Battery Life without Killing Graphics

We run many scenarios for our battery life tests. Since most the 14z doesn't include an internal optical drive, we will focus on DivX HD, x264 HD, Internet, and idle battery life. The GeForce 9400M definitely helps in video playback with complex H.264 codecs. We measured CPU utilization for both 720p and 1080p x264 videos and Windows Media Player Home Cinema; the maximum CPU usage for 1080p was only 12%, and average CPU use was just over 5% for both 720p and 1080p. Interestingly enough, 720p DivX decoding actually required slightly more CPU time (8.5%).

Battery Life - Idle

Battery Life - Internet

Battery Life - DivX Video

Battery Life - x264 720p

Relative Battery Life

Compared to other laptops, the Studio 14z delivers reasonable battery life. However, we are using the larger 8-cell battery (71.6Wh/74Wh), and even in our idle test we didn't come anywhere near the 6.5 hours of battery life Dell lists on their website using the default power settings. In order to get to 6.5 hours, you need to enable the "Dell Extended Battery Life" option, which switches to the "Power Saver" profile, disables the Glass UI, and makes a few other tweaks.

It looks like the Studio 14z should offer comparable battery life to the standard MacBook, at least with the 8-cell battery, but that means the MacBook is making better use of its 60Wh battery. The MacBook Pro remains out of reach of similarly equipped Windows laptops (for now). The Studio 14z does extremely well in the Internet and x264 decoding tests, where it beats the Gateway NV58 by over 20% and 40% respectively. The Gateway NV58 has a smaller battery, however, and in relative battery life the NV58 still outperforms the 14z in Internet tests.

Incidentally, battery life while gaming remains acceptable: we were able to run 3DMark06 in a loop for just over three hours (188 minutes), with essentially the same performance as we achieved on AC power. Even with the smaller 56Wh battery, users should still be able to get over two hours of gaming, just shy of three hours of Internet surfing (depending on web site complexity), or about 2.5 hours of HD video playback. That's not as good as the standard MacBook (3.1 hours of video playback and web surfing on a 45Wh battery), but it's no longer a complete blowout.

Power Requirements

As a corollary to the battery life tests, we also performed measurements of power requirements using the AC adapters and a Kill-A-Watt device. These numbers are only accurate to the nearest Watt, so a difference of 1W (i.e. from rounding) could obscure up to a 12% actual difference in power requirements. Also note that power requirements change when you switch to DC power, and power supply (power brick) efficiency comes into play when using the AC adapter, so the battery life tests are a better indication of true power requirements.

System Power Requirements - Idle

System Power Requirements - CPU

System Power Requirements - Graphics

The Studio 14z has impressive idle power requirements, coming in just below the NV58. When we put a load on the CPU, however, the lower clock speed on the T6500 in the NV58 puts it back in the lead. Worth noting is that the T6500 has a TDP of 35W compared to 25W for the P8600, but all indications are that it actually doesn't use as much power. TDP isn't a true measurement of power requirements!? Say it isn't so…. Perhaps more interesting is that in our simulated gaming test (3DMark at native LCD resolution), the Studio 14z ends up using less power than any of the other laptops. It's still a far cry away from the netbooks, but it's nice that users can get what appears to be the best current IGP solution without compromising on power requirements.

Dell Studio 14z General Windows Performance Dell Studio 14z LCD Quality
Comments Locked

57 Comments

View All Comments

  • GeorgeH - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    That was an excellent review, thanks. The commentary on each section was just enough to highlight important takeaways and asides without a lot of fluff.

    The only other (very minor) thing that I would have mentioned is that the external DVD burner (slim, eSATA, USB powered) from Dell is a $90 option or about $50-60 for a decentish USB unit from online retailers.
  • tiberious - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    When i bought mine a few months ago, they included the CPU option of: Intel® Core™ 2 Duo T9550 (2.66GHz/1066Mhz FSB/6MB cache).

    Which makes it a much more useful machine.
  • tiberious - Monday, October 26, 2009 - link

    I should also note the only reason i bought this laptop over other similar sized laptops (hp elitebook's/macbook) was the screen resolution. Short of splashing out on a sony Z series, there doesn't seem to be anyone making smallish laptops with decent resolutions.
  • maddoctor - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    Good, because it's Intel Inside and with new Core Ix based laptops, nvidia will not have any chance with Intel's chipsets infrastructure business.
  • themadmilkman - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    Just when I thought there was nothing worse than an Apple fanboy...
  • stmok - Tuesday, October 20, 2009 - link

    themadmilkman, just ignore him.
  • JohnConnor - Sunday, September 12, 2010 - link

    Jarred,

    I've read your reviews for many years. Please don't throw your personal color choice, preferences, into a review, as it isn't professional.
    I'm a straight male who is 43, and I like the plum purple, out of the choices given
    It 's one of the reasons why I bought my 14z. I got it refurbished, with a T4200, for $648
    with 3GB of RAM.(I bought the Dell USB dvd-drive, which can blaze using 2 USB ports.

    To all others who don't have this notebook should know this. with, the stock CPU, it was slow.

    Add a T9550 CPU, and a 4GB stick of DDR3 1066Mhz[for 5GB total RAM)
    [both of which I upgraded myself)] and the 8 cell battery, and you have a portable notebook, just above netbook size, which will give you over 8 hours of runtime without the AC!

    I run OS X 10.6.4 SL with Windows 7 Pro x64, in Virtual Box, and love it

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now