Battery Life

The first generation of the iPad promised a ten hour battery life, which was exceptional when one considers what the battery life of smartphones and laptops was at that time. Since that time the battery life target OEMs aim for with tablets has usually hovered around that 10 hour mark. Whether or not a tablet lasts that long obviously depends on a mixture of the user's workload and the OEM's honesty in the battery numbers they report. As for the ZenPad S Z580CA, its 15.2Wh battery is rated for up to 8 hours of battery life by ASUS, which is lower than I would expect when the iPad Mini 2 is competing at the same price with a 10 hour battery life. Of course, the ZenPad S is 0.9 thinner at its thinnest point, which leaves less room to put in battery. This may be one of the cases where I would agree that a thicker device with a larger battery would be better, but that will depend on the outcome of our battery tests.

As always, all devices are calibrated to 200nits for all battery benchmarks, and they follow the standard order of web browsing, BaseMark OS II, PCMark, and finally GFXBench 3.0.

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

In our WiFi web test the ZenPad S falls about 43 minutes short of its rated 8 hour battery life. Had it been designed for a 10 hour rating this wouldn't be a huge deal as you'd still be talking about nearly 9.2 hours of battery life. However, 7.18 hours is a relatively short battery life for web browsing when you consider that the iPad Mini 2 lasts 9.83 hours in the same test, while the Dell Venue 8 7840 lasts 9.59 hours with the same SoC and a similar display area.

BaseMark OS II Battery Score

BaseMark OS II Battery Life

The ZenPad S does fairly well in BaseMark OS II's battery benchmark which mainly stresses a device's CPU. However, it's again outclassed by the Dell Venue 8 7840 which uses the same SoC and actually has a thinner chassis. In this case I would say that the ZenPad S doesn't have bad battery life at all, but I do wish it was a bit higher than it is.

PCMark - Work Battery Life

The ZenPad S achieves the shortest battery life of our tested devices in PCMark's battery life test. Although both devices are close, its battery life is slightly shorter than that of the Dell Venue 10 7040, which I repeatedly noted as having extremely poor battery life. PCMark is a fairly good example of the battery life that a user can expected from a mixed workload, and the ZenPad S Z580CA's battery life of 5.33 hours is not quite where it needs to be.

GFXBench 3.0 Performance Degradation

GFXBench 3.0 Battery Life

The ZenPad S doesn't last quite as long as the iPad Air 2 in GFXBench's battery test, and sits a little more than 46 minutes behind the Dell Venue 8 7840. Evaluating how well a device does in GFXBench requires considering both the battery life as well as the performance. A device can last a long time but deliver performance that isn't even remotely playable. Conversely, a device can last a short time but have incredible performance, which would still be preferable to a long period of unplayable performance.

With a steady frame rate slightly above 19 FPS for most of the test, the ZenPad S doesn't quite offer smooth performance during the 3.69 hours that it ran for. In comparison, Apple's iPad Air 2 lasted longer and approaches upon 50 FPS, which is well above the 30 FPS that many 3D mobile games target. However, it's also worth noting that this is an on-screen test, and in games that render below a device's native resolution it's entirely possible that the ZenPad S would deliver smooth performance while maintaining its 3.69 hours of battery life. It's also worth noting that the iPad Air 2 costs significantly more than the ZenPad, and while we don't have information about the iPad Mini 2 in this test, it's very likely that its performance would be similar. In the end, the PowerVR G6430 GPU is still a fairly capable GPU, even if it can't run intensive 3D games at 2048x1536. I think the GPU performance and battery life in GPU heavy loads that the ZenPad S offers is more than acceptable for a $300 device.

Charge Time

Since tablets have significantly larger batteries than smartphones, they have always required high power chargers to recharge their batteries in an acceptable period of time. Even so, devices like the 2012 iPad took as long as six hours to charge even with a 10W charger due to the sheer size of their battery. Thankfully, reductions in platform power have allowed for smaller batteries while maintaining battery life, which leads to shorter charging times for tablets. At the moment, most tablets seem to take between 3.5 and 4 hours to charge, and with its 15.2Wh battery one would hope that the ZenPad S could go below that 3.5 hour figure. As you can see above, the ZenPad S doesn't quite meet that goal.

Charge Time

The ZenPad 2 charges slightly quicker than other tablets like the iPad Air 2, iPad Mini 2, Nexus 9, and the Galaxy Tab S 8.4. However, it doesn't charge as fast as the Dell Venue 8 7840. To be honest, I had expected a better result here because of the ZenPad's relatively tiny battery capacity. Dell's included charger provides 7W of power, which isn't as much as the 10W+ bricks that come with iPads and some other tablets. It's worth noting that I also checked the charge time when using ASUS's 18W QC 2.0 power brick, but measured no difference from the one that comes in the box. I would like to note that the lack of QC 2.0 support has absolutely nothing to do with the use of the USB Type-C connector. The USB connector is unrelated to the data and power protocols.

In the end users won't be getting a significant shorter or longer charge time than other tablets, but knowing that the battery is only 15.2Wh has me feeling a bit let down that the ZenPad S takes as long as it does to charge.

Camera and WiFi Final Words
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  • DanNeely - Tuesday, September 1, 2015 - link

    They get enough loaners to keep the review queue in a constant backlog (see periodic comment rage about the review of X, Y, and Z being delayed). If ad revenue ever got to the point that they could hire enough reviewers that they didn't have anything to review at times a shopping trip might make sense; but they don't and probably never will.

    Even if that did happen, Sony probably wouldn't be the recipient because they've almost entirely abandoned the US market. If you're bound and determined to have one you can get it; but for 99% of the consumers who read the articles and let the ads load (aka the people who actually make the site money) Sony is irrelevant because it's not something they can find in the store.
  • MrSavage - Tuesday, September 1, 2015 - link

    Interesting Dan. Thanks for the insight!
  • Michael REMY - Thursday, September 3, 2015 - link

    well, i can believe what i read. you wait for the brand to provide you the device that you review. it is a leak of independence, don't you think ? can't you just buy it on amazon, try it, write your review then get your refund and return the product ?
    Seriously, for your own knoewledge, you should have test for yourself the last model of sony tablet to win&earn another point of view (better) on samsung tablet or asus zenPad.
  • IanHagen - Wednesday, September 2, 2015 - link

    I'm really glad 4:3 aspect ratio won the battle. It's so much more useful in a tablet.
  • 911electronic - Wednesday, September 2, 2015 - link

    Nice specification but still i dont know what about battery. It is important for most of the users.
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, September 2, 2015 - link

    Page 8 Battery Life and Charge Time. 7 hours on the wifi browsing test is a very poor result.
  • aldenf - Friday, September 4, 2015 - link

    Maybe I need to turn in my geek card. I see no benefit whatsoever of such resolutions in an 8" form-factor. The way I use tablets, I prefer the 4:3 ratio. So this is great. I spend far too many hours sitting 30" from my 24" 19x12 IPS, calibrated with a ColorMunki, working in Photoshop and Premiere. With an 8" display, at an 18" distance, I see no benefit above 1280x1024. On the contrary; brightness, performance and battery life suffer significantly. I've used most of what is currently available on the market and don't get the insistence of pushing higher resolutions at 8". I own two 8" tablets; an 800x600 Android and 1024x768 iPad Mini. 800x600 is borderline rough but 1024x768 is pretty good. 1280x1024 seems ideal. Why do we suck up all the marketing baloney? Bigger isn't always better. More isn't always more. It's not the resolution that we discern as better, it's simply that they're usually higher quality displays. Drop the Asus' resolution to 1280x1024, keep the high quality, do a reasonable calibration from the factory, drop the price to $250 and you have a darned nice Android tablet to last a couple of years. Really, what more do we want?
  • nitram_tpr - Wednesday, September 9, 2015 - link

    Another vote for widescreen tablets for me, it is all I've ever used (still using a transformer prime). I do watch a lot of medie on my device while I'm travelling / commuting. I tried it on the wife's iPad and got fed up with the huge black bars. Full screening it is like watching an old CRT, so I'm glad there are still the widescreen options out there.
    To all the people whining and bitching about this tablet, are you actually pissed off because you wanted to buy it, or are you just joining in with the bitch fest?
    If it isn't 4:3 don't buy it, end of.
  • er0k - Monday, September 28, 2015 - link

    Hello: My Zenpad 8.0 S is only two days old, out of the box. I cannot seem to charge it. I charged it for many hours yesterday only to find it with a dead battery. I moved it to several different outlets, tried different cables and chargers that work with other devices and worked with it previously, to no avail. It will show the battery charging icon, but does not appear to actually charge. Any ideas? Thanks.
  • System Optimizer - Wednesday, November 4, 2015 - link

    er0k,
    Did you ever get your charging issue solved. Did you try connecting to charge off a computer (if you have USB ports that charge, and the appropriate wire)? Did you hold in the power button and one of the volume buttons to force a reset on the device? (I have an old Archos 80 Titanium tablet, and once I thought it wasn't charging, and was dead, but in reality it was charged and was reporting improper information and the forced reboot resolved the issue). I don't know the z580's reset process, but I expect its something similar.

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