The Lenovo Ideapad Y700 Laptop Review
by Brett Howse on February 11, 2016 8:00 AM ESTBattery Life
When you think of a gaming laptop, battery life is generally not something that springs to mind. But with Optimus to limit GPU power consumption and a larger chassis to accommodate a big enough battery, it can be acceptable. With that said, the Lenovo Y700 only has a 60 Wh battery, which is unfortunately only barely larger than the average Ultrabook. Otherwise the more hardcore gaming laptops can struggle to get only a few hours, but then other devices like the Razer Blade achieve pretty reasonable runtimes.
To test battery life, we run the devices through two tests, both with the display set to 200 nits to keep the test as comparable as possible. The light test is just web browsing, and with Windows 10 we’ve moved from Internet Explorer to Edge for this test, since it’s the default browser. The heavy test increases the numbers of pages loaded, adds in a movie playback, and a 1 MB/s file download to keep the network card active.
Light Results
The light results kind of took me by surprise. Most gaming laptops struggle to get even six hours of battery life, but the Y700 does very well at around 7.5 hours. The combination of Skylake’s power enhancements along with a new network card have certainly helped. Another big help is likely the display. The same narrow-band backlight which caused so much grief on the display testing, likely uses less power since its not covering the entire sRGB color space. This is a much better result than I would have expected with the 60 Wh battery though.
Heavy Results
Here things come back down to earth a bit. Clearly Skylake is much better at idle power, and the backlight has a bigger impact on the light test too. On the heavy test, the results are much more in the range of what I was expecting. But still an almost four-hour runtime on the heavy test is a good result for a gaming notebook.
Normalized
For the normalized results, we divide the runtime by the battery capacity to get an overall platform efficiency result. Once again the Y700 does very well here. Without being able to measure individual components, the backlight is likely a major factor here, but the newest CPU and wireless card from Intel are also both in play too. This is a good result for a gaming notebook, and the overall run times are now moving devices like the Y700 into the realm of being useful unplugged from power. The overall battery life and efficiency is nothing like the latest Ultrabooks, but its still a big step forward.
Charge Time
The other half of the battery life equation is how long it takes to charge the device. Lenovo ships the Y700 with a 135-Watt power adapter, which is significantly larger than you’d get on a smaller notebook.
With a charge time of just 120 minutes, the Y700 is one of the quickest notebooks to go from 0-100% charge. That’s not unexpected, with such a large power adapter and a relatively small battery. But regardless combined with the decent battery life offered by this notebook, it should be fairly good for travel.
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tipoo - Monday, November 14, 2016 - link
Nowhere does it say it lasts 8 hours of gaming. It lasted 7.5 hours of very light use, while being described as a gaming laptop. Reading comprehension.strik - Saturday, July 27, 2019 - link
Brought mine at May 2016, was a terrible experience, first of all mine comes with 16 Gb ram and 2 SSD Samsung evo 850 - 512 gb and 256gb mme, all by the price of 1500euros.The machine was always fast, but running W10 was always problematic, made 3 clean installations of the SO W10, and every time it comes a new SO update something stopped to work.
One day along 2017 brought a digital license from W7 64bits, and reinstalled everything, and since that day everything works.
There is one thing that never changed >>> high temperatures, always high in anykind of game or heavy program (around 90º or more), using both the intel or nvidia graphic card so i think the problem comes out from those bad designed intel i7 (6th generations laptop CPU).
By the end of 2017, i brought a i3 lenovo laptop for my daughter, i3 u-6 generation with 4 gb ram and a 1 terabyte hd and a mx 920 nvidia, for 400 euros and this year i need to change the hd (terrible issues, after 10's SO clean installations) for an 256 ssd kingston. So with lenovo im ready, i will never buy nothing else form that brand.