shading units, 80 texture mapping units, 48 ROPs, and 12 execution units, with a 96-bit memory bus running at 2,000 MHz for an effective speed of 16,000 MHz and a maximum bandwidth of 192 GB/s. It supports multi-display output, stereoscopic 3D, Double Precision Floating Point, OpenCL 3, OpenGL 4.6, and Intel Resizable BAR, and does not include LHR. The integrated graphics solution is identified as the Radeon 780M. On the CPU side, this is a laptop-class processor with a TDP of 115W, a clock multiplier of 38, and a maximum operating temperature of 100 °C; it supports NX bit, ECC memory, and instruction sets including MMX, F16C, FMA3, AES, AVX, AVX2, SSE 4.1, and SSE 4.2, but does not use big.LITTLE technology and has a locked multiplier. Cache configuration consists of 512 KB of L1, 8 MB of L2 at 1 MB per core, and 16 MB of L3 at 2 MB per core, with two memory channels supporting a maximum RAM speed of 7,500 MHz. The chip is built from 18,900 million transistors, and the overclocked PassMark result is recorded at 29,732.