Battery Life

The P8 has an typical 2680mAh (10.19Wh) enclosed battery which serves as the power source of the phone. This puts the expected lifetime of the P8 towards the lower range of today's smartphones, but given the rather efficient screen, it could go either way for the Huawei flagship.

Web Browsing Battery Life (WiFi)

Starting off with our WiFi web-browsing test, we see the P8 achieve 8.76h of lifetime. Although, again, we have to mention that this doesn't particularly represent any groundbreaking number, it still is a good performance given the battery size of the phone.

Web Browsing Battery Life (4G LTE)

I've tried a go on LTE testing for the P8. In previous reviews I've mentioned that I had patchy coverage for 4G, but the P8 still managed to get an average reception. I'm not sure which frequency band it used, but I suspect it must have been the 1800MHz or 2100MHz band as the 800MHz band on my location is too weak and caps out at 0.2Mbps. As a reminder, this poses a discrepancy in the results as our other editors are able to test battery life under better signal conditions.

The HiSilicon Balong modem sadly performed very badly, coming in at only 5.33h. The device was getting noticeably warm when compared to the WiFi test - meaning the modem and RF system are at fault. 

We now move on to PCMark battery test, which is a mixed load benchmark with web browsing, video playback, word processing and photo editing.

PCMark - Work Battery Life

The P8 scored 6.03h, which is good and on par with other devices. This test in particular showed some horrid results for the Kirin 920 devices and showed off how inefficient that SoC could be during normal loads. One remark I would like to make is that the P8's battery life may be actually a tad higher as reported by PCMark because the test artificially stops when the battery gauge reaches 20%; I've noticed in other tests that the fuel-gauge in the P8 can be rather inaccurate, as the actual battery was able to still provide current for another half hour in our web tests even when showing 1% capacity. The same is valid on the other end, as the device will show 100% even though it will continue charging for another half hour after that.

BaseMark OS II Battery Life

BaseMark OS II Battery Score

In BaseMark OS II's battery rundown test which stresses mainly the CPU with high loads, the P8 manages to score very well. This is an expected outcome as the Kirin 930 has no large CPU cores which could cause high power drain and lower the efficiency of the phone.

While I didn't have the proper tools to root the P8 to be able to get detailed power curves on the CPU cores, I again relied on the internal fuel-gauge to get some estimates through a CPU power virus.

Huawei P8 Device Power &
Kirin 930 CPU Load Power
(Estimate as measured by internal fuel-gauge)
  Avg. Total Power Incremental
Difference
Idle ~0.91 W -
1 Thread ~2.48 W ~1571mW
2 Threads ~3.03 W ~556mW
3 Threads ~3.56 W ~533mW
4 Threads ~4.19 W ~624mW

Idle power is measured at 200cd/cm² and comes in at around 0.91W. Looking at the incremental differences in power when adding additional threads seems to add somewhere in the region of 570mW. This is a reasonable number for a Cortex A53 core clocked at 2.0GHz on a 28nm process.

What is shocking though is the 1W overhead that happens when going from idle to 1 thread load. Theoretically what should be included in this figure is the power consumed by the  performance cluster other non-CPU blocks coming out of their power-gated states. I haven't seen this behaviour happen on other SoCs such as from Samsung or MediaTek, where this overhead was usually only around 20% of a single core's power. This phenomenon is a tad worrisome as the impact on the Kirin 930's power efficiency could be quite large. This is definitely an aspect that warrants more investigation once I have the proper software tools for the P8.

GFXBench 3.0 Battery Life

On GFXBench, the P8 managed to perform well at 3.8h runtime, but only because the SoC throttles to ~45% of its maximum performance for about the whole duration of the run. 

One notable metric that we don't really have a objective test-case for is idle battery life. Having now several devices in my collection I tend to leave them on on WiFi for extended periods without using them. The P8 was surprisingly bad in this metric as it only ever managed to survive for 2 to 3 days, while for example my Samsung devices are able to go up to 7-10 days under the same conditions and installed applications. I don't remember having quite as bad idle lifetime on the Honor 6 or the Mate 7, so I hope this is a software issue as opposed to increased power consumption by miscellaneous device components.

Charging Time

Althrough Huawei promised that the P8 would include a quick-charger by default during their London launch event, the actual device just had a normal 5W charger bundled in. In fact, the bundled accessories look nothing like the ones that were presented during the launch:



5.0V 1A charger... generic USB cable, similar but definitely not the same premium headphones ..
.. did we miss part of the story here?

Huawei offers also offers the device in more premium variants with a higher clocked 2.2 GHz SoC and 64GB of NAND memory, so there's the possibility that maybe the accessories for those versions differ too?

Nevertheless, I tried charging the phone with various other chargers with higher power outputs and voltages, but the P8 remained an exceptionally slow charger no matter what I connected it to.

Charge Time

The end results is that the P8 is one of the slowest charging smartphones we've yet tested. While it's understandable that Huawei might have backed off the fast-charging claim in order to preserve the battery longevity of the P8, but having it charge even slower than Mate 7's 4100mAh battery is quite a feat in itself. A device teardown by IT168 revealed that the battery chemistry comes in at only 3.8V versus 3.85V such as in the Mate 7 and other modern devices, pointing out that Huawei chose to employ cheaper materials. Again we see the a quite misleading battery percentage gauge, as even though the P8 hits 100% after 175 minutes of charging, the battery still receives current for another 30 minutes until it is truly fully charged. 

If you're low on battery and want to charge your device quickly, the P8 is definitely not the device for you, as it takes about an hour to charge only 40% of the battery.

Display Measurement & Power Camera Architecture and UX & Video Performance
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  • Pissedoffyouth - Friday, June 5, 2015 - link

    Bus width, sorry.
  • Kepe - Thursday, June 4, 2015 - link

    Android 5.0 is called Lollipop, not Lolipop (every time you mention it, you misspell it). But thanks for the article, I thought the performance wouldn't have been as bad as it seems to be. The phone is way overpriced. It's a shame really, as the camera seems to be very good.
  • Kepe - Thursday, June 4, 2015 - link

    "The P8's gamut remains too large and veers off from the sRGB targets in the blue and green spectrums."

    According to the chart above this text, the blue colors seem to be very accurate. It's the red and green that are not accurate.
  • Ranger101 - Friday, June 5, 2015 - link

    It's easy to see the standards of written articles dropping everywhere you look on the
    internet, just more annoying when it's a website you visit frequently. Do you guys @
    Anandtech bother to read through the articles before you publish? A simple spell
    check perhaps?

    If English isn't Mr Frumusanu's native tongue this would go a long way towards explaining
    the kinds of errors we find in this article. Sadly it seems native english speakers/writers, such as Mr Cutress, are just as prone to said errors in their pieces.

    This is sheer carelessness and creates the impression of falling standards at Anandtech.

    I don't recall nearly as many errors under the tenure of Mr Lal-Shimpi.

    Just a couple of the points from this article:

    "Huawei started Ascend P-line" should read as "the Ascend P-Line."

    "I regard the Kirin 920 as quite of an embarrassment" should read as "quite a bit of an
    embarrassment.
  • Rod_Serling_Lives - Friday, June 5, 2015 - link

    Anandtech gives us the most in-depth reviews on modern technology and you are having a tizzy over spelling and small grammatical errors. Your corrections are valid, but your tone is condescending and unnecessary. Maybe, you should fill out an application for Editor.
  • Ethos Evoss - Friday, June 12, 2015 - link

    What is unnecessary is this in ATOM-DEPTH review !
  • Ethos Evoss - Friday, June 12, 2015 - link

    Exactly I noticed this and + their new invented words e.g. ;app-icon framing throughout :DDD
  • BA5620 - Friday, June 5, 2015 - link

    very usefully post, i just bought a P8 days ago http://www.dhgate.com/product/huawei-p8-sliver-201... and not see anything wrong yet, and cheap.
  • Ethos Evoss - Friday, June 12, 2015 - link

    u purchased it to expensive .. the phone cost much less
    http://www.aliexpress.com/item/Original-HUAWEI-P8-...

    http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/HUAWEI-ASCEND-P8-5-2-OCT...
  • SoC-IT2ME - Friday, June 5, 2015 - link

    Is the LG G4 review in the works?

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