Pros & Cons
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- Long-enough battery life
- Effective keyboard
- Upgradable memory and storage
- Conservative, office-ready aesthetic
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- Below-average performance
- Inferior IPS display
- Mechanical touchpad
- Plastic chassis lacks rigidity
Dynabook Tecra A40-M (Series 2) Specs
| Boot Drive Capacity (as Tested) | 512 |
| Boot Drive Type | SSD |
| Class | Business |
| Dimensions (HWD) | 0.78 by 12.3 by 8.7 inches |
| Graphics Processor | Intel Arc Graphics |
| Native Display Resolution | 1920 by 1200 |
| Operating System | Windows 11 Pro |
| Panel Technology | IPS |
| Processor | Intel Core Ultra 5 225U |
| RAM (as Tested) | 16 |
| Screen Refresh Rate | 60 |
| Screen Size | 14 |
| Tested Battery Life (Hours:Minutes) | 16:01 |
| Variable Refresh Support | None |
| Weight | 3.17 |
| Wireless Networking | Bluetooth 5.4 |
| Wireless Networking | Wi-Fi 7 |
Dynabook's Tecra A40-M (Series 2), part of the business laptop brand Sharp purchased from Toshiba a while ago, is a modest 14-inch work machine that could use a price chop. (Our test sample runs $1,119.) Dynabook built this work laptop to deliver just what companies want in a portable work partner: solid battery life, a comfortable keyboard, essential connections, and extra security. Its hardware specifications and build quality, though, would better fit a laptop a few hundred dollars less expensive. (Though negotiated bulk pricing could alter that dynamic.) Why? The Tecra's IPS display falls well short, its low-power processor doesn't impress, and its plastic frame doesn't inspire much confidence given the price. We recommend going with something even cheaper if you're okay with a build like this, or spending a little more for higher quality, like the Editors' Choice-award-winning Lenovo ThinkPad X9 14 Aura Edition.
One Price, One Configuration
Dynabook's website displays just one Tecra A40-M (Series 2) configuration. Our $1,119 review unit packs an Intel Core Ultra 5 225U, 16GB of DDR5 memory (RAM), a 512GB solid-state drive (SSD), and a 14-inch 1,920-by-1,200-pixel IPS display. Dynabook still sells older models with "Meteor Lake" processors, but it doesn't discount them nearly enough given the performance step down. (In fact, some of these older configurations cost more than the model we've reviewed here.)
While the Tecra A40-M's price is lower than that of many midrange business-class laptops, it's not quite low enough for what's sold here, as you'll soon see. Even in this price range, most competitors typically include faster processors, more configurations, and far brighter, more colorful display options. With that in mind, the Tecra A40-M looks well-priced on paper, but not when you start to dig into the details. Here's to hoping Dynabook provides substantial discounts to IT-fleet managers buying these laptops in volume.
Design: Hope You Like Plastic
The first thing that strikes me about the Tecra A40-M is its chassis: It's entirely plastic. That’s not always a knock; plastic can make for a lightweight frame that's still reasonably rigid. This laptop, in fact, meets MIL-STD-810H standards for durability—but it sure doesn't feel that way. The Tecra shows a lot of bending and flexing in the lid and keyboard deck, and doesn't give the best in-hand impression for the four-digit price.
For aesthetics, the Tecra presents an expected business-conservative look: a minimalist design, enhanced only with a chrome logo on the lid and a chrome power button. Otherwise, the laptop is coated in a "Dark Metallic Blue" plastic with equally dark keycaps, and it features simple lines with a slight curve at the rear edges. It’s an attractive enough laptop that won’t stand out, just fine for business users.
(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)The Tecra A40-M isn’t particularly thin or light at 0.78 inch thick and 3.17 pounds. Sure, those specs are fine for 14-inch laptops in general, but this laptop is not nearly as svelte as ultraportable business laptops that cost about the same or not much more. The plastic display bezels (also not a high-end look) are thin on the side and average on top and bottom. Taken together, all of that makes for a laptop that’s not tiny but remains reasonably portable. Again, nothing about the Tecra's shape stands out. It’s a clean design, quite literally when you consider the Ionpure IPL antimicrobial coating.
Dynabook delivers one significant design benefit: The RAM and SSD are field-replaceable, making the machine reasonably easy for businesses to maintain and upgrade, thereby extending its lifespan. That’s important for a company that might be deploying hundreds or even thousands of units. The Tecra also comes with a three-year standard warranty. Most typical consumer laptops have just one-year warranties.
Other business nods include support for Microsoft's Windows 11 Secured-Core PC suite, which builds in robust hardware and software defenses to protect data on the device. That extends to the firmware, to protect proprietary business data. Finally, the Tecra A40-M uses a proprietary barrel connector for power, leaving a USB port free for charging and allowing returning customers to reuse existing power supplies.
Effective Keyboard, So-So Touchpad, Capable Webcam
The Tecra A40-M keyboard features excellent switches that are deep and snappy, providing a rigid tactile feel for accurate typing. The keycaps are a little small, but their overall key spacing is just enough. I find myself quickly reaching full typing speed and feel no fatigue during longer typing sessions.
(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)Dynabook's touchpad is a super-small mechanical clicker with button presses that are a bit sharp and loud. Its swiping response is fine, but you'll notice a lot of room available on the palm rest for a larger tracking surface. Also, many laptops at this price point use touchpads with haptic motors, which I much prefer.
The 5-megapixel webcam produces high-quality images for videoconferencing. Dynabook calls the webcam “AI-enhanced,” but the processor lacks Intel’s faster neural processing unit (NPU). So, on-device AI performance will be relatively limited. Even though the laptop has a Microsoft Copilot button that launches AI features, its slower NPU doesn’t fully support the Copilot PC specification for on-device AI computation.
A Dull Display Spoils the Mood
Dynabook includes just one screen option with the Tecra A40-M: a 14-inch, 1,920-by-1,200-pixel (WUXGA) IPS display running at 60Hz. That’s just sharp enough, barely, to avoid obviously pixelated text, and the slower refresh rate makes for a rougher Windows 11 interface than you get with similarly priced laptops.
(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)I generally find the display rather mundane, with only average brightness, blacks that tend toward gray, and muted colors—all of which were reflected in my deeper display testing with a colorimeter. The screen is just bright enough to overcome the ambient lighting in my home office, but it might struggle in brighter indoor lights. Forget about using this laptop outside in sunlight.
The laptop's dual downward-firing stereo speakers are just passable. Mids and highs are clear enough, but I hear distortion at maximum volume and scarce bass. You’ll want to use headphones or external speakers for anything more than system sounds or video meetings.
Ports: All the Connections You Need for Work
Dynabook built a broad selection of ports into the Tecra A40-M. On the left side, you’ll find two USB-C connections with Thunderbolt 4 support and the proprietary power connection (which leaves both ports free for expansion), as well as a USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 port, an HDMI connection, and a 3.5mm audio jack. On the right side, Dynabook provides a single USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 port, an RJ-45 Ethernet connection, and a microSD card slot.
(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)The laptop's wireless connectivity is fully up to date, with Wi-Fi 7 and Bluetooth 5.4. There’s no always-connected cellular option, which you’ll sometimes find on business-class machines.
(Credit: Joseph Maldonado)Performance Testing: Not Enough Oomph
The Tecra A40-M uses one of Intel’s low-power "Arrow Lake" U-series processors, which are aimed more at efficiency than performance. They run at a base power of 15 watts (W), containing 12 cores total (two Performance at up to 4.8GHz, eight Efficient, and two Low-Power Efficient) that can process 14 threads at once. To compare, we’ve selected two work laptops with similar midrange loadouts, and then we have included two that represent a step up in performance and panache.
First, we have the midrange HP EliteBook 6 G1q ($1,349 as tested) and Lenovo ThinkPad P14s Gen 6 (AMD), which cost $1,799 as tested. Then, to show you what's possible by spending (or saving up) a little more, we've included the Dell Pro 14 Premium tested at $1,899 and the Lenovo ThinkPad X9 14 Aura Edition in a $2,299 configuration. These are all business-grade systems across the price spectrum, so the Tecra should theoretically land somewhere in the middle of this pack.
Productivity and Content Creation Tests
Our primary overall benchmark, UL's PCMark 10, puts a system through its paces in productivity apps ranging from web browsing to word processing and spreadsheet work. Its Full System Drive subtest measures a PC's storage throughput. (Because the HP EliteBook is a Qualcomm system, it is not compatible with these and so is not included in those charts below.)
Three more tests are CPU-centric or processor-intensive: Maxon's Cinebench 2024 uses that company's Cinema 4D engine to render a complex scene; Primate Labs' Geekbench 6.3 Pro simulates popular apps ranging from PDF rendering and speech recognition to machine learning; and we see how long it takes the video transcoder HandBrake 1.8 to convert a 12-minute clip from 4K to 1080p resolution. (The ThinkPad P14s could not complete the Cinebench tests, so it is excluded from those charts below.)
Finally, workstation maker Puget Systems' PugetBench for Creators rates a PC's image-editing prowess with a variety of automated operations in Adobe Photoshop 25. (The EliteBook 6 G1q and ThinkPad P14s could not complete this test, so they are excluded from the chart below.)
The Tecra A40-M was the slowest laptop in this comparison group, by a fair margin. (However, it edged out Lenovo's snappy ultraportable in storage performance.) From the synthetic benchmarks like PCMark 10 and Geekbench 6.3 Pro to the more real-world tests like HandBrake and Photoshop, the Tecra placed last in five of six tests. The most significant differences came whenever multiple cores spun up for various tasks, but the chip also placed last in the single-core subtests.
For typical productivity tasks, the Tecra A40-M would be plenty fast enough—its PCMark 10 score, well above our 4,000 baseline, says as much—and that’s likely fine for the laptop’s intended mainstream office workers. However, if you need to carry out demanding productivity workflows, you will be disappointed by this laptop, and the integrated graphics won't speed up creative applications.
Graphics Tests
We challenge each reviewed system’s graphics with a quintet of animations or gaming simulations from UL's 3DMark test suite. The first two, Wild Life (1440p) and Wild Life Extreme (4K), use the Vulkan graphics API to measure GPU speeds. The others, Steel Nomad's regular (4K) and Light (1440p) subtests, focus on APIs more commonly used for game development, like Metal, DirectX 12, and Vulkan, to assess gaming geometry and particle effects. A fifth test, Solar Bay, emphasizes ray-tracing performance using Vulkan or Metal APIs at 1440p resolution.
Simply put, the integrated Intel graphics in the Tecra A40-M are not impressive, to say the least. While you wouldn't even consider playing games on this laptop regardless, these results indicate a lack of ability to render 3D visuals for professional fields that might require that capability. If your line of work involves creating or manipulating 3D assets, you'll need to find another laptop. In this bunch, that would be the Dell Pro 14 Premium and its Intel Arc 140V integrated graphics, but you'll probably want a discrete graphics chip for that kind of work.
Battery Life and Display Tests
We test each laptop and tablet's battery life by playing a locally stored 720p video file (the open-source Blender movie Tears of Steel) with display brightness at 50% and audio volume at 100%. We make sure the battery is fully charged before the test, with Wi-Fi and keyboard backlighting turned off.
To gauge display performance, we also use a Datacolor SpyderX Elite monitor-calibration sensor and its Windows software to measure a laptop screen's color saturation—what percentage of the sRGB, Adobe RGB, and DCI-P3 color gamuts or palettes the display can show—and its 50% and peak brightness in nits (candelas per square meter).
The Tecra A40-M packs a 60Whr battery inside, which isn’t that capacious for a 14-inch laptop, but the low-res IPS panel doesn't burn a lot of power. The low-power processor also contributes to longer battery life. In our standard battery test, the Tecra A40-M managed 16 hours, which isn’t bad in its own right, at well more than a workday. However, the system placed dead last yet again, and by an hour. If you repeatedly push it to its limits in a day, the Tecra may not last an entire shift without needing a top-off.
For a brand owned by a display manufacturer, this 14-inch IPS panel's performance comes in well short of expectations, especially at its asking price. Its color gamuts falls way below average at 63% of sRGB, 48% of AdobeRGB, and 48% of DCI-P3. (IPS panels average around 95%, 75%, and 75%, respectively, in my experience.) The screen's brightness also posts well-below-average values for modern displays crossing the four-digit price threshold.