Battery Life

Sub $500 Windows laptops have notoriously had poor battery life, despite their massive size. HP claims over eight hours of battery life for the HP Stream 11. It is helped out by a low power CPU in the Celeron N2840, which has a maximum TDP of only 7.5 watts, and a SDP of 4.5 watts. The display is also fairly easy to drive, with a low resolution and a low pixel density.

In order to keep our results consistent, the display is normally set to 200 nits. The HP Stream is an exception to the rule though because the dimming circuitry is clearly as low cost as the rest of the device. Normally, a Windows laptop can have the brightness adjusted from 1 to 100% in 1% increments in the advanced power settings. The HP Stream 11 though only goes up or down by 10% at a time. It can be set for 91%, but the display output is exactly the same as 100%. At 100%, the display was 220 nits, and at 90% it was 185 nits, so for the battery tests I used the latter number since it was closer to 200. Just to ensure it was not unfair to run slightly dimmer than normal, the tests were repeated at 100% brightness and the results were within a few minutes of each other.

In addition, most Windows devices have an automatic setting to hibernate at 5% battery power, in order to avoid damaging the lithium-ion battery. Li-Ion batteries will stop functioning altogether if the voltage drops too low across the cell, which can cause internal damage to occur to the battery rendering it useless. Normally then, our battery tests are testing the 0-100% useful span of the battery, which is generally 5-100%. In the case of the HP Stream 11, the lowest possible setting before it hibernates is 9%, meaning almost 10% of the battery capacity is not available to the end user.

Battery Life 2013 - Light

In our light browsing test, the HP Stream 11 managed almost seven hours of runtime, which is a decent result. With just a 37 Wh battery (of which we only get 91% of it) it actually has a smaller battery than a tablet like the Surface Pro 2.

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy

For our heavy test, we ramp up the web browsing, download a file at 1 Mbps, and watch a video. This shifts more of the power usage to the CPU and other components from the display, which can be the main draw in the web test. Here the Bay Trail CPU does very well, outperforming devices with much larger batteries, and setting the best battery life time we have seen yet from this test. Our online comparison tool, Bench, does not contain any other laptops with Bay Trail though, so it is competing against much higher TDP parts. Still, with a heavy workload, the device lasted just under an hour less than the light workload test, which shows the efficiency of the processor.

Battery Life 2013 - Light NormalizedBattery Life 2013 - Heavy Normalized

To see the overall power efficiency with the battery size removed, we like to show a normalized graph as well. On our light test, the HP Stream 11 is quite close to the top. It does not meet the incredibly power efficient package that Sony put together for the VAIO Pro 13, but the Bay Trail based Stream 11 does do very well. On our Heavy normalized result, the Bay Trail based Stream 11 shows why it has a place in Intel’s lineup. While performance is obviously lower than the Core parts, overall efficiency is very high.

Temperatures

With no fan at all, one may be concerned that the HP Stream 11 may get warm under heavy use, but as we saw in the heavy normalized graph, the CPU architecture is very efficient.

HP Stream 11 (Idle)

HP Stream 11 (100% CPU/GPU load)

Idle temperatures on the CPU were around 41° C, with a power draw of 0.57 watts. Putting the device under sustained load did not cause a huge spike in temperatures despite the lack of active cooling. The peak temperature seen on the CPU after about ten minutes of 100% CPU and GPU load was only 65° C. Power draw was around 4.33 watts, so the turbo functions of the design are keeping it within the Scenario Design Power rating of this CPU of 4.5 watts. The outside of the device never gets warm either.

Charging

HP supplies a 45 watt charging adapter with the Stream 11. The maximum charge rate when the battery is almost depleted is about 18.3 watts, which leaves plenty of adapter power to keep the rest of the system going while charging the battery.

Battery Charge Time

The HP Stream 11 can fully fill the 37 Wh battery in just under 2.5 hours, which is the shortest in our admittedly limited sample size.

Speakers

There are stereo speakers on the Stream 11 but they are downward firing. The outright volume on the speakers is fairly reasonable, with a maximum SPL of 86 dBA when playing music. As with most laptop speakers, the physical size and location of the speakers will never result in great quality audio despite the DTS Studio Sound label on the device.

Small speakers facing underneath the device is never going to give a great result. There is almost no sound at all under 200 Hz, and the response curve is not very smooth. While there will be no issues for voice chat, music playback and movies would be better suited to headphones.

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  • Bobs_Your_Uncle - Thursday, December 18, 2014 - link

    This must be where the line forms for frugal hipsters waiting patiently for Apple to usher in that really big, long rumored price cut!

    Fortunately, here in the good ole' U.S. of A. we are ALL One-Percenters. It would simply be so gauche were we forced to consider that, just maybe, not everyone gets to lounge about in entitled largesse.

    While we're waiting, please pass the derivatives, won't you.
  • dunce - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    We purchased four of these for our older family members early Christmas presents. Actually the 13in version, to help their old eyes. They LOVE them!! Good battery and small size but they are coming from ancient laptops, my grandfathers was a PII Toshiba Portege.

    We went with these over the Chromebooks for two reasons, first and most important Online Poker, there is no online poker games on Chromebooks (real people, real money). Second was the free office 365 for a year, our grandparents are die hard Excel users and do everything including grocery list in xls.
  • jabber - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    So what happens in a years time and they still want to use Excel? Switch them over to Libre Office?
  • steven75 - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    As jabber says, I bet they'll learn to love any of the MANY MANY other ways you can make grocery lists instead of paying $100 a year. Heck, they may even realize just why the other ways are far superior if they actually tried them out.
  • Zizy - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    Eh if they purchased 4 of those they could get that 5-pack Office 365. 25/year with one extra license he can keep for himself. Full office + tons of online storage. Ends up about the same per person as 100GB google drive storage :)

    As for other ways - sometimes people hate to learn new ways. I believe I don't need to give you examples :) Also, grocery list seems to be an example of how trivial tasks they perform in excel, not that this is the reason excel is needed.
  • schizoide - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    It's not only the free "Windows with Bing" that's bringing real x86 windows tablets/netbooks price/performance competitive with Chromebooks. One aspect that most outlets miss is that Intel is subsidizing bay trail chips. They're losing money on every single one sold. That's why EVERYTHING is usual bay trail atoms these days, and why you don't see any more experimentation with ARM or AMD.
  • Brett Howse - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    I don't know if that's really fair in this version of Bay Trail, but we don't know what they are paying either. HP has the HP Stream 14 which I mentioned has a AMD A4 in it.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    o_O That close up of the pixels, what's that gunky gel covering them? I havn't seen that in other close ups. Is it noticeable from a distance?
  • kyuu - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    Not sure what "gunky gel" you're referring to, but if you mean the distortion of the pixels, that's likely caused by the matte finish of the panel. As Brett mentions in the article.
  • jtharris3 - Wednesday, December 17, 2014 - link

    The crappy TN screen is a deal breaker for me. Not buying!

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