It’s not your imagination: Phone battery life is getting worse
If
you recently bought a new flagship phone, chances are its battery life is actually
worse than an older model. Here's why, and what you can do to extend your
battery's charge.
Phone makers promise “all-day battery life.” Sure, and you
haven’t stolen any of the kids’ Halloween candy.
If
you recently bought a new flagship phone, chances are its battery life is
actually worse than an older model.
For several weeks, I performed the same battery test over and
over again on 13 phones. With a few notable exceptions, this year’s top models
underperformed last year’s. The new iPhone XS died 21 minutes earlier than last
year’s iPhone X. Google’s Pixel 3 lasted nearly an hour and a half less than
its Pixel 2.
Phone
makers tout all sorts of tricks to boost battery life, including more-efficient
processors, low-power modes and artificial intelligence to manage app drain.
Yet my results, and testsby other reviewers I spoke with, reveal an open secret in the
industry: The lithium-ion batteries in smartphones are hitting an inflection
point where they simply can’t keep up.
“Batteries improve at a very slow pace, about 5 percent per
year,” says Nadim Maluf, the CEO of a Silicon Valley firm called Qnovo that
helps optimize batteries. “But phone power consumption is growing up faster
than 5 percent.”
Blame
it on the demands of high-resolution screens, more complicated apps and, most
of all, our seeming inability to put the darn phone down. Lithium-ion
batteries, for all their rechargeable wonder, also have some physical
limitations, including capacity that declines over time — and the risk of
explosion if they’re damaged or improperlydiscarded.
And
the phone power situation is likely about to get worse. New ultrafast wireless
technology called 5G, coming to some U.S. neighborhoods soon, will make even
greater demands on our beleaguered batteries.
My
test had limitations. Your experience will depend on how you use your phone,
and there are steps you can take to make your phone life stretch.
We’re
not without hope. Two phones that performed well in my tests, Samsung’s Note9
and Apple’s iPhone XR, offer ideas about how to design phones to last longer —
at least until a totally new battery technology comes along.
My
results made me do a double take, so I called up a squad of other tech
journalists also obsessed with testing at CNET, Tom’s Guide and Consumer
Reports. “Our overall average battery life is coming down,” says Mark
Spoonauer, the editor in chief of Tom’s Guide, who alsofound the iPhone XS battery died sooner than the iPhone X. Many of
the phones with thelongest battery life, he adds, are a year old.
But not all other reviewers have noticed the same declines — and
the differences in our results help shed some light on what’s going on.
Larger
phones often last longer, but it’s not as simple as the size of the battery
inside. Remember the Blackberry? Those had much smaller batteries than today’s
smartphones, but could go days without being charged.
There’s
no perfect battery test. Mine, which I borrowed from an industry group called
the Embedded Microprocessor BenchmarkConsortium, particularly stresses the screen.
I
use a light meter to set all the phones at the same brightness and then force
their web browsers to reload and scroll through a series of sites I serve
through a local WiFi network. I rerun the tests as many times as possible, and
then average the results.
CNET, which like me found conspicuous dips in battery life
between the iPhone8 and iPhone X (and Samsung’sGalaxy S8 and S9), tests screens at 50 percent brightness playing a
looping video with Airplane Mode turned on.
What
we both discovered: Phones with fancy screens that are especially
high-resolution or use tech such as OLED perform worse. (That tech can require
more power to push out light.) So if you want your phone to last longer, turn
down the screen’s brightness. Or stop looking at your phone so many times each
day, if you can break our nationwide spell of phone addiction.
Tom’s Guide throws another factor into the mix: The cellular connection. It
makes phones run through a series of websites streamed over LTE. Unlike me, it
also saw a big batterylife hit to the Pixel 3 XL versus the Pixel 2 XL.
Another
lesson: If you want the battery to last longer, use WiFi when possible — or even
Airplane Mode when you don’t need to be reachable. BothApple and Androidphones also offer low-power modes (not reflected in our
testing) that reduce some draining data functions without taking you offline.
The
counterexample is ConsumerReports, which found the new iPhone XS lasted 25 percent longer than
last year’s iPhone X. Its test uses a finger robot — yes, you read that right —
to make phones cycle through lots of different functions and apps, including
pauses in use where the screen turns off.
Consumer
Reports is likely better testing the phone’s processor, an area where a number
of companies — but particularly Apple — have made efficiency gains.
So
overall, are battery lives decreasing or increasing? “You can’t make a straight
trend,” says Consumer Reports director of electronics testing Maria Rerecich.
I
wish companies had more standardized ways to talk about battery life. Since the
earliest days of the iPhone, Apple has described battery life through specific
measures, including “talk time” and “Internet use.” Recently it’s also taken on
some more squishy language: The iPhone XS “lasts up to 30 minutes longer than
iPhone X,” it says, a measure based on data about how long people go before
plugging back in.
So what about the two 2018 phones that did better in my tests?
Samsung’s
Note9 succeeds by stuffing in more battery. It contains a battery capacity of
4,000 mAh, up from the already-huge 3,300 mAh in the Note8. (TheiPhone XS battery is only 2,659 mAh, and actually slightly downgraded from theX.)
Lots
of phones have followed the bigger battery trend. iFixit, a repair community
that performs teardown analysis of phone components, says battery capacities
have almost doubled in the last five years.
How
much further can the size game go? Huawei just introduced a phone called Mate
20 Pro, not sold in the U.S., with a 4,200 mAh battery. Larger, denser
batteries can be more dangerous (rememberSamsung’s exploding Note7?), not to mention heavier. The Note9,
which also has a giant screen and a stylus, weighs 7.1 oz – more than twice a
deck of cards.
Apple’s
iPhone XR, thenew phone I recommend to most people, has a different approach. It
scales back on the screen tech — lower resolution, less bright and
lower-quality color — in ways that benefit battery life tremendously: The XR
lasted 3 hours longer than the top iPhone XS, even though its screen is
actually a smidge larger. (Bonus: It also costs $250 less.)
“Consumers
have to start getting ready for compromise,” says Maluf, the CEO of the battery
optimization company.
Perhaps the market will fragment further, making phones more like buying cars.
That market was eventually upended by fuel-economy models; instead of the
gas-guzzling Cadillac, you could choose the Honda. Apple’s iPhone XR is the
Civic of smartphones.
Our
near-future choices are likely either: Get an economy phone — or plug in more
often. Faster and more convenient charging is the strategy for some makers.
Lots of phones now support wireless charging, though still few cafes, offices
and airport lounges offer it.
And
then there’s the plug itself. Apple, which has shipped thesame 5 watt charging brick for years, could take a lesson from
Google, which sells its Pixel phones with an 18 watt charger and claims you can
get 7 hours of use from just 15 minutes of charging. The one thing that’s
almost as bad as running out of juice is being tethered to an outlet.
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