Battery Life

Most notebooks are designed to be used on the go, whether just in your house, or out and about in the world. Desktop replacement laptops like the GT83VR Titan are more like desk to desk. You can’t really use this in your lap effectively, especially with the keyboard configuration, and the power requirements of the SLI graphics would chew through any size battery. Still, to cover all aspects, the GT83VR Titan was run through our battery life tests.

The GT83VR Titan has just a 75 Wh battery, which is only slightly more than a Microsoft Surface Book, but that’s fine, since this really needs to be plugged in to take advantage of the performance.

Battery Life 2013 – Light

Battery Life 2013 - Light

The older 2013 web browsing test cycles through four web pages every minute, and is not very demanding especially on with the quad-core CPU in the Titan. The poor result is somewhat surprising, considering the GT80 Titan managed about 1.5 hours longer in this test, but the GT83VR Titan has even more powerful GPUs and a slightly smaller battery.

Battery Life 2016 – Web

Battery Life 2016 - Web

Although this test is more demanding than the 2013 version, on high-performance notebooks the base power draw is generally enough to mask the extra CPU draw required, and that’s certainly the case here again, with this result within a few minutes of the older, less demanding test.

Normalized

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Battery Life 2016 - Web - Normalized

By removing the battery capacity from the battery life scores, we can get a look at the overall efficiency of the package, and it’s not pretty for the GT83VR Titan. Only the Clevo P750ZM with a Core i7-4790K desktop CPU does worse. It’s not pretty, but SLI GTX 1080s, even at idle, take their toll.

Movie Playback

Battery Life Movie Playback

Battery Life Tesseract

Surprisingly the movie playback regresses a bit even compared to the web browsing, with a result just a hair under two hours. This means the GT83VR Titan can’t even complete a single loop of The Avengers, resulting in a score under 1.0 on the Tesseract results.

Battery Life Conclusion

Luckily, buyers of the GT83VR Titan are likely not holding battery life very high on their list of needs, because the Titan has pretty terrible battery life. But, despite this, it’s not really a requirement of this type of machine, so it’s not a huge detriment to the experience.

Charge Time

MSI only includes a 75 Wh battery, which isn’t very large compared to more portable machines. For power, the GT83VR Titan uses not one, but two 300 Watt power supplies, which tee together. Although that may seem like overkill, if you try to game on just one of the adapters, the single power adapter quickly overheats and shuts off, so dual GTX 1080s are a lot more power draw than dual GTX 980M which got by with just a single adapter on the GT80 Titan.

Battery Charge Time

Despite the huge amount of power available, and a relatively small battery, MSI is very conservative on their charge rates, so it takes an entire three hours to refill when you do run out of battery.

Display Analysis Wireless, Audio, Thermals, and Software
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  • HollyDOL - Saturday, April 15, 2017 - link

    I rather suspect it would be nightly LAN party :-)
  • Lord-Bryan - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - link

    Right, how many of these do you think msi will sell
  • BrokenCrayons - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - link

    I'm not going to hazard a guess on their sales numbers since I'm not very familiar with what the modern consumer market segment for high end gaming laptops looks like. However, since this is MSI's third refresh of this particular product, it's a very safe bet to argue they're making enough money from sales to make keeping the line updated worth the investment. Or MSI is getting enough benefit back from having a halo product that the publicity drives the sales of their other offerings and makes the venture worthwhile. Either way, they're not soaking up a loss on these things.

    I'm surprised you didn't reach a similar conclusion on your own by performing a bit of critical thinking before you started typing. It's pretty obvious if you just spend a few moments in thought before diving for the keyboard to ask me.
  • keeepcool - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    Over 10 Titans a week in Spain alone, doesn't seem a lot, but dont forget that's 50k € on a single SKU.
  • fanofanand - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - link

    I don't think the R&D cost on devices like this are as high as people think. For the most part they take an existing clevo (or sager or similar) case, slap their decal on it, fill it with components from their shelf and charge an astronomical price. The component list is quite high-end, but they would still likely make $1k+ per unit sold, it wouldn't take many sales to recoup the costs.
  • SquarePeg - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - link

    I think you're right on about off the shelf parts keeping costs down. So if they made a $1500 profit and could sell 50,000 across the planet that would certainly be a good money maker for MSI. That screen should have been 2K and a single 1080ti would have made more sense.
  • Murloc - Friday, April 14, 2017 - link

    they must also be willing to carry all this weight around.
  • Glock24 - Thursday, April 13, 2017 - link

    That's one fugly "laptop". I think you'll be better with something like this:
    https://www.quietpc.com/mono-aio
  • shabby - Friday, April 14, 2017 - link

    Lol that's one ugly aio.
  • Glock24 - Sunday, April 16, 2017 - link

    Sure, just as ugly as the laptop, but you'll spend 1/5 and get mostly the she functionality

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