Battery Life - Contrasting Two Models

The Mate 20 comes with an LCD screen and a 4000mAh battery. The screen is slightly larger in area than that of the Mate 20 Pro, who in turn uses an OLED screen, but also features a slightly larger 4200mAh battery.

The Kirin 980 of both phones should provide great efficiency, although I have to note that my units of the Mate 20 Pro seemed to have a worse binned SoC, as active system power consumption (normalised for screen and idle) in SPEC was about 8-9% higher than on the Mate 20.

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (WiFi)

In the web browsing test, we see the regular Mate 20 post some new record battery life results, with a staggering runtime of 13.5h. Here we finally see Huawei replicate the results of the Mate 9, which similarly had a very efficient screen. The efficiency of the SoC also augments the phone above that of other devices.

On the Mate 20 Pro, we see the previously discovered screen panel issues come back to haunt it. Even though it has a larger battery and a smaller screen than the Mate 20, the more expensive phone fares worse off in the test. Unfortunately the large base power handicap of the phone along with slightly worse luminance efficiency is the main cause of the results.

In regards to the Mate 10 results: The actual battery life of devices on the stock firmware should be better, unfortunately I haven’t been able to get to get back to this version as my units have a variant that unlock the memory controller to its full speed (and reduces battery life).

PCMark Work 2.0 - Battery Life

In PCMark, we see a similar regression on the part of the Mate 20 Pro – the regular version is achieving excellent results. Here the test is favourable to OLED devices, as evidenced by the P20 Pro leading all our results, however again this increase base power consumption of the Mate 20 Pro costs it a lot of lifetime which ends up it having much reduced battery life compared to where the SoC and battery capacity should have been capable of.

Overall, there’s two conclusions here in regards to battery life:

The Mate 20 is just an outstanding device and is currently showcasing absolutely leading battery life. Most devices with such runtimes are lower or mid-range phones with large battery capacities. In the high end, the Mate 20 is essentially in a tier of its own as it achieves this excellent battery life result while also showcasing the best performance of an Android device.

The Mate 20 Pro’s result and conclusion is a bit more muted. Its battery life isn’t bad, but falls short of expectations. Here the 4200mAh battery serves as no more than to just compensate for the inefficient display.

Display Measurement & Power Camera - Daylight Evaluation
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  • Titud - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    It would be interesting to see a review of the BOE screen because many of the LG screens are defective and the devices with LG screens are being replaced by devices with BOE screens.

    Anyway, great review.
  • melgross - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    While Apple and Samsung screens would be considered if they performed this way, it seems to be normal for LG’s OLEDs. Last year, the screens were pretty terrible too.

    With Apple investing $2.7 billion in LG for the purpose of improving g their OLED screens so that Apple can have a second OEM for them, I wonder how that’s working out. No way Apple would use these screens. But my Apple watches have been using LG screens with Apple tech. They’re fine.
  • kbohus - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    Andrei,
    would you be so kind as to check the advertised dual-frequency Galileo GNSS capability? Easiest way is with GPSTest app by barbeauDev from Google Play.
    For more info pls see https://medium.com/@sjbarbeau/dual-frequency-gnss-...
    Thanks for the great review!
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    It doesn't run dual-frequency. The post you linked also includes data from a Mate 20.

    The L1+L5 support was in regards to the Hi1103 as far as I'm aware: https://www.anandtech.com/show/13298/hisilicon-ann...

    The Mate 20's come with a BCM4359 WiFi chipset, not the Hi1103.
  • SydneyBlue120d - Saturday, November 17, 2018 - link

    So they lied in the presentation?
  • MyFluxi - Thursday, November 22, 2018 - link

    the mate 20 pro defo has the Hi1103, see ifixit tear down
  • pixelstuff - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    Regarding notched displays (or lack thereof), I think the LG V35 is one of the best looking phones out there. Phone makers should strive to copy that look. Anyone that complains about the V35 bezels being too big is just being a moron.
  • guizt - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    Some LG panel Mate 20 Pro have serious green tint issue. Does your model affected by it?
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Friday, November 16, 2018 - link

    I'm aware of the issues, but my panel doesn't have it.
  • colts187 - Monday, November 19, 2018 - link

    Hey Andrei I know you've seen the green screen issues on the LG panels. What do you think could be the cause of it? I'm curious of your opinion since Huawei apparently doesn't want to bring it up lol.

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