Battery Life

The iPhone XS comes with a 2658mAh/10.13Wh battery, while the XS Max has a capacity of 3174mAh/12.08Wh. Again, it’s to be noted that although both phones are quite large form-factor devices by now, Apple’s battery density still largely lags behind the competition. While yes, it’s true that the XS Max’ battery is the biggest that Apple has ever used, it still pales in comparison to the 3500 to 4000mAh that other vendors now employ in the same form-factor.

As we saw in the SPEC analysis, the one advantage that Apple has is an enormous lead in terms of power efficiency of its SoC, which largely makes up for any gap in the battery capacity deficit.

Our web browsing test is a mixed-to-heavy workload that iterates through a set of popular webpages that are hosted on our server. The test loads a web page, pauses, scrolls through it, pauses, and then continues to the next in the set, repeating all over when done. Brightness is fixed at 200cd/m².

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (WiFi)

The iPhone XS saw a very slight degradation compared to the iPhone X in our test. The 19 minute deficit isn’t terrible, but it does come at a surprise given that Apple had promised improved battery life for the new model. What’s happening is that likely our test is a tad heavier in its workload than what Apple and many other vendors internally test to advertise as the daily battery life of their devices.

The iPhone XS Max came in at 10.3h. Again while this is still good, it’s a degradation over the 11.83h of the iPhone 8 Plus. Here it’s easier to rationalise the difference; the OLED screen of the XS Max is just more power hungry and also has a larger area than the iPhone 8 Plus. Here the increased battery capacity isn’t enough to counteract the panel’s increased needs.

As to why the iPhone XS saw a degradation over the X, I’m not too sure. I did rerun the test on the iPhone X to make sure iOS12 hadn’t impacted the devices – and I got a runtime just 10 minutes lower than what I had tested on the iPhone X back around in January, so the iOS upgrade certainly doesn’t seem to have affected the battery life.

It should be relatively safe to assume that the new A12 should be more efficient in its workloads, even with the increased performance that it brings. One thing that we can’t really verify is the power efficiency at intermediate performance states, as that’s also where CPUs perform a lot of their work at.

We also have to keep in mind the connectivity factor: the new iPhone’s seems to sport a new Broadcom BCM4377 WiFi combo chip which we don’t know much about. Most importantly the new XS have also switched over from a Qualcomm baseband (in our test unit of the iPhone X) to a new Intel XMM7560 baseband.

I’ve generally given up on LTE testing after a few years ago I had run into some serious issues regarding a misconfiguration of my mobile carriers’ baseband stations as they did not have CDRX enabled. This caused an almost 20-30% battery life degradation on Huawei’s devices – and if I hadn’t debugged the issue with HiSilicon I’d probably be none the wiser. Fact is, cellular battery life testing is a lot harder than one would think, and without having a controlled environment, I’m very hesitant to resume cellular battery life testing.

That being said, I will revisit the iPhone X vs iPhone XS battery life topic while on LTE over the weekend and post an update to the review.

Overall, the battery life of the iPhone XS and XS Max are good – they don’t quite reach Apple’s claimed improvements, but that also just might be something that will vary from use-case to use-case.

Display Measurement & Power Camera - Daylight Evaluation: Zoom and Scenic
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  • id4andrei - Saturday, October 6, 2018 - link

    I didn't catch the 2nd part of your comment. It seems we agree. Anandtech needs an editing system.
  • warrenk81 - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    Great to see mobile phone reviews return! Hope you can keep up the momentum with the Pixel 3
  • Ikefu - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    And LG V40!
  • leo_sk - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    The way the globe in the default wallpaper just misses the notch, apple if you acknowledge that it is ugly then at least try to reduce its size
  • EnzoFX - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    Not on an S release! It bugs me a little that people want these evolutionary changes in all aspects of the phone when it's an S release. A trend that has long been established to be more about a few internal changes.

    Also the X was a pretty big change, took everyone a bit to calibrate to the new hardware, but now with the S release, nothing is enough, when an S iphone is never meant for the n-1, non-S iphone buyer. These people, if upgrading would probably go with a newer phone rather than a year old phone.
  • cmaximus - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    Great review! I have a question regarding the off angle color shift of the screen. Given even small off angle viewing (5-10 degrees), I noticed a considerable blue shift in the color. Is this normal for this screen? It's not a big deal in practice, as I rarely look at my phone off angle when using it, but it'd be nice to know if this is expected behavior or not.
  • melgross - Saturday, October 6, 2018 - link

    All OLEDs look flush off Angeles to the side. Some are a bit better. The LG screens are a lot worse.
  • TEAMSWITCHER - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    I upgraded from a regular iPhone 7 to the XS Max. The biggest surprise for me is Face ID. It's far more reliable than a finger print scanner. I do lots of home improvement and car repair projects and the finger print scanner would always fail due to roughed up hands. Face ID is so fast, you barely notice it. And it works from harsh angles - I can pull the phone from my pocket, look down at it, and it unlocks... every time. The "notch" is not ideal .. but it does enable a feature that ACTUALLY works better (for me) than TouchID ever did.
  • Golgatha777 - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    Wow, we live in the age of $1200 phones and video cards. Truly an age of wonders for the 10%ers!
  • PeachNCream - Friday, October 5, 2018 - link

    There are less expensive products for people that don't have or don't want to spend as much, but I do agree in principal. The XS and Max are amazing phones that come with an outrageous price tag. The A12 is an impressive SoC, but it should be given that the handset its inside of costs more than the retail price for most desktops and laptops.

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