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M1 MacBook Pro (13-Inch) Long-Term Review: Battery Life

Roberta Fernandez by Roberta Fernandez
April 12, 2021
in Laptops
0
M1 MacBook Pro (13-Inch) Long-Term Review: Battery Life

M1 processor used in the 13-inch MacBook Pro.

M1 processor used in the 13-inch MacBook Pro.


Credit: Apple

While the M1 MacBook Pro delivers long battery life, it’s not the only game in town.

Battery life: all-day but…

The latest Windows entry, the Lenovo X1 Nano with an 11th Gen Intel “Tiger Lake” energy-efficient (aka low power) processor, shows surprising battery life, rivaling the M1 MacBook Pro:

  • MacBook Pro 13 M1: 10 hours
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano: 9 hours

Battery life is based on my usage scenario which includes running Google Chrome with 20+ tabs (the single biggest power drain), Firefox browser, Microsoft Office, Google Docs, social media, YouTube videos (in background playing music), CMS, video conferencing (e.g., Zoom, Microsoft Teams), Apple Music, benchmarking applications, and photo editing. Display brightness is typically set at over 70 percent.

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano config I have uses a Intel Core i5-1130G7 processor, a 13-inch 2K (2,160-by-1,350) LCD and is spec’d with 16GB/256GB.

The 13-inch MacBook Pro I use is equipped with the Apple M1 processor and 16GB/512GB.

Battery life based on my usage scenario.

Battery life based on my usage scenario.


Credit: Brooke Crothers

Others: HP Elite Dragonfly, Google Pixelbook Go

The ThinkPad X1 Nano isn’t the only recent Windows laptop I’ve tested that gets battery life close to the M1 MBP.

HP’s ultraportable, the Elite Dragonfly (2.2 pounds), which I’ve tested for months, has battery life just shy of the M1 MacBook Pro. The Dragonfly goes for almost nine hours based on the usage scenario cited above.

My Google Pixelbook Go Chromebook, which was released long before the M1 MacBook, maxes out at 10 hours of battery life, which is pretty much identical to the M1 MacBook Pro.

Some of the latest laptops that fall short of the M1 MBP

The HP Spectre x360 14 — currently my daily driver — with a high-resolution 13.5-inch OLED display falls a few hours short of the M1 MBP, getting up to 7 hours of battery life (but that’s due* to the use of a high-resolution OLED display instead an LCD).

A more recent high-performance Chromebook I’ve been using, the HP Elite c1030, manages 7-8 hours of battery life. (But as a side note, if I spend most of my time within the Chrome browser — which isn’t unusual on many days — it’s the fastest laptop I have, which almost makes up for the shorter battery life compared to the Pixelbook Go.)

Final note — heat:

The one area that the M1 MacBook Pro most consistently beats Windows laptops is thermals.

I’ve never been able to get my M1 MacBook Pro hot. The most the M1 MBP gets is slightly warm when it’s hooked up to my LG Ultrafine 5K monitor in the usage scenario cited above.

That’s not the case for more than a few of the latest, higher performance Intel 11th Gen-based Windows laptops, which do get hot to the touch, particularly on the bottom of the chassis.

——

NOTES:

*Re: HP Spectre x360 14 OLED: HP also offers the Spectre x360 14 with an LCD. That model gets longer battery life.

OLEDs can be power hungry on white backgrounds, the most common background color I use. You can reduce battery life on OLED laptops by opting for dark mode whenever possible since OLEDs can turn off pixels completely in dark mode while LCDs cannot.

13-inch MacBook Pro M1.

13-inch MacBook Pro M1.


Credit: Apple

Comments or suggestions can be sent to me via a direct twitter message at twitter.com/mbrookec.

Tags: m1M1 MacBook ProMicrosoftThinkPad X1 NanoWindows 10
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