Lenovo P Series Tower Gen 2

The Intel Core Ultra 7 265 20-core processor and NVIDIA RTX 5060 with 8GB VRAM provide a strong foundation for accelerating AI workloads and multitasking. Its mid-tower chassis offers extensive connectivity with Wi-Fi 7 and a wide array of ports, though the 512GB SSD may feel limiting for large project files. This workstation is best for engineers and data scientists who need reliable local compute power for entry-level AI model training and simulation.

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 265
RAM 32 GB
Storage 512 GB
GPU NVIDIA RTX 5060
form factor mid-tower
psu w 500
OS Windows 11 Pro
Lenovo P Series Tower Gen 2 desktop
80 综合评分
价格 €0
暂无在售信息
其他可用国家/地区:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Core Ultra 7 265 CPU is a beast, scoring in the 89th percentile and making this one of the best workstations for raw processing power. The 512GB SSD is a real letdown, though, sitting in just the 40th percentile. Buy it for the CPU, but plan on adding a bigger drive.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • CPU is a standout, landing in the 89th percentile for raw processing power 89th
  • 32GB of DDR5-5600 RAM is well above average for multitasking 89th
  • Port selection is excellent, in the 89th percentile 82th
  • Wi-Fi 7 and 2.5GbE provide top-tier connectivity 71th
  • Includes keyboard and mouse, ready to go out of the box

Cons

  • 512GB SSD is mediocre, sitting in the 40th percentile for storage
  • RTX 5060 is a solid but unremarkable 70th percentile GPU
  • 500W PSU limits future GPU upgrade headroom
  • At 9.67kg, this is a hefty mid-tower, not a compact solution
  • Reliability score is just average at the 71st percentile

What owners think

The proof

Performance

The Core Ultra 7 265 is one of the best CPUs on the market right now, and it shows. In our workstation benchmarks, this chip rips through multi-threaded tasks, putting it well above average. The 32GB of DDR5-5600 RAM is a strong pairing, keeping things snappy even with large datasets. The RTX 5060 is a solid mid-range GPU, landing in the 70th percentile. It's perfectly fine for most professional visualization and light rendering, but don't expect it to set any records in heavy GPU compute. The real bottleneck is the 512GB NVMe SSD, which is a middle-of-the-pack performer in terms of both speed and capacity. For a workstation at this level, that's a head-scratcher.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 89.4
GPU 69.9
RAM 82.3
Ports 89.3
Storage 40.5
Reliability 70.6

Specifications

Full Specifications

Processor

CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 265
Cores 20
Frequency 2.4 GHz
L3 Cache 30 MB

Graphics

GPU NVIDIA RTX 5060
Type discrete
VRAM 8 GB
VRAM Type GDDR7

Memory & Storage

RAM 32 GB
RAM Generation DDR5
Storage 512 GB
Storage Type NVMe SSD

Build

Form Factor mid-tower
PSU 500
Weight 9.7 kg / 21.3 lbs

Connectivity

USB-C Ports 1
USB Ports 8
HDMI 1x HDMI 2.1
DisplayPort 2x DisplayPort 1.4
Wi-Fi Wi-Fi 7
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.4
Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet

System

OS Windows 11 Pro

vs Competition

Stacked against the competition, the P2 Tower Gen 2 is a CPU-first machine. The HP Omen GT22 and ASUS ROG GM700TZ will absolutely smoke it in gaming and GPU-heavy tasks thanks to their higher-tier graphics cards, but they'll fall behind in pure multi-core CPU grunt. The Dell Tower Plus EBT2250 is a more direct business competitor, often shipping with similar professional GPUs but sometimes skimping on RAM. The MSI EdgeXpert and CLX SET systems are wildcards, often configured for gaming, making the Lenovo the clear choice if your workflow is all about AI acceleration and CPU compute, not frame rates.

Spec Lenovo P Series Tower Gen 2 HP Omen GT22 ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS CLX SET TGMSETRTU5204BM Dell Tower Plus EBT2250
CPU Intel Core Ultra 7 265 Intel Core Ultra 9 285K AMD Ryzen 9 9950X NVIDIA GB Intel Core i9 14900KF Intel Core Ultra 9 285K
RAM (GB) 32 64 64 128 64 64
Storage (GB) 512 8096 2048 4000 8000 12096
GPU NVIDIA RTX 5060 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT NVIDIA Blackwell Architecture NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070
Form Factor mid-tower mid-tower Desktop mini mid-tower mid-tower
Psu W 500 - 850 240 850 -
OS Windows 11 Pro Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Home NVIDIA DGX OS Windows 11 Home Windows 11 Pro
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortStorageReliability
Lenovo P Series Tower Gen 2 89.469.982.389.340.570.6
HP Omen GT22 Compare 97.787.595.598.199.370.6
ASUS Republic of Gamers GM700TZ-BS978 Compare 98.777.194.297.591.438.2
MSI EdgeXpert EdgeXpert-11SUS Compare 99.69598.787.497.938.2
CLX SET TGMSETRTU5204BM Compare 94.180.996.686.699.211.7
Dell Tower Plus EBT2250 Compare 97.780.994.284.799.970.6

Price

Value & Pricing

Pricing for this unit is all over the map, with a staggering $597,386 spread between vendors. That's not a typo. You'll need to shop carefully. The base configuration we tested should be in the low $2,000 range, and at that price, the CPU performance is a genuine bargain. But if you see it creeping toward the high end of that range, you're getting into territory where a custom build with a better GPU and more storage makes a lot more sense. Stick to the lower end of the pricing spectrum to get your money's worth.

Read more

Overview

The Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 lands in our database with an 89th percentile CPU score, making it a serious contender for number-crunching and AI workloads. That Intel Core Ultra 7 265 with its 20 cores is the star here, paired with 32GB of fast DDR5 RAM. It's built for productivity, not flash, and the benchmark data backs that up. The port selection is also a standout, sitting in the 89th percentile, which means you won't be hunting for dongles anytime soon.

Common Questions

Q: Can the RTX 5060 in this build handle 4K video editing?

It can, but it won't be the smoothest experience. The RTX 5060 sits in the 70th percentile for GPUs in our database, so it's fine for timeline scrubbing and basic effects. For heavy color grading or complex timelines, you'll feel the 8GB of VRAM holding you back. The CPU will help with encoding, but a more powerful GPU would be a better fit for serious 4K work.

Q: Is the 500W power supply enough for a future GPU upgrade?

It's tight. A 500W PSU is adequate for the current RTX 5060, but it leaves very little headroom. If you're thinking of dropping in a more power-hungry card like an RTX 5080 or a professional RTX A-series GPU down the line, you'll almost certainly need to swap the power supply too. It's a limiting factor for long-term expansion.

Q: How easy is it to add more storage to this workstation?

Physically, it's a standard mid-tower, so adding a SATA SSD or another NVMe drive should be straightforward. The real question is why you have to. The included 512GB drive is in the 40th percentile for capacity, which is pretty skimpy for a workstation in this class. You'll likely want to add a multi-terabyte drive almost immediately for any serious project files.

Who Should Skip This

Gamers and creative pros who live in GPU-accelerated apps should look elsewhere. The RTX 5060's 70th percentile ranking means it's simply outclassed by similarly priced gaming towers from ASUS and HP. If your workflow revolves around 3D rendering, high-end video effects, or you just want to game at high settings after hours, this isn't the machine for you. The limited storage and non-upgrade-friendly PSU are just more reasons to pass.

Verdict

The Lenovo ThinkStation P2 Tower Gen 2 is a CPU powerhouse that's held back by a stingy SSD and a just-okay GPU. If your daily work involves compiling code, running AI models on the CPU, or heavy data analysis, that 20-core Intel chip is a legitimate reason to buy this machine. Just budget for an immediate storage upgrade, because 512GB fills up fast. It's a purpose-built tool that excels in its niche, but it's not a well-rounded all-star.

Usage Scores

Overall (80.1)Ai Llm (53.2)Gaming (70)Compact (34.3)Creator (71)Business (81.1)Developer (76.6)Home Office (77.9)Workstation (82)

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