Battery Life and Charging

Most of us would not think of a 8.5 lb notebook as something that is overly portable, but there still might be an occasion where the G751 would need to be off the mains for a bit. NVIDIA has done some work on battery powered gaming, but their biggest issue to overcome is that most of these gaming notebooks do not get great battery life even under light workloads, so gaming generally means an hour or less of battery life, and that is with reduced performance as well.

The G751 comes equipped with a 90 Wh battery, which is certainly on the large side but not unexpected with a large chassis notebook.

Our light battery life test consists of web browsing, with the display set at 200 nits. Time is logged until the device powers down. The heavy test ramps up the number of pages loaded, adds in a 1 MB/s file download over Wi-Fi, and also includes a movie playback.

Battery Life 2013 - Light

If the G751 has an Achilles heel it is battery life. Although we can't isolate power consumption of the laptop's GTX 980M discrete GPU, based on the performance of other large gaming laptops I believe the bulk of the battery life hit comes from the lack of Optimus support. Without any Optimus support, or a hardware switch to disable the GPU like the MSI GT80 has, the ASUS G751 is dragged down by having to power far more graphics power than is necessary to browse the web. These devices are not really designed to be used on the go like a smaller Ultrabook would be, but here we can see pretty clearly that there is a lot of work to be done for the Maxwell GPUs to get close to integrated GPUs low power usage.

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy

It is pretty much the same story on the heavy test. Only the Clevo manages worse battery life, and it has a desktop processor inside of it. A ten pound notebook is already not very portable, so the battery life scores are certainly not as relevant as they would be on many machines.

Battery Life 2013 - Light Normalized

Battery Life 2013 - Heavy Normalized

With a 47 watt quad-core Haswell processor, a powerful GPU which can’t be completely disabled, and no real requirement to be efficient, the G751 is closer to a desktop replacement than other similar devices. Like a desktop, this laptop should be plugged in for pretty much any usage. If you wanted to watch a movie on it, you could get by as long as it isn’t Lord of the Rings (the extended version of course). But if you are going to have a knock on a device like this, battery life is likely the one area that is not as critical to the experience.

Charging

ASUS ships the G751 with a 230 watt A/C adapter, which should be plenty to cover the peak power usage of the laptop. With a 47 watt processor and a GPU that will draw somewhere around 100 watts, there is still a nice margin even if the device is fully loaded up. This also leaves quite a bit of power available to charge the large 90 Wh battery.

Battery Charge Time

Despite the huge battery, ASUS manages to charge up very quickly, with the G751 being right at the top of any device we’ve tested. In fact the only device that charges quicker is the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon, and it has just a 50 Wh battery inside, so ASUS slightly makes up for the less than stellar battery life by at least getting back up to full charge quickly.

All in all, the battery life is poor, but with G-SYNC requiring that the GPU be directly connected to the display, rather than through the integrated GPU, there is no possibility for Optimus to be used. Some devices have a hardware multiplexer to enable the integrated GPU to be used, but it adds cost and complexity to the laptop, and you would lose access to G-SYNC on the desktop too in that case. With these handicaps, ASUS has tried to compensate with a large battery, but in the end the device is just not that power efficient, but its use targeted audience is likely not too worried about that.

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  • Notmyusualid - Saturday, August 1, 2015 - link

    ^ Also this is true.

    Guys in work bemoanded my M3800 purchase back in December due to only having Haswell, and supposedly Broadwell was due out any day... But a machine was required immediately.

    Broadwell shipped 8 months later, and in no numbers too! I'm not ever buying a 'U' Intel cpu, so those don't count.

    Turns out my instinct (likely due to places like this), was right.
  • BMNify - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    Around the corner?? Skylake H mobile will take atleast 6 months before launching in a new product like this, people buy when they need and don't wait half a year for updates.
  • shadowjk - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    Exactly. I'm still on 4700MQ + 780M.

    With "Skylake around the corner", nobody seems to want to sell even the few Broadwell-H laptops that allegedly exist, atleast in Europe. I'm guessing we'll be stuck on Haswell another 9-16 months..
  • boeush - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    My guess is, nobody wanted to invest in Broadwell H inventory, when Skylake is soon to render it obsolete. OEMs are simply waiting for Skylake to refresh their models; they are skipping Broadwell pretty much just as Intel did.
  • Refuge - Thursday, July 30, 2015 - link

    Yes, this. No OEM's are paying Broadwell much mind. It was a flubbed launch when you look at its placement in the timeline. Timing was all wrong.

    Intel shouldn't have even bothered with it if they weren't going to push back Skylake, but oh well. At least the limited it to a very small launch.
  • douglord - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    Totally pointless system for anyone that's not an engineer or architect that has to be able to take 3D drawings to customers.

    Why can't we get a 4 Core 45w chip with Iris Pro in a 5lb 15" laptop with all day battery life (10 hours)?

    No we have to choose between a pointless 10lb gayming system with 1 hour battery life and 2 core ULP garbage in a 2lb folder.
  • BMNify - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    I doubt you even read the article's first paragraph before commenting here, You are blabering about Engineers and architects and ignoring the name of the product itself: "Republic of Gamers", Hope you got a clue and its gaming not gayming. Hope i didn't hurt your gay feelings, homophobic people generally are just hiding their own insecurities and can be cured with proper help in coming out of the closet.
  • Notmyusualid - Saturday, August 1, 2015 - link

    doug sounds clueless to me.
  • benzosaurus - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    I believe the low-end Retina Macbook Pro is exactly the machine you're describing.
  • boeush - Wednesday, July 29, 2015 - link

    As an engineer (SW) who periodically deals with 3D graphics and modeling, I wouldn't bother with any 16:9 screen no matter the resolution. 16:10 is the minimal aspect ratio that is remotely acceptable for a workstation. 1080p is only suitable for movie watching, and is counter-productive for anything else.

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