Battery Life

While we’ve gotten a good handle on how battery life is on the Snapdragon 801 platform with 1080p displays, we haven’t quite seen the same when it comes to a 1440p display. I’m sure that most people already understand the importance of battery life, so I’ll simply reiterate that our testing conditions are standardized. Everything other than the task at hand is turned off to the best of our abilities, and the display is calibrated as close as possible to 200 nits. The device is then run on an endless loop until it shuts down, starting with a fully charged battery. First, we’ll start with the WiFi web test.

I have to stop proceeding with the analysis with a disclaimer though. With the LG G3, we’ve found evidence of dimming behavior with manual brightness. In the worldwide model that we received, the dimming happens soon after setting the brightness level. A dangerous practice for sure if you only measure display brightness once before conducting battery life tests. However, in the SKT and likely the other Korean units that reviewers received, this dimming process takes around an hour or longer (but with a far shallower drop in actual brightness). It's clear that TI's LM3697 is the chip that controls the backlight brightness, but it's unclear what is setting the brightness curve. LG states that this mechanism is part of their 3A system to reduce display power, and they state that the brightness dimming effect is done in an effort to save power by reducing brightness at a rate that would be unnoticed according to the Weber-Fechener law of perception. This does make sense, but LG should offer the option to disable this functionality one way or another.

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

Here, the LG G3 has a major regression in battery life. While the LG G2 had around 11 hours of battery life on WiFi and was competitive with the Galaxy S5 and One (M8), the G3 is around the iPhone 5s in this test. There are a few reasons for this. If we compare battery capacity vs. display size, the LG begins at a disadvantage to HTC's One (M8). In order to equalize this gap, LG would need to fit the G3 with a 3150 mAh battery, something that would be difficult as a result of the loss in volumetric efficiency from the removable battery. The other reason is due to the lower panel efficiency, which is a direct result of the higher pixel density.

Web Browsing Battery Life (4G LTE)

Surprisingly, in the LTE test we see a significant improvement over the LG G2, although it’s still behind the One (M8) and Galaxy S5 for the same reasons that I discussed in the WiFi test. These gains were likely made by improvements to RF and general process improvements such as envelope tracking and lower power process on the modem and other aspects of the SoC from S800 to S801.

Web Browsing Battery Life (2G/3G)

In WCDMA, there are very few surprises. As a result of bottlenecking on the network connection, battery life drops noticeably. The delta between the One (M8) and the G3 is relatively constant in this test as well, around 15-20% less in general.

Overall, the web test shows the power cost of the 1440p panel. However, in many situations the importance of display power efficiency can drop dramatically, especially if other components consume similar levels of power. To take a closer look at this, we turn to the compute-bound battery life tests. The first is GFXBench, which runs an endless loop of T-Rex on the display until the phone shuts down.

GFXBench 3.0 Battery Life

GFXBench 3.0 Battery Performance

Here, we see that the LG G3 is between the One (M8) and Galaxy S5 in overall runtime. What’s surprising is that end of run FPS is below both the One (M8) and Galaxy S5, even when compensating for the difference in resolution by multiplying the score by 1.77. This actually places the LG G3 behind the G2.

However, looking at the overall picture, it’s very clear that LG is simply using a throttling mechanism that results in sinusoidal behavior. By averaging the last runs, the realistic end of run FPS is around 13.636. By scaling this to the 1080p-equivalent FPS, we see that the end of run FPS is actually around 24.1357. This means that there’s still a noticeable difference between the One (M8) and LG G3 in overall thermal dissipation capabilities, although not nearly as bad as the end of run FPS value might suggest.

BaseMark OS II Battery Life

The next test is Basemark OS II, and we see that the battery life score sits between both the Galaxy S5 and One (M8), although it does worse than both of them in the battery score taking into account performance. 

BaseMark OS II Battery Score

Overall, the LG G3 does acceptably well in battery life. However, after taking into account the dimming function it’s rather concerning how the G3 fails to keep up with the rest of the competition in this critical area. To really get a good idea what why this is though, we have to look at actual power numbers. This will allow us to truly quantify the power differences.

Charge Time

Charge Time

In this test, the LG G3 trails behind both the One (M8) and Galaxy S5 in charge time, although it's quite close to the One (M8). This is strange, especially because the LG G2 has the same battery size. However, this can be explained by the change to charging protocol, as it seems that the G3 doesn't support Qualcomm's Quick Charge technology. Instead, signalling is done over BC 1.2. As we'll see later in the article, this is due to the charger chip used.

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  • blabby - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    I saw a movie where some characters had shiny buttons instead of eyes. This review reminded me of that movie.

    On a positive note, maybe the line to get this phone will be shorter! That's good because I want it ASAP!
  • plonk420 - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    is it just me or does the SGS4 and 5 oversharpen? that good ole ring around hard lines...
  • snark9a - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    If I root it to make it useable and give the better user experience (i'm a designer, after all) will I sacrifice a battery life? I guess I could carry another battery with me an charge it up.
  • soldier45 - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    Will wait to see what the Note 4 brings in September over this phone.
  • austinsguitar - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    oh man that camera though.... best
  • xmen77 - Monday, July 7, 2014 - link

    phonearena.com/reviews/Camera-comparison-LG-G3-vs-Samsung-Galaxy-S5-Galaxy-Note-3-iPhone-5s-LG-G2-Sony-Xperia-Z2-HTC-One-M8_id3728
    eprice.com.tw/mobile/talk/124/4899661/1/rv/sony-xperia-z2-review/
    eprice.com.tw/mobile/talk/124/4899662/1/rv/sony-xperia-z2-review/
    4pda.ru/forum/index.php?showtopic=515584&st=860#entry30435226
    blog.gsmarena.com/weekend-poll-samsung-galaxy-s5-vs-sony-xperia-z2/
    phonearena.com/news/Samsung-Galaxy-S5-tops-our-blind-camera-comparison-for-the-third-time-in-a-row-LG-G3-close-second_id57178
    polls-polarb-com.a.ssl.fastly.net/000/186/650/186650-1-large-d063293267b7ddb6.jpg
    pp.vk.me/c618826/v618826401/95e9/7bw7hDlOdSg.jpg
    pp.vk.me/c618826/v618826401/95e2/NMeVKQWoFs0.jpg
    pp.vk.me/c614824/v614824401/15efd/3awlVBQMNfo.jpg
    pp.vk.me/c614824/v614824401/15ef4/hCockYiBow4.jpg
    pp.vk.me/c619218/v619218401/ad50/vZosnbAwfNo.jpg
    pp.vk.me/c619218/v619218401/ad49/TX4mRgFNq3I.jpg
    phonearena.com/reviews/LG-G3-vs-Samsung-Galaxy-S5_id3724/page/3
    forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2662379&page=65
    forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2662379&page=62
  • xmen77 - Monday, July 7, 2014 - link

    good only low light shots
    cnet.com/news/lg-g3s-laser-equipped-camera-put-to-the-test/
  • aryonoco - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    Thank you for another excellent review. Your display, battery and camera tests are again without a doubt the best in this industry.

    Just a couple of off topic points:

    1) It would be great if you also reviewed the Sony Xperia Z2. Along G3, the SGS5 and the M8, it is arguably the other 2014 Android flagship. And I would love to have your take on its camera. I understand that Sony has a negligible presence in the US market, but you guys have significant number of readers from other countries where the Z2 is readily available and popular (Australia and the UK for example). Also a good number of your US readers are the kind of tech savvy people who buy their phones outright and so the review would be of use to them as well. I'm sure Sony would love to send you a sample if you asked.

    2) While I don't want to take anything away from the stellar job that Josh Ho is doing, I do miss Brian Klug. I understand that you are not at liberty to shed any light on his sudden disappearance, but I just wanted to raise it here.
  • ZeDestructor - Sunday, July 6, 2014 - link

    As Anand has said before: They review what get's sent in. Nothing more, nothing less due to budgetary concerns.

    If you really want a Z2 review, you could always try and organise loaning out yours (something like order off amazon, ship to AT, then have it shipped along to you after the review is done) or something similar... I'd give it a try if I lived in the US, but I don't, I live in Australia, and the shipping costs make me sad.
  • Klug4Pres - Friday, July 11, 2014 - link

    I don't think it is that simple, actually.

    They review things that the manufacturers want them to review, as evidenced by them being supplied with the review item.

    They do not say they will review anything that their readers are prepared to lend them.

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