Battery Life

The OnePlus 3T has the same dimensions and mass as the OnePlus 3, but one of the internal changes is an increase in the battery capacity from 3000mAh to 3400mAh courtesy of improvements in battery density. This represents a capacity increase of slightly over 13%, and given that the OnePlus 3T has essentially the same hardware platform as the OnePlus 3 one can expect to see a corresponding increase in battery life due to the capacity increase alone. Any improvements in SoC efficiency and energy optimizations in the software could lead to even further improvements.

To examine the degree of improvement in battery life that the OnePlus 3T brings to the table I've run our standard set of battery benchmarks, which includes our web browsing battery test, and PCMark battery.

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (WiFi)

In our web browsing battery test the OnePlus 3T lasts 16% longer than the OnePlus 3, which is slightly longer than you'd get by simply scaling to match the 13% increase in battery capacity. Of course, there's always a degree of variance, along with differences in power usage for different SoCs and different bins of the same SoC, and these factors play a role in the outcome of the test. In any case, the increase in battery capacity comes without an increase in mass or size, so it's really just an extra hour or so of web browsing without compromising any other parts of the phone.

PCMark - Work Battery Life

PCMark's battery life test runs through the same mix of tasks that emulate what users actually do with a device, so it provides a good idea of how much active usage a user can expect from a device. In this test the OnePlus 3T lasts 10% longer than the OnePlus 3, which is in line with the expected improvement from the increased battery capacity when you factor in slight differences in device platform power and test variance. This increase brings the OnePlus 3T slightly ahead of Samsung's Galaxy S7 Edge, which is a good improvement when one considers that the OnePlus 3 was beaten by the significantly smaller Exynos version of the Galaxy S7.

GFXBench Manhattan ES 3.1 / Metal Battery Life

GFXBench Manhattan ES 3.1 / Metal Final Frame Rate

GFXBench demonstrates that the throttling behavior for the GPU has been changed either with the OnePlus 3T or in a newer version of OxygenOS than was available when I reviewed the OnePlus 3. I plan to re-run this test on the OnePlus 3 when OxygenOS 3.5.1 is made available for it to see if the behavior has changed. Essentially, the phone now exhibits more throttling during the test. The OnePlus 3 dropped down to a nearly constant 30fps in the Manhattan battery test, which meant if it were a real game you'd have a playable frame rate. The OnePlus 3T doesn't do as well. It drops from its peak of 33fps down to 26fps within the first twenty minutes, and slightly past forty minutes into the test it begins to oscillate rapidly between 22fps and 25-26fps.

This behavior leads to a substantial increase in battery life, but comes at the cost of performance. If this were a real game, the performance would not be sufficient on the OnePlus 3T during its 3.5 hours of battery life, while the OnePlus 3 will have lasted only 2.15 hours but maintained a sufficient frame rate for the entirety of the session.

Charge Time

Recently we have run into issues with charge time testing due to new restri ctions introduced in Android Nougat. To get around these I developed an app that we will use internally for measuring charge time. This app uses the same data set as our previous methodology, but accesses it using Android's system APIs rather than by polling the files on the disk directly. This means the results are directly comparable to ones obtained in the past, and the methodology should continue to work for the foreseeable future assuming the device's manufacturer hasn't broken the API, which unfortunately has been the case on some devices that we've tested internally.

The OnePlus 3T still ships with Android Marshmallow, so the old method of battery life testing could still be applied. However, I felt that this would be a good time to get the ball rolling with our new testing app, and I just wanted to make it clear to interested readers that we have a solution in place so we do not again encounter the issues with testing this that we did when reviewing the Pixel XL.

Charge Time

As expected, the OnePlus 3T takes longer to charge than the OnePlus 3, with the increase being strongly correlated to the amount that the capacity of the battery has increased. Dash Charge is still incredibly quick though, so I don't think users will have any complaints about the phone taking too long to charge. The only downside is that Dash Charge being exclusive to OnePlus means that you can only charge quickly using OnePlus's special charger and cable. I think most users end up using the block provided with their phone, but it does mean that you won't get fast charging speeds when borrowing someone else's charger, and if you end up having to buy another you can't buy a charger that supports USB Power Delivery or Qualcomm Quick Charge and utilize fast charging.

GPU and NAND Performance Software: OxygenOS 3.5.1
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  • ithehappy - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    I guess I am the lucky one but it has never happened to me. I used Note 2 for 10+ months, Note 3 for almost a year, S2 for 15 months, S4 for 9-10 months, and in none of them there was any sign of any sort of burn in. Now I know that Samsung uses the very best panels when its about their own flagship but still.
  • zepi - Wednesday, November 30, 2016 - link

    If you lose 10-20% of max brigtness and your color balance shifts a bit because one sub-pixel loses a fraction of more color than others, you will never see it with naked eye when the change happeng over 12-15 month-period.

    Actual burn-in... I don't know how easy it is to see that in regular phone. I've seen many samsung phones and tablets (tab s2) with severe burn-in, but those have been on display in stores where they run 24/7 screen in short loops and lots of static images.
  • ithehappy - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    Well took a good 20 minutes to read the review in full, thanks a lot for upping this pretty fast.

    I am just so excited to see the sRGB mode got even more improved than before, that is excellent. Though like you mentioned 1080p Pentile is not particularly good, especially for text rendering.

    The camera, that was the main thing they could have changed, I mean the OP3's camera performance isn't really good to my eyes, so they could have tweaked it a bit or something, rather than changing something as stupid as the selfie camera, jeez!

    I am still torn between this and Pixel though, damn it.

    PS: There is a small typo there by the way, when you said, "The display is essentially the same, although in my case I did see an even higher level of accuracy in the sRGB mode than I did on the OnePlus 3T...."

    I am sure you meant OnePlus 3 there.
  • ikjadoon - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    "However, it's important to recognize why this is, particularly where write speeds are concerned. Most smartphones we review have either 16GB or 32GB of internal memory. The OnePlus 3 has 64GB, and this OnePlus 3T unit is the flagship 128GB model."

    Maybe one way to alleviate this issue and to have better informed readers (most of us have read SSD reviews here) is to list the device's capacity in the chart? So that when we compare the speeds, we know we're comparing apples-to-apples, at least in terms of capacity?
  • mobutu - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    40bucks for 10-15% more battery life? I'm game.
  • ahtoh - Monday, November 28, 2016 - link

    How is the camera?
  • Mikad - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    The camera in on level with Lumia 920. I've changed my phone from Lumia 920 -> LG G3 -> Lumia 950XL -> Nexus 5x -> OnePlus 3 and unfortunately OP3's camera ranks the lowest, equaling 920.

    In every other way OP3 is the best phone I've used but the camera is a big let down. Especially compared to the 950XL and Nexus 5x.

    You can get good pictures if everything is still. But if there is even little movement happening, the pictures are blurry.
  • solnyshok - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    I am in the market for a new phone. Op3T is good, but S7 Edge 64gb has dropped to 500 Euro in my country. Camera and display are significantly better, CPU perf is on par, and battery life is epic. Considering small price difference, I will probably take S7 Edge.
  • solnyshok - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    oops, I meant 32gb variant. Still, with microsd slot, it is good enough
  • 10basetom - Tuesday, November 29, 2016 - link

    I've read that they also upgraded the rear lens to Sapphire, which is added to the cost as well.

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