Battery Life

It's fairly self-evident that achieving a long battery life is one of the most important aspects of a mobile device. A device can be incredibly enjoyable to use, but if its battery doesn't last very long you won't be able to enjoy it for any considerable period of time. There are also many elements that contribute to battery life, and certain use cases may be bound by a certain aspect more than others. For example, web browsing is actually a very display-bound type of battery workload, while gaming is a GPU-bound workload.

To gain an understanding of the OnePlus 2's battery life in various scenarios I've run it through our standard battery benchmark suite, which consists of our web browsing battery test, PCMark's mixed usage battery test, BaseMark OS II's CPU bound test, and finally GFXBench's GPU-bound test. As always, all devices are calibrated to 200nits except when their brightness curves necessitate testing above that value.

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

Web Browsing Battery Life (4G LTE)

In our WiFi web browsing test there's definitely a noticeable regression in battery life going from the OnePlus One to the OnePlus 2, but both devices last over 11 hours so I don't think this presents a major issue. Battery life on LTE sees a more significant drop than the OnePlus One did, but it's worth noting that it's difficult to keep this test entirely consistent between editors due to different network frequency and signal strength in different nations, and so it's just to give an idea of what to expect when browsing off of WiFi.

BaseMark OS II Battery Life

At first glance, the OnePlus 2 appears to do quite well in BaseMark OS II's battery test. When examining the behavior of the CPU during this test it's clear that the Cortex A57 cores shut off after about five minutes, and so you're left with four Cortex A53 cores. With that in mind, being able to run a CPU heavy workload for 4.28 hours is not that impressive when you have a 12.54Wh battery pushing four Cortex A53s.

It's worth comparing to the OnePlus One, which actually was a case of a device achieving both a high level of CPU utilization and high performance, and while it didn't last as long as the OnePlus 2 it's definitely more useful to sustain high CPU performance and achieve a shorter battery life than to sustain much lower performance for an hour and a half longer.

PCMark - Work Battery Life

PCMark is a test that we actually weren't able to run on the OnePlus One due to the PCMark suite being a relatively new introduction to our benchmarking catalog. While this means we can't compare the OnePlus 2 directly to its predecessor, the fact that a device still needs to stand on its own means that this isn't necessarily a big deal. When looking at the OnePlus 2's battery lifetime of 7.27 hours it's clear that it has a notable lead over most other smartphones, although it's bested by the smaller Nexus 5X and the larger Galaxy Note5.

GFXBench 3.0 Performance Degradation

GFXBench 3.0 Battery Life

The fact that Adreno 430 is quite a good GPU coupled with a large battery allows the OnePlus 2 to perform very well in GFXBench's battery life test. When looking at sustained performance we see that after about 10 minutes it has dropped to around 32fps, and it sustains a very stable frame rate for the reminder of the test which speaks well of the thermal management going on. This is enough to put it at the top of the Android devices on our sustained performance chart, although it's still bested by Apple's latest and previous generation iPhones, which is partially due to the fact that the test renders on screen, although mostly due to A9's relative lack of GPU throttling. It lasts 3.52 hours before dying, which is one of the longer battery lifetimes that we've seen. One can safely say that the OnePlus 2 is a good phone for someone who wants to be able to run GPU heavy apps like games for a long period of time, although it's important to consider whether the CPU performance issues will end up bottlenecking performance in real world games.

While the OnePlus 2 is certainly not the most performant smartphone, one can say that the battery is more than enough to get you through the day. The performance and battery life demonstrated in GPU heavy workloads is notable, although the battery life in CPU heavy workloads is not very impressive once you consider how the phone is simply shutting off its Cortex A57 cores. If you need a balance between performance and battery life I would probably look elsewhere, but if battery life regardless of other factors is your priority when buying a device the OnePlus 2 will be a good fit.

Charge Time

One of the concerns that I've seen about the OnePlus 2 since its original announcement was the lack of support for Qualcomm's Quick Charge protocol. Since the OnePlus 2 has fairly substantial battery life, I don't think the lack of support for QC2.0 is a big problem, as you'll typically just be plugging the phone in at night. That being said, there aren't really any circumstances where quick charging makes the experience worse, and so the omission is a bit concerning.

Charge Time

Charge time on the OnePlus 2 increases slightly from the OnePlus One, which isn't surprising given the slight bump in battery capacity. The charger that OnePlus includes in the box is a 5V 2A block, and as I mentioned above there's no official support for faster rates using QC2.0 chargers. For me, a two hour charge time isn't very bothersome considering the large battery, but I know that some buyers will take issue with the lack of QC2.0 support. The phone's tagline is "Never Settle" after all, so I think it's a valid point of frustration.

WiFi Performance

The OnePlus One used Qualcomm's WCN3680, which provided 1x1 802.11ac connectivity and Bluetooth 4.0 support. while the OnePlus 2 adopts their QCA6164A WiFi + Bluetooth chip which also supports 1x1 802.11ac and Bluetooth 4.0, although the software stack now supports Bluetooth 4.1 for improved LTE coexistence among other improvements. As far as WiFi performance goes, we're looking at the same theoretical peak throughput for both phones.

WiFi Performance - UDP

While there is a small gap between the results for the OnePlus 2 and OnePlus One, I'm sure if I ran the test many times I could eventually reverse the order due to testing variance. I think it's safe to say that the WiFi on the OnePlus 2 is as performant as its predecessor, and while it's not a 2x2 802.11ac implementation I think that you'll run into NAND or network limitations before the throughput of the WiFi chipset becomes a limiting factor.

System Performance Cont'd and NAND Performance Display Analysis
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  • aenews - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    The author mentions his dislike of the "back cover material" many times throughout the article and fails to see the point of a removable back plate. He clearly does not realize StyleSwap™ exists and is a major selling point of the phone.

    He also doesn't seem to realize there's a color slider in settings that adjusts the tint of the screen. Pulling the slider all the way to the right would yield more color-accurate displays for most OnePlus 2's. He should have tested further with the spectrophotometer IMO. Everyone has his own temperature preferences in regards to the display.
  • Brandon Chester - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    I'm not sure how you can assert that the slider would have an impact without having measured a difference. I did do that, and the difference is insignificant. It's just not a good display.

    Also, no company offering heavy phone customization is doing very well financially in the smartphone market, so something like StyleSwap is clearly not a major selling point for most consumers.
  • MarcSP - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Random Android device: Review
    Flagship of the third mobile platform: Nope!
  • MarcSP - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    That's really weird. In any case, you could have explained that from the begining.
    Still, thanks for the reply :-). And ignore another message I posted later. I thought the first one had failed.
  • vishnumrao - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Well written and informative review.

    This review is giving me a sever bout of "buyer's remorse". I was deliberating with myself, between the Nexus 6P and the OnePlus Two. I jumped the gun, when I got an invite. I bought it based on the "on paper" specs and the rave reviews of the predecessor.

    Right off, I felt the UI sluggish. Ever so slightly! Some hesitation to move! I installed Cpu Spy app and I started noticing that the processors were maxed out at 1555 (1.56 GHz on the A53). Even when playing games, I never saw CPU states higher than that.

    I was surprised by the color accuracy assessments. I never noticed it. Maybe I am not very color sensitive.

    The hope is that CM 13 will officially support OnePlus Two phones. That should fix some of the issues on the CPU usage. Oxygen OS is buggy too! An example of a bug I found: https://forums.oneplus.net/threads/cpu-usage-durin...

    No official acknowledgement of the issue and no fix either.

    I wish I had never got that invite to buy!
  • SydneyBlue120d - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Still no HEVC encoding from the Snapdragon 810, do You know if there is some hack to shot videos in HEVC? Thanks a lot.
  • dexterkarthik - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    finally - this review helped in ruling out OP2 and wait for the SD820 to come and then zero in on the Nexus 6P is on sale!!
  • vladx - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Wtf are you putting S808 in the same sentence with S810? S808 does very well, as shown by the LG G4 score in the tests. Even beats S6 in some.
  • Lbhati - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    @Brandon oneplus one never had ois. Please correct that.
  • albireox - Wednesday, December 16, 2015 - link

    Is the reviewer actually aware that the much highlighted Oneplus One display had a yellow tint on a great number of batches sold by Oneplus? So is then relevant that the OnePlus One had better calibrated screen ?
    On the other hand, you seem to miss that Oneplus 2 has dual SIM functionality that isn't present in a lot of phones that you regard (and recommend) as better purchases?

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