Battery Life and Charge Time

The XPS 15 is available with two battery sizes. If you opt for the base model, it comes with a 2.5” SATA drive and a 56 Wh battery. If you opt for a device with the M.2 SSD, the extra space taken up by the 2.5” drive is replaced with more battery cells, giving you 84 Wh of capacity. It also adds about 0.5 lbs of weight to the device, but if you are going to be working away from an outlet, the SSD model should give much better battery life.

But, with the high resolution display, and wider color gamut, battery life is going to take a hit compared to something with a more traditional display. Since Dell sent us the UHD model, that’s the one we have to test.

To test battery life we have two tests. The light test involves light web browsing, with the display set to 200 nits brightness. The heavy test increases the pages loaded by the browser, adds a 1 MB/s file download, and includes movie playback. All testing is done with Edge as the browser.

Light Battery

Battery Life 2013 - Light

The XPS 15, with its quad-core CPU and high resolution display, can’t keep up with the best devices for battery life, even on light usage. At just under 7.5 hours, it is well under the XPS 13 and Surface Book results, despite the larger battery. It is also below the XPS 15 9530 results, and that device has a 91 Wh battery and 3200x1800 display.

Heavy Battery

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy

With the extra CPU workload, as well as constant network use, the battery life falls to just 4:23. This is exactly the same as the XPS 15 9530 score, so there is certainly some more efficiency because the display is higher resolution and the battery is slightly smaller on the new 9550 model. It’s still not a great result though.

Normalized Battery

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy Normalized

By removing the battery size from the equation, we can get an overall feel for platform efficiency. The XPS 15, despite the higher resolution display, does outperform the XPS 15 9530 on the heavy results, but the UHD display certainly hurts it compared to other devices. The Surface Book with discrete GPU is over double the efficiency, but with a dual-core processor. The Lenovo Y700 has the same processor and GPU, but a much lower resolution display, and it comes out quite a bit ahead of the XPS 15. For those that are normally plugged in, the UHD display is fantastic, but be warned, it’s a big hit on battery life.

Charge Time

The other side of battery life is how long it takes to charge. With an 84 Wh battery, this is a significant amount of capacity to top up. Luckily Dell ships the XPS 15 with a 130-Watt power adapter.

Battery Charge Time

At 148 minutes, the XPS 15 charges very quickly. At least with the less than stellar battery life, once you do plug it in, it gets back on its feet pretty quickly.

Display Wireless, Thermals, Noise, and Audio
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  • Valantar - Tuesday, March 15, 2016 - link

    In a laptop as thin as this, you need to consider that the last 1.5-2cm of each side is unusable for keyboards due to ports directly under the keyboard bezel. Unless you want a thicker laptop or a keyboard with zero key travel, this would leave you with far too little space for a numpad.
  • Nightwolf1 - Thursday, March 10, 2016 - link

    It is appalling that a computer at that price is a do it yourself project (assemble yourself)!
    Firmware updates back and forth, take it apart to move the mother board so USB and other ports fit into the holes so the connectors can come in!
    Chinese junk, why would Dell put there name on this?
  • Valantar - Saturday, March 12, 2016 - link

    It seems like you've had a bad experience, would you mind expanding on that? Taking it apart to move the motherboard (which should be very firmly screwed in, after all) seems pretty drastic.
  • Nightwolf1 - Saturday, March 12, 2016 - link

    Just start reading this thread!

    http://forum.notebookreview.com/threads/dell-xps-1...
  • Valantar - Tuesday, March 15, 2016 - link

    Ouch, that looks bad. Hopefully they get that sorted out pronto, and fix the issue for anyone involved free of charge. That should NOT have passed QC.
  • Nightwolf1 - Monday, March 14, 2016 - link

    If that's not enough, then read here!

    http://www.ultrabookreview.com/10234-dell-xps-15-9...
  • esii - Monday, March 14, 2016 - link

    Hi AnandTech, will you be able to confirm what thunderbolt 3 controller does XPS 15 9550 use? It seems to me that i cannot find any x4 link in PCIe configuration with HWINFO64, so i am suspecting that it uses a x2 link for thunderbolt 3. If this is true, then it can only interact with motherboard with a rate up to 20Gbps for PCIe 3.0 x2. I hope i am wrong.
  • Nightwolf1 - Wednesday, March 16, 2016 - link

    It would be great if Anandtech would contact Dell, for an explanation of all these problems buyers have experienced with their Dell XPS 15 9550, but it is perhaps too much to ask for?

    The question is, when it is possible to have one that is not faulty (if at all)?
  • luyuan20 - Thursday, March 17, 2016 - link

    Can anyone that owns an XPS 15 9550 comment on how long the fans take to return back to idle after playing an intensive game? I've had Dells in the past not be able to reduce fan speed back to idle after gaming. Thanks in advance. Looking into a UHD/i7/16GB/512GB model.
  • jacksonjacksona - Thursday, March 17, 2016 - link

    welcome to
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    n i k e $38

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