sperho
Android Enthusiast
I was curious about battery drain on my phone under a few different conditions so I ran a few tests and thought I would share the results. I got curious about battery drain after doing some testing showed that Light Flow, with my configuration of multiple notifications allowing the LED to cycle colors, was causing excessive battery drain by keeping the phone out of Deep Sleep. I get a lot of notifications during the work day and battery was going a lot faster than I though it should have been. I've since stopped using Light Flow and am pleased with idle times and battery life compared to when I had LF enabled.
Percentages and times were calibrated from a screenshot using Photoshop CS4 Extended using the measurement tools (basic pixel = length stuff) and the screenshots are below. I did the 4G Netflix test twice to see how repeatable this kind of measurement was and the drain rate was within 0.1% of the first time I ran the test. Not bad.
Test conditions:
This test was meant to be representative of how I have my phone set up pretty much all of the time, so your results might vary, but some might find the relative drain rates of interest nonetheless.
I measured the following:
My conclusions under my test conditions are:
That's about it and YMMV - so remember that before you post...
Percentages and times were calibrated from a screenshot using Photoshop CS4 Extended using the measurement tools (basic pixel = length stuff) and the screenshots are below. I did the 4G Netflix test twice to see how repeatable this kind of measurement was and the drain rate was within 0.1% of the first time I ran the test. Not bad.
Test conditions:
- I left bluetooth on for these, wi-fi off, and screen on auto brightness.
- All tests were performed in a dim room and the screen brightness was low because of this.
- Samsung extended battery was installed.
- Rooted and unlocked, otherwise bone-stock ICS 4.0.2. Signal for 3G was 2-3 bars. Signal for 4G was 2-3 bars.
- Data sync was enabled, which includes a POP email account with a 10 min fetch interval, TouchDown for Exchange email with push-enabled, GTalk on, GMail sync on.
- All tests performed over the course of 2 days (yesterday and today) and tests were performed only after the battery had been off the charger for 10-15 minutes, so its voltage had time to stabilize a little bit.
This test was meant to be representative of how I have my phone set up pretty much all of the time, so your results might vary, but some might find the relative drain rates of interest nonetheless.

I measured the following:
- drain under only occasional screen-ons with 3G enabled.
- drain with no screen-ons with 3G enabled.
- drain with no screen-ons with 4G enabled.
- drain while downloading a 456MB file from Dropbox with 3G data, screen off.
- same as 4, but with 4G data.
- drain while watching 45 minutes of Burn Notice on Netflix over 3G.
- same as 6, but over 4G.
- screen on only
My conclusions under my test conditions are:
- Drain while idling with 4G on is almost 2X that of 3G, but it is not terrible, coming in at only 1.7%/hour.
- Idle drain in general is surprisingly good despite having push enabled on several services.
- When transferring a lot of data, 4G is MUCH more efficient than 3G, not because it uses less power per unit time, per se, but because the radio is working hard for a LOT less time on a decent connection.
- Netflix (or quite possibly, simply video playback) chews the bejeebers out of the battery, regardless of 3G or 4G connection.
- Screen on drain when the brightness is low isn't all that bad.
- I am guessing that like the desktop version of Netflix, the Android Netflix app sends more data when you have higher bandwidth connection, thus at least partially accounting for the 38.2%/hour drain rate on 4G compared to the 33.1%/hour drain rate on 3G.
That's about it and YMMV - so remember that before you post...