Battery Life

When Apple unveiled the iPad, they promised that it would achieve 10 hour battery life. That has been something of a standard for tablets now, and for the most part we've seen that high end tablets end up meeting that goal, while mid range ones often end up falling short of it. 2015 was a bit of an exception to this in some ways, with many high end tablets also missing this goal by several hours in some cases. Due to the nature of tablets and how they're used, it's really difficult to recommend one if it doesn't achieve enough battery life to last you through the day with a normal workload.

To test the Pixel C's battery life I've attempted to run it through all of our battery tests. First up is our internal web browser test, followed by our video playback battery test.

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

It's clear that Google's use of a LTPS display and a large battery pay off big time when you look at battery life. Even with the SoC staying on its higher-power A57 cores, the Pixel C manages to last for over 13 hours in our web browsing test. This puts it ahead of every other tablet on record, and by a large margin too.

Video Playback Battery Life (720p, 4Mbps HP H.264)

In video playback the Pixel C once again comes out on top. This is quite surprising, as normally AMOLED tablets perform best in this test due to their ability to turn off pixels when displaying black, as well as their general efficiencies with darker colors and shades. The gap between the Pixel C and the Tab S2 isn't insignificant either, so Google should be very happy with what they've achieved here.

BaseMark OS II Battery Life

In BaseMark OS II's CPU-bound battery test we again see the Pixel C top the charts. This is really surprising to me, because on the SoC side we're looking at four Cortex A57 cores on a 20nm process. Again, Google's large battery and LTPS display help a great deal, but it's also clear that Tegra X1 isn't causing any significant problems for the Pixel C as far as power consumption goes.

At this point I would normally continue to run our PCMark and GFXBench battery tests. Unfortunately, the Pixel C's software makes it incapable of completing either of them. I made five attempts to complete PCMark, which took a great deal of time as the test runs over many hours. In all cases the tablet locked up during the test and required a hard reboot. It may be possible to eventually get it to complete, but I didn't feel that it was worth delaying the review further in the hopes that I could eventually get the Pixel C to complete the test properly.

As for GFXBench, it instantly stops due to it detecting that the tablet is plugged in. I believe this may relate to Google's system for inductive keyboard charging, but whatever the cause may be the result is that I can't get a battery result for GPU-bound workloads either. It's worth noting that the web test also required several runs before I could get it to complete the test without the tablet crashing, so that's something to think about as far as software stability and reliability goes.

In the end, what I have seen of the Pixel C's battery life leads me to believe that it's quite good, but we're definitely not looking at the entire picture here due to the missing data. I can say that in my experience it seemed to last a long time, so if I had to go out on a limb I would say that the combination of the low power LTPS display panel and a relatively large battery allow for very good battery life even with the CPU running on its A57 cores. Since Tegra X1 has a great deal of GPU power I really wish I could have gotten a GFXBench battery result, but there's not much that can be done there.

Charging

Since tablets usually offer enough battery life to get through the day, being able to charge them incredibly quickly becomes less of a need than with smartphones because you'll often end up only charging your tablet overnight. That being said, the immense charge time required by older tablets which required larger batteries to power their SoCs and displays meant that if your tablet battery did die you probably weren't going to get to use it until the next day. With modern tablets we've seen a push to reduce battery capacity, as well as the inclusion of 10-15W chargers to reduce charge times.

Charge Time

The Pixel C ships with a 15W charger with a USB Type-C connector. The cable is actually fixed to the block, so you can't use it as a normal Type-C to Type-C cable. On the bright side, Google has used a cable which is around four feet long, so you get some extra length compared to using the included cable in the box. As you can see in the graph above, the battery is charged at around 11W while fast charging, which lasts for three hours before trickle charging begins. Getting the remaining 10-15% ends up taking another hour, with the total charge time from 0% to 100% being 4.14 hours. Considering that the Pixel C packs a noticeably larger battery than the iPad Air 2, the roughly four hour charge time is actually quite a good result.

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  • osxandwindows - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    No I meant the pro tablets from samsung.
  • Ratman6161 - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    Where to start on a comment like that...but then why bother. Its so blatantly untrue its not worth it.
  • McDuncun - Tuesday, January 26, 2016 - link

    Hahahaha what?
  • xthetenth - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    Yeah, I'll talk down on the iPad Pro in comparison to the Surface Pro by calling it a big phone, but that's a rhetorical thing to point out how many places the iOS ecosystem doesn't have options for the capability x86 Windows has. This is literally a big phone and doesn't even offer anything more. It doesn't have multitasking. It doesn't have apps that use its bigger screen. There's no reason to be carrying the size and weight of a 9" device because you don't receive the capability of a 9" device.
  • MikhailT - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    I have both iPad Pro and SP4. I like SP4 but there are far more glitches and annoyances with it that I don't get on iPad Pro. Driver crashes, horrible dynamic display power switching BS that you must install Intel drivers separately to disable which MS then decided to switch back to Intel drivers to re-enable without asking me first, W10 app often resets without of nowhere, and so on.

    iPad Pro? None of that, I did not experience any issues with it and it has far more useful tablet apps for me.

    However, MS is definitely much better at multi-tasking but iOS 9 has drastically improved the multi-tasking as well. I can't wait to see what Apple does with iOS 10 and so on and maybe Redstone updates as well.

    If nothing drastically is improved with W10 on Surface, I'm sticking with iPad Pro from now on as my primary device.
  • MikhailT - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    Blah, can't edit, I meant to say switched back to MS provided drivers instead of Intel.
  • xthetenth - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    Yeah, the SP4 has been flaky early, although I've been lucky and it's just a ten second annoyance when starting up for the morning and then it's amazing for the rest of the day. I'm not a huge tablet app user, I use the built in apps but don't need much more for pure tablet use, it's really halfway between tablet and laptop for me. I think the two are more likely to be differentiated by user need than anything else.
  • R. Hunt - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    Lol... as if Windows Store wasn't a wasteland.
  • Speedfriend - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    No tablet apps for Android? I have two Android tabs and there are apps that for everything I need it for? And while my iPad has plenty of Apps, I find the home screen design which is just a scaled up phone quite annoying, with giant icons and wide open spaces.
  • MikhailT - Monday, January 25, 2016 - link

    So, your only issue with iPad is the home screen?

    So, how often are you looking at your home screen? A few folks say this all the time but the amount of time I care about the home screen is less than 1%. I always find my apps via app switcher since I never need to shut any down and via Spotliight search as needed.

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