A Lenovo ThinkBook 14 G9 IPL laptop tested in Germany contains a solid-state drive from YMTC, a Chinese manufacturer. This finding matters to US buyers because it raises questions about component sourcing in global supply chains. We track these hardware details to ensure transparency for consumers who care about where their parts come from.
German test unit contains YMTC drive while US shipments use different components
The specific device identified is the Lenovo ThinkBook 14 G9 IPL with model number 21UX005PGE. Our editors at Notebookcheck examined the German specification version of this business laptop. The unit featured an internal storage component from Yangtze Memory Technologies (YMTC). This is the first time a YMTC SSD has been identified in an OEM laptop shipped outside of China.
Tested SSD Specifications
- SSD Model: PC42Q512GBG4Q
- SSD Capacity: 512GB
- SSD Interface: PCIe 4.0 NVMe
- Flash Technology: 3D QLC
- Form Factor: M.2 2242

The storage drive inside the laptop is the PC42Q512GBG4Q model. It holds 512GB of data using 3D QLC flash technology. The drive uses the M.2 2242 form factor, which is a compact physical size. It connects via a PCIe 4.0 NVMe interface. Sequential read speeds reach approximately 3950 MB/s, while write speeds hit 2514 MB/s.
Notebookcheck rates these speeds as medium-level for office laptops. Lenovo has issued a clarification regarding these components. The company stated that products configured and shipped to the US market do not use YMTC solid-state drives. This distinction separates the German test unit from units available in the United States.
Previous reports by US media suggested this was the first YMTC SSD in a US-market laptop. Lenovo's statement renders those claims unsubstantiated. We do not know if YMTC drives will appear in US models in the future. The current confirmed fact is that US shipments avoid this specific Chinese storage component.



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