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Honor Magic6 Pro
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Honor Magic6 Pro Battery test

OTHER AVAILABLE TESTS FOR THIS DEVICE

We put the Honor Magic6 Pro through our rigorous DXOMARK Battery test suite to measure its performance in autonomy, charging and efficiency. In these test results, we will break down how it fared in a variety of tests and several common use cases.

Overview

Key specifications:

  • Battery capacity: 5600 mAh
  • 80W charger (not included)
  • 6.8-inch, 1280 x 2800, 120 Hz, OLED display
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen3(SM8650) (4 nm)
  • Tested ROM / RAM combination: 512 GB + 12 GB

Scoring

Sub-scores and attributes included in the calculations of the global score.

Honor Magic6 Pro
Honor Magic6 Pro
157
battery
168
Autonomy
189

221

127

195

157

198

151
Charging
145

224

158

212

121

205

150

194

Key performances

Charging Time
3 days 9h
Battery life
Charging Time
0h29
80% Charging time
Charging Time
1h11
Full charging time
Quick Boost
7h36 autonomy
after 5-minute charge

Pros

  • Excellent indoor autonomy
  • Great showing in video streaming, gaming, and idle screen on
  • Overall low discharging currents in most of the indoor test cases
  • Less than 1h 20 mins required to fully charge the battery with both wired and wireless charger

Cons

  • Relatively short autonomy in idle screen off and music streaming Wi-Fi tests
  • High residual power drain no matter the device is still plugged in or not

The Honor Magic6 Pro provided an excellent overall battery experience, with impressive improvements in autonomy and charging that pushed the flagship device into the top position of the Battery ranking, a rare feat for an ultra-premium smartphone.

Equipped with a large 5600 mAh battery, the Honor Magic6 Pro, offered more than 3 and a half days of autonomy under moderate usage. The device performed impressively in most individual test cases, including the idle screen-on, video streaming, gaming, and calling. However, idle screen off and music-streaming test cases under Wi-Fi conditions showed weaker performances.

The peak wired charging power supported by the Honor Magic6 Pro increased to 80W, allowing the device to be fully charged in 1 hour and  11 minutes. The maximum wireless charging power at 66W  was not far behind, providing a full charge in less than 1 hour 20 mins.  In our 5-minute quick charge test, the device was able to regain more than 7.5 hours of autonomy, which ranked it at the top half of our database.

The Honor Magic6 Pro’s charge-up efficiency was 75%, which is somewhat less efficient when compared with other devices. The device demonstrated a relatively high residual power drain, whether it remained plugged in or not.  However, the device’s discharging currents were consistently low, except during periods of idle screen off and when streaming music over Wi-Fi, indicating the device was generally well-optimized.

The battery experience often presents a challenge for ultra-premium smartphones, which have to find the right balance between optimizing new power-demanding features and providing a satisfying user experience. The Honor Magic6 Pro clearly emerged as the frontrunner in this segment when compared to other devices, thanks to the outstanding battery life and fine-tuning that solidifies its user experience as the best so far.

Test Summary

About DXOMARK Battery tests: For scoring and analysis in our smartphone battery reviews, DXOMARK engineers perform a variety of objective tests over a week-long period both indoors and outdoors. (See our introductory and how we test articles for more details about our smartphone Battery protocol.)

The following section gathers key elements of our exhaustive tests and analyses performed in DXOMARK laboratories. Detailed performance evaluations under the form of reports are available upon request. Do not hesitate to contact us.

Battery Charger Wireless Display Processor
Honor Magic6 Pro 5600mAh 80W
(not included)
66W OLED
1280 x 2800
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3
Honor Magic5 Pro 5100mAh 66W
(not included)
50W OLED
1312 x 2848
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2
Huawei P60 Pro 4815mAh 88W
(included)
50W LTPO OLED
1220 x 2700
Qualcomm Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1

Autonomy

168

Honor Magic6 Pro

195

Honor X7b
How Autonomy score is composed

Autonomy score is composed of three performance sub-scores: Home / Office, On the go, and Calibrated use cases. Each sub-score comprises the results of a comprehensive range of tests for measuring autonomy in all kinds of real-life scenarios.

Light Usage
113h
Light Usage
Active: 2h30/day
Moderate Usage
81h
Moderate Usage
Active: 4h/day
Intense Usage
51h
Intense Usage
Active: 7h/day

Home/Office

189

Honor Magic6 Pro

221

Honor X7b

A robot housed in a Faraday cage performs a set of touch-based user actions during what we call our “typical usage scenario” (TUS) — making calls, video streaming, etc. — 4 hours of active use over the course of a 16-hour period, plus 8 hours of “sleep.” The robot repeats this set of actions every day until the device runs out of power.

Typical Usage Scenario discharge curves

On the go

127

Honor Magic6 Pro

195

Samsung Galaxy M51

Using a smartphone on the go takes a toll on autonomy because of extra “hidden” demands, such as the continuous signaling associated with cellphone network selection, for example. DXOMARK Battery experts take the phone outdoors and perform a precisely defined set of activities while following the same three-hour travel itinerary (walking, taking the bus, the subway…) for each device

Autonomy for on the go use cases (full charge)

Calibrated

157

Honor Magic6 Pro

198

Samsung Galaxy M51

For this series of tests, the smartphone returns to the Faraday cage and our robots repeatedly perform actions linked to one specific use case (such as gaming, video streaming, etc.) at a time. Starting from an 80% charge, all devices are tested until they have expended at least 5% of their battery power.

Autonomy for calibrated use cases (full charge)

Charging

151

Honor Magic6 Pro

218

Realme GT Neo 5 (240W)
How Charging score is composed

Charging is fully part of the overall battery experience. In some situations where autonomy is at a minimum, knowing how fast you can charge becomes a concern. The DXOMARK Battery charging score is composed of two sub-scores, (1) Full charge and (2) Quick boost.

Wired
Wired
82%
in 30 min
0h29
0 - 80%
1h11
Full charge
Wireless
Wireless
69%
in 30 min
0h37
0 - 80%
1h16
Full charge

Full charge

145

Honor Magic6 Pro

224

Realme GT Neo 5 (240W)

Full charge tests assess the reliability of the battery power gauge; measure how long and how much power the battery takes to charge from zero to 80% capacity, from 80 to 100% as shown by the UI, and until an actual full charge.

Power consumption and battery level during full charge
The charging curves, in wired and wireless (if available) showing the evolution of the battery level indicator as well as the power consumption in watts during the stages of charging toward full capacity.
Power consumption and battery level during wireless full charge
The charging curves, in wired and wireless (if available) showing the evolution of the battery level indicator as well as the power consumption in watts during the stages of charging toward full capacity.
Time to full charge
Time to full charge

Quick boost

158

Honor Magic6 Pro

212

Realme GT Neo 5 (240W)

With the phone at different charge levels (20%, 40%, 60%, 80%), Quick boost tests measure the amount of charge the battery receives after being plugged in for 5 minutes. The chart here compares the average autonomy gain from a quick 5-minute charge.

Average autonomy gain for a 5 minute charge (wired)

Efficiency

140

Honor Magic6 Pro

154

Oppo Reno6 5G
How Efficiency score is composed

The DXOMARK power efficiency score consists of two sub-scores, Charge up and Discharge rate, both of which combine data obtained during robot-based typical usage scenario, calibrated tests and charging evaluation, taking into consideration the device’s battery capacity. DXOMARK calculate the annual power consumption of the product, shown on below graph, which is representative of the overall efficiency during a charge and when in use.

Annual Consumption Honor Magic6 Pro
4.1 kWh
Efficient
Good
Bad
Inefficient

Charge up

121

Honor Magic6 Pro

205

Nubia RedMagic 7 Pro

The charge up sub-score is a combination of four factors: the overall efficiency of a full charge, related to how much energy you need to fill up the battery compared to the energy that the battery can provide; the efficiency of the travel adapter when it comes to transferring power from an outlet to your phone; the residual consumption when your phone is fully charged and still plugged into the charger; and the residual consumption of the charger itself, when the smartphone is disconnected from it. The chart here below shows the overall efficiency of a full charge in %.

Overall charge efficiency

Discharge

150

Honor Magic6 Pro

194

Apple iPhone 14 Pro

The discharge subscore rates the speed of a battery’s discharge during a test, which is independent of the battery’s capacity. It is the ratio of a battery’s capacity divided by its autonomy. A small-capacity battery could have the same autonomy as a large-capacity battery, indicating that the device is well-optimized, with a low discharge rate.

Average discharge current

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