Battery Life

Battery life of the OnePlus 8 Pro was a big question-mark for a lot of users given the phone’s 120Hz refresh rate. Several weeks ago I had reported on my initial power draw investigation results covering the different display modes of the screen:

Much like on the Galaxy S20 series, the OnePlus 8 Pro incurs a large static power draw penalty when switching from 60Hz to 120Hz. This is a increase in the baseline power of the phone, no matter the type of content that you’re displaying, and will even incur on a pure black screen.


OnePlus 8 Pro Baseline Power usage (Black Screen)

Whilst OnePlus does include refresh rate switching mechanisms based on scenarios such as video playback, the lack of a true variable refresh rate (VRR) mechanism that works on the per-frame basis and is implemented on the deeper OS and GPU driver levels, means that current generation high-refresh rate devices will have to suffer from a larger than usual power and battery life penalty.

Web Browsing Battery Life 2016 (WiFi)

In our web browsing test, we see the clear impact of the 120Hz refresh rate on the OnePlus 8 Pro as it reduces the battery life of the phone in the test by 22% compared to its regular 60Hz mode. As a note- we’re testing at QHD resolution here as generally there’s very little power benefit from using lower resolutions.

In terms of absolute results, the 9.71h of the 120Hz mode here are adequate but not great. The results fall in line with the S20+ at 120Hz, but short of the bigger battery capacity of the S20 Ultra. At 60Hz, the 8 Pro moves back in at 12.31h which is a great result and will get you through even the most extensive usage days.

Whilst many will have looked forward to the OnePlus 8 Pro results, the really interesting results belong to the smaller OnePlus 8. The phone here was able to showcase outstanding battery life figures. The 90Hz mode only has an 8% impact on the battery runtime in this test, and in the 60Hz mode the phone lasted for a staggering 14h which is amongst the best results we’ve ever measured on a phone.

PCMark Work 2.0 - Battery Life

In PCMark, the smaller OnePlus 8 again takes the lead in terms of longevity with its 60Hz mode. The 8 Pro also does quite well at 60Hz, and both phones lose respectively 15.4% and 16.4% of their runtime when switching over to 90Hz and 120Hz modes.

Whilst the OnePlus 8 Pro pretty much fell in line with what we’ve expected in terms of its battery life, falling in line with the 120Hz power behaviour of the S20 phones, it’s the regular OnePlus 8 which surprised a lot given that it features a slightly smaller battery, notably surpassing the efficiency of the OnePlus 8 Pro. Given its form-factor and weight, it’s easily the longest-lasting device of its class, with only other heavier, bigger battery phones being comparable in terms of battery longevity.

Display Measurement Camera Recap - Amongst The Best
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  • paul4na - Tuesday, June 30, 2020 - link

    Think the Sony Xperia 1 II is a much more rounded device. Flat 4k screen, 1/1.7" camera sensor, stereo front-facing speakers, SD expansion, 3.5mm headphone jack, no notches or holes, nice build with niceone-handed use, clean software.
  • KarlKastor - Wednesday, July 1, 2020 - link

    For the OnePlus 8 which starts at $/€699, there’s actually very little competition out there at this price range"
    Don't know why you compare it with the S20. The competition are other non pro flagships.
    Mi10, P40, ...
  • amosbatto - Wednesday, July 1, 2020 - link

    Watching the trends in the mobile industry has convinced me to preorder the Purism Librem 5, because it fights all the things that the mobile industry does wrong. Why hasn't Anandtech covered Linux phones? Look at the features of the Librem 5: an SoC manufactured for 10 years, a removable battery, replaceable cellular modem, replaceable WiFi/BT, lifetime software updates, smartcard reader for OpenPGP card, free/open schematics, headphone jack, convergence as a PC.
  • AbRASiON - Thursday, July 2, 2020 - link

    "no 3.5mm jack"

    Stops reading.
  • snowsurferDS - Friday, July 3, 2020 - link

    Someone needs to tell them Xiaomi is making SD865 phones at the $500 mark, and they have both a headphone jack and an SD card. I am still using a Galaxy S9 (Exynos, EU), but was dismayed to see my wife's new Xiaomi Note 8 Pro (Mediatek 90T) is much, much faster than my S9, which cost almost 1K€ back when I got it at release.
  • yacoub35 - Thursday, July 9, 2020 - link

    Can the 5G modem be turned off / disabled through Settings for those who wish to stick to 4G?
  • Questor - Sunday, July 12, 2020 - link

    Did I miss it somewhere or was the OS covered? More specifically, does the 1+ come with the minimalist OS it used to? I dislike all the bloat from other makers. Appreciated the lack of with 1+ products.
  • Bencherian90 - Saturday, August 1, 2020 - link

    Nice review. But you guys should add audio review also. Especially review of loud speaker of the phone
  • JustSayin - Sunday, August 2, 2020 - link

    Which model of the 8pro was used for these tests? I did look for it but it doesn't say if it was the 8 or 12 gb version. Not sure if/how much that would alter results... but it would be nice to record that.
  • JustSayin - Sunday, August 2, 2020 - link

    I also noticed that in some other comparisons you used the 3dMark extreme slingshot test but not for this one. I have found my 8pro performs that test ~15% better than iPhones. It would be good to include a test where it performs better than iphones for the sake of fairness/completeness.

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