Display, Battery Life, and Charging

The Monitor

The high-level specifications of the monitor make for very interesting reading. A 16-inch IPS display with a 2520x1680 resolution, making it a 3:2 ratio (which is becoming more and more common on laptops of all sizes). The IPS panel means that the viewing angles are wide, and Huawei rates the screen for 300 nits brightness maximum as well as a 1500:1 contrast ratio. That brightness maximum isn’t anything to write home about – in fact it’s a bit low for any external daytime use – but the contrast ratio is better than the MateBook X Pro we last reviewed because of the lower blacks. On colors, Huawei pre-calibrates the display to a dE below 1, qualifying the display for 100% of the sRGB gamut with 8-bit + FRC support.

That gives a lot to play with, so here are our results:

Display - Max Brightness

The specification sheet said 300 nits, and we scored 311. Our 200 nits regular battery testing was at a brightness setting of 65, with a very linear profile sweep.

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The display has some of the better black levels at maximum brightness that we’ve tested, giving a 1488:1 contrast ratio, which is almost identical to the rating.

The odd resolution of 2520x1680 is a little left-field: Huawei calls it a 2.5K+ display. But what it really comes down to is the 3:2 version of 2560x1600, which is a 16:10 ratio. The only thing really missing from the display is the lack of a touchscreen. For certain office workloads, having a touchscreen is quite handy, although it does tend to add a little weight.

For those looking for color accuracy, unfortunately I do not have the same equipment Brett does for this, however my colorimeter provides the following at 200 nits:

This shows that the red tracking is almost perfect, with the greens and the blues being biased away from that proportional line.

 

Battery Life

Due to the short time we had, I was only able to run one battery life test, and chose our Web Playback test that uses MS Edge to cycle through a number of remote server-driven but fixed webpage workloads. The screen brightness is set to 200 nits. Power numbers are reverse calculated mWh reported by Windows.

After the initial caching of the webpages, the system settled down into a 6-8 for most of the test. At around 550 minutes, we see a decrease in the system activity, which we’re attributing to the system entering the low power plan at 20% total battery, which surprisingly picks up again after an hour around 15% battery. The total battery life in this case, from 100% charge to shutdown (which this laptop was set at 2%, but Windows cuts at 2.5%) is 697 minutes.

 

Charging

So here’s where it gets a bit interesting. The laptop has a 35W/45W processor, an 84 Wh battery, and a 135 W power charger. The performance mode can only be accessed when the charger is equipped. But in a charging scenario, we get three different variants:

  1. When the system is idle, it will charge the battery at around 35 W and draw 50 W at the wall.
  2. If the display is closed, regardless of the sleep state, the battery will charge at 70 W and draw 70-90 W at the wall.
  3. Only when performance mode is active, and the CPU is being used fully, does the charger draw its full 135W setting.

One of the key features of this unit is the fast charging and the bundled 135 W charger. But users should note that it never charges at 135 W, but it will draw that much at the wall when the system is in use under a high-performance load. We did charging runs for both the first and second modes, with the display set to 200 nits but otherwise the system was idle.

In the 70W charging mode, the system charges at 70 W for 42 minutes, before dropping to 60 W for 8 minutes, then trickling down until ~82 minutes where it ramps up again for a seemingly final push. In this mode, we get the following:

  • 10 minutes charge gets from 1696 to 13466 mWh (15.8%)
  • 30 minutes charge gets from 1696 to 36374 mWh (42.8%)
  • 90% charge takes 71.3 minutes

When we move down to the 35W mode, while the system is in the default Balanced CPU mode rather than Performance CPU mode, it takes a lot longer:

Here we start with an initial power wobble (for whatever reason this laptop doesn’t like accurately refreshing its battery power below 5%), and then get a constant 35 W battery charge until 90%, then it switches charging modes until 95%, and the PMIC increases charging again. In this mode, we get the following:

  • 10 minutes charge gets from 1662 to 5925 mWh (7.1%)
  • 30 minutes charge gets from 1662 to 17408 mWh (20.9%)
  • 90% charge takes 130.2 minutes

I can certainly see the reason for having a slower charge while the lid is up – if there would be a thermal build-up on charging, the lid up means that while the laptop is in use, and so the user is not affected. It also gives room for when the system needs to go full bore. The downside is knowing that shutting the lid doubles the charging rate, so if you need a quick charge before going somewhere, it’s going to be beneficial to close the laptop lid and wait, unable to use the device, than to continue charging and working.

Battery Charge Time

It should be noted that when our review unit arrived, the 135 W charger was effectively DoA; a second one arrived the day before our review embargo lifted (I unfortunately went on holiday, so this review was completed after I returned). That second charger has worked flawlessly, so I can only assume we had a (rare) dud charger. During the interim, I had other Huawei 65 W chargers from other products around for testing, and those worked without issue.

Graphics Performance: Vega 8 in Mobile Coupling with Huawei Share: Laptop to Tablet, to Monitor, to Phone
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  • Oxford Guy - Sunday, October 24, 2021 - link

    640K ought to be enough for anybody.
  • Oxford Guy - Sunday, October 24, 2021 - link

    'I'm amazed companies keep pushing laptops with 512GB SDDs and pretend they are not crap. 1 TB of storage is the absolute minimum any new pc or laptop should have if you don't want to buy a second SSD in a few months.'

    Agreed. Companies think they can be Apple.
  • Alistair - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    Won't buy anything from Huawei again. They are basically the Chinese military and are heavily connected to top leadership in China. They abducted two innocent Canadian citizens for 3 years and mistreated them. My current Huawei phone will be the last product I ever buy from them, that's for sure. Don't support evil.
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    Let's not forget that without top military connections, Silicon Valley would not have happened.

    I couldn't really stop buying hardware from a country run by a narcicistic would-be dictator either, nor are there many ways around a company from that country, which now seems quite more ready to "do evil".

    Since I was born in the city where Konrad Zuse invented the programmable computer to help Adolf win The War, I just hope that sooner or later the other millions or billion citizen come to their senses without civil or even less civil war.
  • Alistair - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    China today, we are talking about a company right now, a government, right now, 2021. You can buy products from other brands like Samsung, or Adata, Asus, or Acer.
  • Oxford Guy - Sunday, October 24, 2021 - link

    Glenn Greenwald, in his 'collapsing empire' piece at Salon, said the US is the world's largest dealer of arms.

    Last time I checked, arms are used to rob people of theirs.
  • Alistair - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    Also you should wake up, suggesting China is comparable to any modern country is just ignorant. Taiwan, Korea, and Japan are the major modern Asian countries. Not China, especially politically.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    The canadian government regularly turned a blind eye to the abuse/murder of natives by the RCMP. Hope you dont buy anything canadian either eh!
  • Alistair - Wednesday, October 20, 2021 - link

    That is just anti Canada nonsense.
  • sonny73n - Thursday, October 21, 2021 - link

    You must be one of them racist and prejudice KKK in the US. I don't ever hear any Chinese slander you people but somehow you people keep spewing shit everyday. Chinese people in general are much more decent than you scumbag.

    Yea in China some company is state sponsored but in your country, big corps sponsor the state. You know what does that mean, don't you?

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