Battery Life

Section by Brandon Chester

When a phone comes in two sizes, battery life is always one of the big questions on a potential buyer's mind. In general, if you have two devices with a similar hardware platform but one is able to fit a significantly larger battery due to its larger size, it's going to achieve better battery life. Obviously this is not a strict rule, as we've seen with web browsing on the iPhone and iPhone Plus, where both models have a very similar battery life. Even so, as a general rule it's usually a safe assumption.

The Google Pixel is one of those devices that comes in two sizes. There's a 5" model and a 5.5" model, both with equal thickness, and both sharing the same internal specifications. They differ only by the size and resolution of their AMOLED displays, and accordingly, the larger Pixel XL has a 25 percent larger internal battery.

Unfortunately, we don't have the 5" Google Pixel on hand, so testing will have to rely solely on the Pixel XL. As I just mentioned, it is usually the case that when a smartphone ships in two sizes the larger model provides better battery life, which is something to consider when thinking about where the normal Pixel would sit relative to the larger model. As usual, our battery testing begins with our internal web browsing test, followed by PCMark's general use battery test, and ending with a GFXBench GPU battery rundown.

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (WiFi)

In our internal WiFi web browsing test the Google Pixel XL comes in just under 8 hours. Considering the thickness, mass, and battery capacity of the Pixel XL, this is not a very impressive result. In comparison, the thinner, smaller, and lighter Galaxy S7 edge with a display of equal size and resolution manages to last for 9.72 hours in this test. Apple's iPhone 7 and 7 Plus do similarly well at 9.22 hours and 9.32 hours, despite the fact that their batteries are significantly smaller than the Pixel XL's. The S7 edge and the Pixel XL have very similar specifications, right down to the CPU configuration and the display. The S7 edge only has a 4% advantage for battery capacity, which isn't nearly enough to explain the gap. It could very well come down to greater power usage by the display, and this appears even more likely when one considers the additional power burden of using the wider NTSC gamut instead of sRGB.

Normally we would also run this test on LTE, in order to compare battery life between devices when browsing on a cellular connection instead of WiFi. Unfortunately, the Pixel XL presents a problem here. Both Matt and I have noticed that cellular reception on the Pixel XL is not very good. In particular, Matt was unable to achieve our target signal strength of -90dBm or better in the same area where he tests all other LTE devices. The best signal he was able to achieve was -100dBm (outdoors). Because we're dealing with a logarithmic scale, the difference in transmission power is not 10% like you might imagine based on the numbers, it's ten times the power. Unfortunately, we aren't equipped to do laboratory tests on the Pixel XL to directly compare RF performance to other devices, but it does seem that the signal strength is generally not as good as other smartphones.

PCMark - Work Battery Life

In PCMark's battery test, the Pixel XL is much more competitive than when it's browsing on WiFi. The result is actually slightly higher than the Galaxy S7 edge, which is a good position to be in. However, the reasoning behind this has more to do with the Pixel XL's poor performance in PCMark than any sort of advancements in energy efficiency. While running PCMark's workloads, the Pixel XL's CPU cores run at lower frequencies for longer stretches of time than the Galaxy S7 edge's CPU cores, which helps to explain the Pixel XL's lower performance and longer battery life. In the end, PCMark is a test of general usage, and so this shows that the Pixel XL can last for a good length of time on a single charge, but only by sustaining a relatively low level of performance during that time compared to other smartphones.

GFXBench Manhattan ES 3.1 / Metal Final Frame Rate

GFXBench Manhattan ES 3.1 / Metal Battery Life

The Pixel XL does quite well in the GFXBench Manhattan battery test. The total runtime is 3.19 hours, which is lower than other Android devices, although in most cases the gap isn't enormous. The Galaxy S7 edge is an exception once again, coming in at 4.88 hours despite its small battery advantage not being enough to create such a gap.

GFXBench battery always has two sides though, and when you look at sustained performance it's clear that the Pixel XL has an advantage over existing Android devices. It's hard to say how much of this is due to improvements in Snapdragon 821 and how much could be due to differences in thermal design between different smartphones. When you consider the battery lifetime and the sustained performance, the Pixel XL definitely does a good job.

A Note About Charge Time Testing

Due to changes made to filesystem access in Android Nougat, we are unable to perform our standard charge time test on the Pixel XL. The test requires data related to current, voltage, and charge level that are no longer accessible, meaning that there's no way to produce a result that is comparable to existing data. We will be evaluating potential options going forward, and may decide to migrate to a test that measures power at the source rather than on the device.

GPU Performance Final Words
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  • jjj - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    On a scale from 1 to 10, your normal reviews are a 6 since you focus on synthetic , single active app battery life and don't look at all at many key metrics.
    This is a 3.5 since you just skip large parts of what a normal review is. Why even bother, there are 10000 other reviews with almost no relevant data already.
  • Despoiler - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    The Pixel phones are WAY overpriced for what they deliver. Google clearly didn't bother with tightening the OS integration to "their" phone. The audio is not good compared to HTC branded phones so they didn't bother tapping HTC's superb talent in that department. Goggle is using off the shelf hardware ie not designing their own ARM cores. Their camera is near the top of the stack, but not the best because it lacks OIS. OIS costs money to implement yet their phone is more expensive than those with it. Google wants to sell you a premium phone at a premium price, but do less work and provide less features other Android phone manufacturers and certainly less than Apple. What in the actual.....are they thinking? Literally the only reason to buy a Pixel is if you want Android updates first.
  • vikramc - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    Google phones sit right at top of the Android tree of phones , no matter what . I understand you cannot afford it , but that is your fate. Not everyone can afford an Apple or a Google phone . There are loads of chinese stuff in the market for you all .
  • akdj - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    We REALLY Need an 'ignorant/ignore' button!

    Great review fellas, as always!
  • Impulses - Wednesday, November 9, 2016 - link

    Yeah, I actually bought a Pixel and still find his posts obnoxious... Almost like written by a bot with a trolling 101 script.
  • vikramc - Wednesday, November 9, 2016 - link

    Butthurt iSheep spotted ..
  • anandtech pirate - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    nice,

    now looking forward to reading the LG V20 review.
  • DM725 - Wednesday, November 9, 2016 - link

    As am I
  • Yuriman - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    I read through a scathing review, seeing negative after negative, and expected at the end to see "don't go anywhere near this device", but instead found, "In the end, the Pixel is a decent enough phone." Talk about an analysis not supporting the conclusion...
  • Yuriman - Tuesday, November 8, 2016 - link

    I guess what I mean is, if you feel like it's not half bad, tell us why in the review. If you have nothing at all good to say about the phone in your analysis, be straight with us in your conclusion.

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