Battery Life

Every mobile device with a battery is going to be held back by it’s battery life, and there’s always trade-offs to be had. Larger batteries cost money, and add weight, so smaller batteries with higher efficiency can be the way to go. Chuwi has only outfitted the LapBook 12.3 with a 37 Wh battery, compared to the larger 45 Wh battery in it’s larger LapBook 14.1 sibling, so expectations are that it won’t be able to live up to that device for outright battery life.

Battery Life 2013 – Light

Battery Life 2013 - Light

Our older 2013 battery life test opens a set of four web pages every minute, using Edge. It’s gotten to be that it’s far too light for almost any device, so it’s been replaced with an updated test, but since we have a large backlog of data to work with, we still run this one as well.

This is why you have to test things. Going in, with a higher density panel, and smaller battery, it would have seemed there was no way the LapBook 12.3 could keep up with the decent battery life of the LapBook 14.1, but in fact, the smaller laptop actually outperformed the bigger one. Pretty impressive start.

Battery Life 2016 – Web

Battery Life 2016 - Web

Our 2016 web test is much more CPU intensive, so the scores have dropped for most devices compared to the 2013 test, unless the laptop was a gaming laptop where the CPU only makes up a fraction of the power draw. That’s not the case with the Chuwi though, and it was only slightly beaten by the LapBook 14.1. This is a solid result as well.

Normalized Battery Life

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Battery Life 2016 - Web - Normalized

To look at the device’s efficiency, we remove the battery size from the equation to get a minutes per Wh result. The LapBook 12.3 does much better here than the 14.1 model did, coming in ahead of the much lower resolution HP Stream 11, although it can’t quite match some of the most efficient devices we’ve ever tested, especially the discontinued Surface 3. It’s still a good result, and really makes the smaller 37 Wh battery last.

Movie Playback

Battery Life Movie Playback

Battery Life Tesseract

Movie playback can be offloaded to fixed function hardware, so it generally makes the battery last longer than our 2016 web browsing, and that’s the case here as well, but the difference isn’t huge. Still, our Tesseract score lets you know you can watch The Avengers three times before the laptop will shut down.

Charge Time

The laptop ships with a 24-Watt AC Adapter, which is 100V-240V. The review unit shipped with the wrong cable, but since it’s a standard PC cable, it wasn’t difficult to dig up the proper North American plug, which is no issue because the adapter itself handles both voltages.

Battery Charge Time

With a smaller battery than it’s bigger brother, it does charge a bit faster, but it’s not going to set any speed records here.

Display Analysis Wireless, Audio, and Software
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  • ianmills - Thursday, September 7, 2017 - link

    I guess the bigger one has a copper heatsink. Techtablets has a bunch about this. Adding a copper heatsink can improve performance quite a bit
  • vanilla_gorilla - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    This doesn't seem that shocking of a price. For $270 you can get an all aluminum Acer Chromebook 14 with a 1080p IPS display, 4GB RAM and 32GB eMMC. And the acer has been available for several months.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    I have it. I hope they updated it to Apollo Lake soon, the Braswell CPU is pretty slow.
  • kefkiroth - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    I think it's at least a little surprising. The LapBook 12.3 has 2 more GB of RAM, a slightly better processor, a much higher resolution display, and double the storage for just ~$60 more.
  • systemBuilder - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    RAM is $10/GB = $20.
    Flash is $0.50/GB = $16
    Better screen, I guess, is about $18 more, markup is assumed 10%.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    I don't think Windows is free in this screen size
  • notashill - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    What BIOS version was used for testing? I've seen some people on the Chuwi forums say that the most recent BIOS update significantly raised maximum brightness, seems to be dated 2017/06/12.

    See: http://forum.chuwi.com/forum.php?mod=viewthread&am...

    http://forum.chuwi.com/thread-4473-1-1.html
  • jabber - Wednesday, September 6, 2017 - link

    If you can put Neverware on this and you have a great Chromebook!
  • BrokenCrayons - Thursday, September 7, 2017 - link

    I's prefer a Linux disto if looking into an alternative OS. Chromebooks are distressingly limited in capability. The end user is probably better off leaving Windows in place since it can do anything Chrome OS can do and a lot more.
  • jabber - Sunday, September 10, 2017 - link

    Well as this is essentially a Chromebook re-purposed for Windows I'd say ChromeOS would work better. I use a mix of Windows and ChromeOS machines and it is so nice to use a Machine that doesnt take ages to update and boot etc. ChromeOS just works and for a lot of people that's all they want. If not why did MS bother with the farce that is Windows S?

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