Battery Life

The Yoga 2 Pro contains an integrated 55Wh battery inside, which compared to a tablet first device like the Surface Pro 3 with its 42Wh battery is a good size. However, with a high resolution 3200x1800 screen to drive, battery life is not spectacular, especially at light workloads.

First we consider the light workload test. We use the default browser (in this case IE 11) going through a standard workload of web browsing with the display set at 200 nits. The default setting is to hibernate the machine when the battery gets to 5%, and to avoid damage to the battery this was not changed, so please note these times are from 100% charge to 5% charge.

Battery Life 2013 - Light

Battery life of the Yoga 2 Pro is not its strong point, with the battery life near the bottom end of our charts. A big part of this is likely the display. In order to achieve 200 nits, the display had to be set at 94%, which is fairly high. High resolution has its drawbacks and this is one of them.

Next up we compare it to other devices with a heavy workload.

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy

Here, where the display is no longer the largest battery draw, the Yoga 2 does very well. The heavy workload shifts the results from being optimized for mostly idle with the display drawing the majority of the power to a scenario where the CPU, GPU, and Wi-Fi are all in use and the percentage of overall power draw by the display is less. Still the results here are a bit surprising. It is possible there is something drawing excessive power at idle that isn’t an issue when the device moves off idle, or it could just be the display. Either way, it’s a much better showing on the heavy battery test.

Next we'll look at the battery life normalized to compare platform power use and remove the battery size from the equation.

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Here we can see the effect of what is likely the display power draw at idle. The Sony VAIO Pro has the same Core i5 inside, but Sony really did a great job on overall platform power. The Sony has an easier to drive 1080p display which also helps. Microsoft's Surface Pro 2 and 3 both have Haswell Core i5 processors as well. The Yoga 2 Pro also benefits by having a larger 55Wh battery inside to compensate for the higher idle platform power draw.

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy Normalized

On the heavy workload, as discussed earlier, the overall percentage of power draw of the display is reduced. Here we see the Yoga 2 Pro much more in-line with the other Haswell Core i5 devices.

Charging Times

The Yoga 2 Pro ships with a 65 watt power adapter with a reversible plug. Though the adapter is 65 watts, normally the battery will charge with a 22 watt rate which decreases as the battery gets charged. Charging times are a function of charge rate versus battery size, which for the Yoga 2 Pro is 22:55.

Battery Charge Time

The charge times are pretty good, with the Yoga 2 Pro being able to go from 5% to 100% in 2.5 hours. It is a bit quicker than the Surface Pro 3, even with a larger battery on the Yoga 2 Pro. But Lenovo has a trick up its sleeve here as well. The Yoga 2 Pro has an optional express charging mode, where the initial battery charge power jumps from 22 watts to 44 watts. This has a significant impact on charging times.

Battery Charge Time (Express Charge)

The Express Charge option drops the charge time to 109 minutes. The express charge requires 28% less charging time than the standard charge. The obvious question is why don’t they just leave it at 44 watts all the time? It gets into battery chemistry, but the higher charge rates can cause a quicker breakdown of the battery. Lenovo has likely chosen a conservative value for the standard charge in order to keep warranty claims low. Since this is a personal laptop, it likely won’t need the express charge treatment very often.

Temperatures

At idle, temperatures stay pretty low with the CPU sitting around 45°C, and the laptop itself never gets warm during light workloads.

Stressing the device for fifteen minutes, the temperatures rose up to around 80°C on the CPU. At this point, the laptop was certainly warm to the touch, but it wasn't hot.

While stressing the CPU, I also captured the CPU clock speed to see if it would throttle under prolonged high loads, but the Yoga 2 Pro never went under the advertised base clock speed of 1.6GHz with both cores (all 4 threads) at 100% usage, though it does drop quite a bit from the maximum 2.6GHz clock speed.

Noise

The Yoga 2 Pro has a fan, but in normal operations it stays fairly low so it isn’t very audible. With the default power profile, when the Yoga 2 Pro is plugged in, the fan is active but quiet, and when on battery power it switches to passive as the default cooling option. It's only if you stress the device that the fan spins up at all, and generally it stays quiet. It is not silent like a tablet would be, but it also has a lot more performance. If you push the device the fan will spin up though in either mode.

I don't have an accurate dB meter (yet), and attempts to capture the sound resulted in more noise from the room than the laptop. It's certainly not silent, but with no dedicated graphics to keep cool, the overall noise is very reasonable. Under intensive workloads, the fan spins up and is very audible, however the only time it has ever been at this level was during stress testing. Normal usage, even light gaming, was audible but not loud.

Wi-Fi and Tablet Performance Final Words
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  • Brett Howse - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    That's great to hear the Wireless is a real drawback on the unit we received. I'm still hoping they will get back to me with the time on when they switched it over. The specs on the website still show the old card so I can't guarantee someone will get AC at the moment.
  • DrShawarma - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    I've been reading this site for quite a while, but this will be my first post.

    I bought a Y2P about a month and ago and am surprisingly pleased. It's quick, fun and feels good in the hand.
    I do however have 2 tiny complaints-
    1) Adobe programs won't scale correctly, requiring a microscope to work with. Don't care about that too much though.
    2) The trackpad is like a fingerprint\oil magnet, that on the other hand is driving me nuts, how do I clean it? (I tried an LCD cleaning solution with a towel, did nothing)
  • Brett Howse - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    Adobe showed off their new products with High DPI support at the Surface Pro 3 launch I believe. That's been a big complaint of mine, especially since Adobe should be on top of this because their target market would likely benefit from HiDPI more than the average consumer. Looks like version 13 at the moment but of course that will mean an upgrade cost as well.
  • HighImStan - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    They have since updated their the CPU to i7-4510u and dual band wireless ac-7260 card. I just bought mine, manufactured in mid June, and it hasn't had any wifi issues. Also, uninstalling the McAfee bloatware helped. Still has the greenish yellow though on the display.
  • DigitalFreak - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    Supposedly it's better than it was, but it's just a side effect of the screen technology they chose to use.
  • wpcoe - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    I read that the RAM is soldered to the motherboard, so not user upgradable, but is the SSD user upgradable? I'd prefer the i3 model, but with a larger SSD.
  • KingGheedora - Friday, August 1, 2014 - link

    You can upgrade the SSD, it is M.2 slot though. But the SSD it comes with is surprisingly fast. I felt no need to upgrade it (512gb model).
  • Samus - Wednesday, July 30, 2014 - link

    My problem with the Yoga is the price. Although they can definitely be had for less than MSRP, they're still more expensive than a Surface 3 WITH a type cover. The rest of the specs, other than the screen size (obviously Yoga is two inches bigger) are about the same, but the Surface has more flexibility. One of my clients picked up both the Surface 2 Pro and a Yoga 2 back in March, and he likes the Yoga 2 more, and perceptively thinks its lighter.

    But I think the Surface 3 gives it a run for its flexibility.
  • HighImStan - Thursday, July 31, 2014 - link

    I got the Y2P because my Surface Pro 2 was stolen. Originally, I was planning on waiting for the i7 Surface 3 to arrive in August but eventually settled on the Y2P because
    1) A 256 i7-4650u with HD5000 is $1549 + type cover $130. For around the price of the Y2P, I can only get 128 i5-4300u with HD 4400 $999 + type cover $130 and only 4gb of ram too! Y2P was only $1200 for i7-4510u with HD4400 and 8gb. I'm on a tight budget this month so Y2P got me the best bang for the buck.
    2) My Surface 2 Pro kept having connection issues with the type cover. Brought it to Palo Alto's Microsoft store and they have no idea what was wrong. I played with some of the Surface 3 for an hour and found connection issues that was on and off with one of the displayed Surface 3. I was about to bring back my Surface Pro 2 for fixing after my Fourth of July vacation but it was stolen. So in a way, losing that device is a blessing in disguise...I was able to discover Y2P.

    3) I never took off the type cover on my Surface Pro 2 anyways so the Y2P doesn't pose a problem. I treated the SP2 like the Y2P anyways by bending back the keyboard and using it as a laptop. Only difference, I don't have to worry about problems of keyboard connection. Only thing I miss from my SP2 is the mini display port (better than the micro hdmi imo) and the ability to change the keyboard lighting's brightness. Yes, it was lighter too but the weight of the Y2P never bothers me.
  • Samus - Thursday, July 31, 2014 - link

    That's crazy about your connection issues. I have dozens of clients with Surface 2's and none of them mentioned that. A firmware update fixed some wifi issues people were having back in March though.

    As far as price, nobody pays retail for Surface. They can always be had for 20% less (just like the Yoga 2) but with that in mind, I agree that it's only really competitive at the base level. But that's where most people are buying, anyway.

    I just picked up a Surface 2 256GB 8GB i5 for $800 new with a type cover on eBay... That was a buy-it-now too. There's a lot of auctions for used ones that include BOTH covers for even less.

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