Google Pixel 2 XL vs Galaxy Note 8 vs iPhone 8 Plus- Battery Life Drain Test By Mrwhosetheboss

By Mrwhosetheboss
Aug 14, 2021
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Google Pixel 2 XL vs Galaxy Note 8 vs iPhone 8 Plus- Battery Life Drain Test

Since, the very day the Google Pixel to smartphones were announced, which Google claimed would solve the battery life problem. When it came to smartphones, you guys have constantly been asking that big question. Does it actually do that it will right in front of us? We've got the brand-new Google Pixel to excel, and we're going to compare it to the Galaxy Note 8, iPhone, 8 plus, and the current always champion of these battery tests. The 1 plus 5, as we always do. We've equalized the brightness turned Wi-Fi on Bluetooth on and everything else off, and we're going to check the battery life readings every five to thirty minutes and after the first little session of on to two we're getting a bit of a surprising result. Weirdly enough, the iPhone 8 plus, is actually taking the lead, a phone which historically has tended to lose these tests.

So what we're going to do now is pull up the camera and try and record some 4k video at 30 frames per second on all the phones, while still we'll be using some synthetic benchmarks is to drain the batteries a little faster for the most part. I'll try and keep this as realistic when it comes to day-to-day usage as possible and as you can see after the second reading, this is starting to make a bit more sense. The 8 plus has fallen back into joint first place and the pixel to Excel is first one of the primary things people use their smartphones for is watching content, so we wouldn't even be doing the smartphones' justice if we didn't show at least some of this now notice. One thing over here, whilst the 1 + 5 ? 8, + +, the Galaxy Note 8, are all running at full HD or full HD + resolutions, Google's pixel to excel, doesn't actually have the envelope Shin, like the note 8, does to scale its resolution down so is in fact running at a quad HD setting, and we need to bear that constantly in mind, even though after the next reading, it's fallen into third place just in front of the Galaxy Note 8, quad, HD or quad HD +. That we actually have here been a lot more pixels than Full HD and Full HD +, and so, if the pixel to excel ends up lasting anywhere near as long as the other three phones, it technically has the best battery of the bunch now notice it does have the highest capacity 3 v 20 William hours compared to the 1 + 5.

In the note 8, which have 3300, and I'm hoping. This is gonna somewhat offset that high screen resolution time will tell after having opened up Sonic ? a game which uses a fair bit of power, but also the accelerometers. We're going to go full throttle we're loading Apollo, which is an augmented reality app that uses not only the accelerometer but the gyroscope, the camera and the CPU and GPU after the next result. Things are starting to fall into place a little we're starting to get more of the result. I was expecting I've got the one plus five at the front, yet again at 70, for the iPhone.

Eight plus is now in last place as 67, and the thing we're really concentrating on here is a pixel to excel and that's 70, it's kind of close to the 1 plus 5, much closer than you'd expect it to be given how much higher its screen resolution is. As we get further and further into the test, it gets more interesting. The pixel to Excel is managed to further close the gap between it and the 1 plus 5, which is really exciting, and the iPhone with the Samsung are very closely tied after running a pretty extensive session of Geek bench 4, which is really pushing the CPU to the maximum we're going to jump ship to Google Maps, which yes, is not the most demanding app, but it's the kind of thing you would be using on a day-to-day basis. On a bit of a side note, you can actually use this as a demonstration all the differences in color temperature. You can see the pixel to excel as the coolest display, among all the phones and the iPhone 8 plus, by far the warmest in terms of what's happening here.

It seems that the Galaxy Note 8 is finally strengthening its lead over the alpha 8 plus and, to be honest. After having tested a lot of iPhone battery life now, I have started to notice a bit of a trend. It almost seems like for the first few percent. They compete very well on battery life, and then you start to fall much, much faster, and it's very possible that this is programmed into iOS to perhaps give people an initial level of confidence after they've just charged their phone and the battery is falling slowly. To begin with, apparently, all right checking the phones just in between a session of Temple Run, the FNA plus us finally gone below that 20% mark.

So what I going to do now is pull up an tutu benchmark to push all these fans to the limit until they finally call it a day. Walt sees our role plus-sized smartphones, and we should expect a good level of battery life. The father they have all lasted over 4 hours of grueling battery draining is still nonetheless commendable, and it's not much longer until the iPhone 8 plus calls it quits. And surprisingly, the note 8 is really not very far behind it. It has 5% when the iPhone has 0, so it would seem like, even though the iPhone 8 plus is battery capacity is significantly smaller than the notates its battery life is not necessarily that much worse, so it's using what it has a little more efficiently, and now we hit 4 hours thirty-two and the Galaxy Note 8 runs out too, so I'm going to continue to run the unto two benchmarks on both those phones, and I'm.

Gonna. Tell you the results in just a second, but if you did enjoy this video, it means so much to me. If you could support me by subscribing in 4th place, we have the iPhone 8 plus. This is as expected. My friends have famously had smaller battery capacities than their equivalent competitors and, whilst the do use them a little more efficiently, that wasn't enough for it to be the note 8 with 4 hours and 32.

We then had the pixel to excel just second place at 5 hours, o won, and the winner was one plus five at five hours and three. However, considering how closely matched those two phones were in terms of battery life, it almost feels unfair to call the one plus five, the winner, the pixel to excel, has a larger battery and is also using that larger battery much better in order to push a far higher resolution and still have the same battery life as the one plus five. What would have been nice on the pixel to Excel would be the option to lower the display resolution. People who want even more battery life anyway, guys I, really hope you enjoyed the video I missed a user boss, and I'm signing out.


Source : Mrwhosetheboss

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