Lenovo ThinkPad X13 Gen 5
Hardware | PCI/USB ID | Working? |
---|---|---|
Touchpad | 06cb:00f9 |
Yes |
GPU | 8086:7d45 |
Yes |
Webcam | 30c9:00cd |
Yes |
Bluetooth | 8087:0033 |
Yes |
Audio | 8086:7e28 |
Yes |
Wireless | 8086:7e40 |
Yes |
TPM | Untested |
The Lenovo ThinkPad X13 Gen 5 laptop was released in March 2024. It is available with an Intel CPU. Some models include a fingerprint reader, a Smartcard reader, and a WWAN card.
WWAN
Lenovo states, the ThinkPad X13 Gen 5 works with two different Wireless Wide Area Network (WWAN) modules for the use of SIM cards for, e.g. mobile Internet:
- Quectel EM061K
- Quectel EM05-CN
Both, the Quectel EM061K and the Quectel EM05-CN WWAN card have a M.2 (NGFF) form factor. However, the slot for WWAN modules installed by Lenovo in the X13 Gen 5 is only suitable for the slightly larger M.2 3052 form factor. You can install them anyway.
Firmware
Firmware can be updated using fwupd.
Function keys
Key | Visible?1 | Marked?2 | Effect |
---|---|---|---|
Fn |
Yes | No | XF86WakeUp
|
Fn+Esc |
No | Yes | Enables Fn lock |
F1 |
Yes | Yes | XF86AudioMute
|
F2 |
Yes | Yes | XF86AudioLowerVolume
|
F3 |
Yes | Yes | XF86AudioRaiseVolume
|
F4 |
Yes | Yes | XF86AudioMicMute
|
F5 |
Yes | Yes | XF86MonBrightnessDown
|
F6 |
Yes | Yes | XF86MonBrightnessUp
|
F7 |
Yes | Yes | XF86Display
|
F8 |
Yes | Yes | XF86WLAN 3
|
F9 |
Yes | Yes | XF86Messenger
|
F10 |
Yes | Yes | XF86Go
|
F11 |
Yes | Yes | Cancel
|
F12 |
Yes | Yes | XF86Favorites
|
Fn+Space |
No | Yes | Enables/disables keyboard backlight |
Fn+4 |
Yes | No | XF86Sleep 3
|
Fn+B |
Yes | No | Ctrl_L+Break
|
Fn+P |
Yes | No | Pause
|
Fn+K |
Yes | No | Scroll Lock
|
Fn+Left |
Yes | No | Home
|
Fn+Right |
Yes | No | End
|
Fn+S |
Yes | No | Alt_L+Sys_Req
|
Fn+End |
Yes | Yes | Ins
|
Fn+L |
No | No | Set power profile to "low-power" (low)4 |
Fn+M |
No | No | Set power profile to "balanced" (medium)4 |
Fn+H |
No | No | Set power profile to "performance" (high)4 |
- The key is visible via
xev
and similar tools - The physical key has a symbol on it, which describes its function
- systemd-logind handles this by default
- To see which profile is active run
cat /sys/firmware/acpi/platform_profile