Battery Life

I would say the average Ultrabook has around 50 Wh of battery capacity. Some have a bit more, and some have a bit less, but 50 Wh would be a good ballpark figure. The Surface Book has a 70 Wh battery, split into 18 Wh in the Clipboard, and 52 Wh in the base. Combined, it gives the Surface Book more battery capacity than any other Ultrabook. However, as I’ve just discussed in the display section, Microsoft has a high resolution panel that is also based on a traditional amorphous silicon TFT which may impact the battery life.

Since the Surface Book includes a detachable Clipboard, the battery tests have been done with the Surface Book both as a tablet and a notebook. The tablet portion of our testing is with the device in Tablet Mode with the screen detached, leaving just 18 Wh of battery capacity. The Surface Book is intended to be used as a laptop first and foremost, but it’s still important to see what it can deliver away from it’s keyboard base. As always, all of our battery life tests are done with the display at 200 nits, and using the Microsoft Edge browser.

Since we have received both the Core i5-6300U model, as well as the Core i7-6600U model with the discrete NVIDIA GPU, both devices have been put through these tests.

Clipboard Battery Life

Clipboard Battery Life - Web Browsing Edge

Clipboard Battery Life - Video Playback

Battery life of the Clipboard is about what you would expect. With just 18 Wh of capacity, and a full Ultrabook inside the display, there is no way it would get the 10 hours that we would expect of an ARM based tablet. The Core i7 model has less battery life, which makes sense since its base frequency is a bit higher and overall power consumption should be a bit higher even with standard chip binning from Intel. Video playback is very close on both though, which would be expected since the video is offloaded to fixed function hardware in Skylake.

Notebook Battery Life

On the notebook side, we have two tests. The light test consists of loading four web pages per minute, and can be heavily impacted by display power draw. The CPU mostly sits idle during this test, expect for the brief bursts of work to load the pages. The heavy test ramps up the number of pages loaded, adds in a 1 MB/s file download, and has a movie playing.

Battery Life 2013 - Light

Something amazing happened when I ran the Core i5 Surface Book through our light test. It set a new record for battery life. The amazing part of this is that it did it with a high resolution display, which normally impacts battery life quite a bit. For some contrast, the Dell XPS 13 was our previous battery life leader, but it was the 1920x1080 model. The 3200x1800 version, as seen in the graph above, was quite a bit less. The Core i5 Surface Book got 15.6 hours of battery life in this test. Yes, it was helped by a larger battery, but it was still a very impressive result. The dGPU + Core i7 model took a big hit here, coming in over three hours behind. Without dissecting the device and measuring power draw at each component, it’s tough to lay the blame on any one piece of the puzzle, but it has more RAM, a dGPU with GDDR5 memory (though this should be completely powering down when not in use), and a faster CPU. Any one could be to blame, or a combination of all three. Despite the lower score, at over 12 hours it still did very well on our light test.

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy

The heavy test brings a lot more components into play, making the display power draw a smaller part of the picture. Here we see both the i5 and i7 models doing very well again, but once again the i5 version scores a lot higher. Both models can offer all day battery life, but if outright mobility is a concern, the i5 outperforms the i7 on battery life.

Next, let’s take a look at the platform efficiency, and remove the large 70 Wh of capacity from the equation.

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy Normalized

While not the outright leaders in efficiency, the Core i5 Surface Book is the class leader when compared against other high DPI devices. The Core i5 Surface Book has even better efficiency than the Surface Pro 4, despite the Surface Pro 4 using an IGZO panel. On the heavy test, the Core i7 falls back a bit in both tests, but still has a good result.

Connected Standby Support

Surface Book is configured to use Connected Standby, which means that it can pull in app updates and push notifications even when it is sleeping. Out of the box, this is a mixed blessing, since the Surface Book has some issues with Connected Standby at the moment. It is supposed to hibernate after a couple of hours, but that doesn’t always happen, and there seems to be an activity/power drain issue when in sleep, since the Surface Book can get pretty hot when it’s closed. These are serious bugs that mar the experience. You can’t just trust that shutting the lid is going to put the machine to sleep, so if you close the lid and come back the next day, you are going to be welcomed by a dead battery. This is a well known issue, so I would expect a fix soon, but it’s a serious problem with the Surface Book that needs to be pointed out.

Charge Time

With 70 Wh of battery, charge times might be something that will be an issue, so I’ve tested both the Core i5 and the Core i7 models out with their respective adapters that come in the box. Since the Core i7 model includes a GPU, the AC adapter that is supplied is about twice the output of the standard version. The Core i5 comes with a 30 W charger, and GPU models come with a 60 W charger. It’s very difficult to tell which is which, but the 60 W version is slightly thicker, and the charging light on the Surface Connect port has different lighting. The low wattage version has a light that points away from the laptop when connected, and the higher wattage charger has lights that point up and down. You can technically use either charger, or even the Surface Pro 3 or 4 charger, but if you are using the GPU with a 30 W charger, the battery will slowly be depleted since it won’t be able to keep up with demand.

Since there are two batteries, I expected to see the tablet battery charged first and then the base, but that’s not actually what happens. Both are charged simultaneously.

You can see that the 60 W charger on the Core i7 can charge both batteries at the maximum rate simultaneously, but the 30 W charger that comes with the Core i5 charges the smaller tablet battery at maximum first, and when it’s full, sends the rest of the power to the base. It results in a longer charge rate for the non-GPU version.

Battery Charge Time

Thanks to including a large 60W power adapter by default, the Core i7 + dGPU version wins by quite a bit, with the non-dGPU model taking nearly four hours to charge to 100% on both batteries. It kind of makes up for that with great battery life, but if you are someone that travels a lot, it may be worth investing in the higher wattage adapter for the non-dGPU version.

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  • Brett Howse - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - link

    Sorry I covered the pen in the Surface Pro 4 review. It's all exactly the same. I should have put a link to it so I'll add one now. As far as latency and other measures, working on that.
  • milkod2001 - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - link

    Clicked on Amazon link posted on this review to see what are early adaptors experiences.

    http://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-Surface-Book-Intel...

    The amount of 1* review(25%) is quite alarming. Looks like half baked rushed product. Too bad, i have expected more from product in this price range.
  • s.yu - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - link

    Exactly.
  • cashnmillions - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - link

    Yes, 13 bad or 1* reviews, 3 of which are verified purchases. Take it with a grain of salt.
  • s.yu - Sunday, November 15, 2015 - link

    Yeah, MS Store reviews are all "verified", they just delete all the negative ones. Those people have nowhere to go so they post reviews at Amazon instead.
  • cbf - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - link

    The one star reviews are all quite believable. Most of them say that they didn't purchase it at Amazon, so naturally wouldn't be verified.

    I played with a Surface Book at a Microsoft store (only sample they had), and it was flaky. I fully expect these glitches to be fixed in time -- hopefully with software/firmware updates (as opposed to hardware replacement). But in the meantime, you can hardly blame people who give an appropriate review to a product that doesn't work yet.
  • pliablemoosethebanned - Wednesday, November 11, 2015 - link

    Review mirrors what I'm hearing, software half baked.

    Also, guys, has there been any discussion about just shutting down the comments altogether, seem to be the latest trend.
  • milkod2001 - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    Where is that trend of shutting down comments coming from? Comments help to keep user stay on website longer, browse through pages or posts. All that increase a chance that user will eventually see some ads which will draw his attention and will eventually click on them. That generates money.

    As user/reader you also have a chance to state your own opinion / toughs etc. in comments. If you shut down comments you will also decrease time spent on website from a few minutes to a few secs.
  • s.yu - Sunday, November 15, 2015 - link

    I noticed some sites shutting down comments but they don't seem to be among the more popular tech sites. They also use individual comment systems and since I don't see much interesting content I don't even bother registering. Anandtech is the only place I registered that isn't using Disqus or Livefyre.
  • milkod2001 - Thursday, November 12, 2015 - link

    I guess it would be OK for cheapo brands like ACER, but when you spend $2000+ on something it should work as advertised from day one.

    I just don't understand how can MS throw 1.2 billion on Minecraft without problem but cannot spend a few hundred grand on quality control: software firmawe / hardware.

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