Battery Life

One of the trade-offs that Microsoft has made with the Surface Pro 4 is a reduction in battery capacity. Ever since the first Surface Pro was launched, Microsoft has equipped it with a 42 Watt-hour battery. That is a large size for a tablet, but the Surface Pro has always been a larger than normal tablet too. With the Surface Pro 4, the battery capacity has been reduced slightly to 39 Wh. Part of this is the thinner chassis, and part of it is the new hybrid cooling which puts a copper plate over the battery. I can’t argue with the new cooling system, since it has clearly made a big difference in thermals.

To take a look at battery life, I’ve run both our tablet battery tests and our notebook battery tests. As with all of our battery life testing, the display is set to 200 nits for a consistent result across devices.

Tablet Battery Life

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

Looking at our tablet web browsing test, the Surface Pro 4 comes in right around the same battery life of the Surface Pro 3, running out of power about 13 minutes sooner. When you think about the move to Skylake, this could be taken as a disappointment, and I honestly thought it might be able to get a bit more. But the smaller battery capacity and increased pixel density both negatively impact batter life despite the CPU using a bit less power itself. I would have loved to see the larger battery stay, which would have given it about 8.5 hours, but the improved cooling system is likely a better trade-off compared to around 30 minutes of battery life.

Video Playback Battery Life (720p, 4Mbps HP H.264)

Once we shift to a more CPU-intensive workload however we start seeing significant gains. Intel has been making good progress on their video decode power consumption since Haswell, and the Surface Pro 4, despite the greater pixel density and a smaller battery, achieves 23% longer battery life than the Surface Pro 3 at this task. This is a great result and puts the Surface Pro 4 more in line with what traditional ARM based tablets can achieve.

Notebook Battery Life

Battery Life 2013 - Light

Once again the Surface Pro 4 falls right in line with the previous generations for battery life, which means that the efficiency has been improved even though the panel is much denser. While certainly not class leading in overall life, for the size of device and performance available, it is a pretty good result. Being able to keep battery life flat, while improving the display resolution, and making the device thinner and lighter, is in line with what you would expect as they pack more and more power efficient parts into the Surface Pro 4.

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy

Under our heavy battery life test we can really see the improvements with Skylake. The Surface Pro 4 battery life score on our heavy battery life test outlasts the Surface Pro 3 by 21%. The heavy test involves video playback, which we have just seen in the tablet workload is significantly improved, as well as a much higher web load and a 1 MB/s file download. Once again, the Surface Pro 4 is not going to be able to compete with notebooks with much larger batteries, but for the size and weight of the device, it is a good result.

Next up let’s break down our results by energy efficiency.

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy Normalized

The XPS 13 is the class leader in battery life at the moment, but it achieves this with the 1920x1080 display. In order to be more comparable to the Surface Pro 4, the graph shows the higher resolution 3200x1800 version which was still able to get some pretty good battery life scores. The Surface Pro 4 manages to be more efficient than every other high resolution device we have tested, although lower resolution devices are still able to offer greater overall efficiency.

Charge Time

Microsoft has kept the same charging system from the Surface Pro 3, with the Surface Connect port providing the connection. This hasn’t changed since the last model, but I do like the magnetic connector and how well it always attaches. I kind of wish Microsoft had added a USB-C here as well, but the Surface Connect port is a pretty nice implementation. Unsurprisingly then, the charge time does not change very much at all compared to last year’s model.

Charge Time

Battery Charge Time

I recorded a 158-minute charge time with the standard charger. Microsoft also offers a higher wattage 60 W version for use with the Surface Book, and you can also purchase it as an accessory for the Surface Pro 4. The result with that charger? 158 minutes. The Surface Pro 4 did not dump any extra power to the battery at all with the higher wattage charger.

Once other nice part of the Surface Pro 4 charger, which also carries over, is the included 5 W USB port on the charger itself, so you can charge up your smartphone without burning two outlets. It’s a small thing, but when you are at a hotel where outlets on the desk are at a premium, it’s nice to be able to do this.

Display Wireless, Speakers, Camera and Software
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  • SaolDan - Friday, October 23, 2015 - link

    Sure. But then again i play final fantasy 14 on my i3 surface pro 3. The ipads pro may have "more" gpu power but i can run REAL games on my SP3. Steam. Enough said.
  • tipoo - Friday, October 23, 2015 - link

    ...There are no benchmarks of it yet? Apart from Apples __x faster numbers, and, well look at the 370X graphics chip about that.
  • Fiernaq - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    Editing check: It looks like the i5-6300U has HD Graphics 520 instead of the HD Graphics 530 mentioned in the review. Specs do appear to be correct for the 520 though (24EU, 300-1000MHz).
    http://ark.intel.com/products/88190
    http://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-HD-Graphics-520...
  • Brett Howse - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    Sorry that was a typo in the chart.
  • tdogdfw - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    I'm pretty sure the Core I5 is using Intel HD520 graphics - not 530.
  • Klaus.88 - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    I wonder if they will create a GPU dock with the Surface Connect port...
  • tipoo - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    Really interested in the Iris model with 64MB eDRAM. Intel said 128MB was overprovisioned, so if it gets close to Iris Pro performance that would be neat.
  • Mfgillia - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    Thanks for a great article - read several SP4 reviews in the last few days from different websites and none came close to factually addressing the major issues and questions as well as yours.
  • sn_85 - Monday, October 26, 2015 - link

    Agreed. Anandtech has always gone into an in-depth look from a hardware perspective. I feel most "reviews" no a days are more tech blog style reviews which focus on general daily use.
  • GermanQR - Thursday, October 22, 2015 - link

    What a wonderful review, thank you. And the technical knowledge level of your commenters here is out of this world. This looks like a true PERSONAL computer at last. I find myself at a crossroads here. I am a gamer but I find myself drifting towards PS4 for hardcore gaming and PC for indy and classic titles. Should I get this? I travel a lot and I would love to carry my personal PC with me. I never lug my Alienware with me as it's too cumbersome and my company supplied laptop (X1 Carbon) won't allow me to install anything. Looking at this and Surface Book. Does this allow for a decent gaming experience (pre 2000 and indies) as well as productivity? Any thoughts?

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