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Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802 battery test concludes, the results are here

The Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802 is part of Samsung’s growing dual-SIM Android lineup. The hardware inside the phone is mostly the same as in the original Ace, save for the second SIM slot, of course.

We don’t have many dual-SIM phones in our battery test database, so we’ll be testing the Ace Duos using only one SIM to make its results comparable.

When it comes to talk time on a 3G network, Samsung advertises 7 hours of battery life. In our tests the phone came close to hitting that mark with its battery dying after 6 hours and 53 minutes of real-world call time. That puts it at the bottom third of the chart, so maybe you should consider sticking to 2G networks – according to official numbers, the Ace Duos should last for more than 18 hours of telephony on those.

Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX
20:24 Huawei Ascend P1
12:30 Samsung Galaxy Note
12:14 Samsung I8530 Galaxy Beam
11:58 Samsung Wave 3 S8600
11:07 HTC One X (AT&T, LTE)
10:35 Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III
10:20 HTC One V
10:00 Meizu MX 4-core
10:00 HTC One X
9:57 HTC One S
9:42 Samsung I9103 Galaxy R
9:40 HTC Sensation XL
9:30 Nokia Lumia 710
9:05 HTC Vivid
9:02 HTC Rhyme
8:48 LG Optimus 3D Max P720
8:42 Sony Ericsson Xperia neo V
8:41 Meizu MX
8:39 Samsung Galaxy S II
8:35 Nokia Lumia 800
8:25 Samsung Galaxy Nexus
8:23 Samsung Captivate Glide
8:20 HTC Rezound (LTE)
8:10 Samsung Galaxy Note (LTE)
8:02 LG Optimus Vu
7:57 LG Optimus 4X HD
7:41 Apple iPhone 4S
7:41 Samsung i937 Focus S
7:25 HTC Evo 4G LTE (LTE)
7:21 Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G
7:14 Samsung Rugby Smart I847
7:09 Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro
6:57 Nokia N9
6:57 HTC Radar
6:53 Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802
6:53 BlackBerry Curve 9380
6:52 Samsung Galaxy Pocket
5:54 Nokia Lumia 900 for AT&T (LTE)
5:53 Sony Xperia ion LTE
5:52 Sony Xperia P
5:33 Nokia 808 PureView
5:16 LG Nitro HD (LTE)
5:16 HTC Titan II (LTE)
5:10 BlackBerry Bold 9790
5:00 Pantech Burst
4:46

The Galaxy Ace Duos S6802 has a 1300mAh battery, so we’re not expecting miracles in web browsing (though having a relatively small 3.5? screen should help). With a time of 4 hours and 45 minutes, the phone placed in the middle of the pack, which is probably more than you could expect.

Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX
7:23 HTC Radar
7:17 Apple iPhone 4S
6:56 HTC One V
6:49 BlackBerry Curve 9380
6:40 Samsung i937 Focus S
6:15 Sony Xperia ion LTE
5:56 Samsung Rugby Smart I847
5:53 Pantech Burst
5:51 Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G
5:45 HTC Evo 4G LTE
5:41 Samsung Wave 3 S8600
5:34 Samsung Captivate Glide
5:33 Samsung I8530 Galaxy Beam
5:28 Samsung Galaxy Note LTE
5:24 HTC Sensation XL
5:20 Meizu MX 4-core
5:19 Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III
5:17 HTC Rezound
5:16 HTC Rhyme
5:08 Samsung I9103 Galaxy R
5:07 HTC One X (AT&T)
5:03 Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro
4:50 LG Optimus Vu
4:49 HTC Vivid
4:46 Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802
4:45 Meizu MX
4:35 Nokia N9
4:33 Samsung Galaxy S II
4:24 Sony Ericsson Xperia neo V
4:20 HTC One X
4:18 Nokia 808 PureView
4:14 LG Optimus 3D Max P720
4:10 Nokia Lumia 900 for AT&T
4:10 Nokia Lumia 800
4:07 HTC Titan II (LTE)
4:05 HTC One S
4:03 BlackBerry Bold 9790
4:02 LG Nitro HD
4:00 LG Optimus 4X HD
3:59 Sony Xperia P
3:59 Nokia Lumia 710
3:51 Samsung Galaxy Pocket
3:47 Samsung Galaxy Note
3:35 Huawei Ascend P1
3:23 Samsung Galaxy Nexus
3:01

The phone also scored an average result in the video playback test. The screen may not be perfectly suited for watching videos and the phone has very poor codec support, but you should know you can watch about six and a half hours of SD footage on a single charge if you wanted to.

Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX
14:17 Samsung I9300 Galaxy S III
10:01 Nokia 808 PureView
9:53 Samsung I8530 Galaxy Beam
9:42 Samsung Rugby Smart I847
9:34 HTC One S
9:28 Apple iPhone 4S
9:24 HTC Evo 4G LTE
9:07 Nokia N9
8:40 Samsung Galaxy Note
8:25 Samsung Galaxy S II
8:00 Samsung i937 Focus S
7:55 Samsung Wave 3 S8600
7:52 Sony Ericsson Xperia neo V
7:45 Huawei Ascend P1
7:38 Samsung Galaxy S Blaze 4G
7:33 Samsung Galaxy Note LTE
7:30 Meizu MX 4-core
6:33 HTC One X (AT&T)
6:26 Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802
6:25 LG Optimus Vu
6:23 Samsung I9103 Galaxy R
6:21 HTC Sensation XL
6:12 Samsung Galaxy Pocket
6:06 Samsung Captivate Glide
6:04 Sony Xperia ion LTE
6:03 Samsung Galaxy Nexus
6:02 HTC Vivid
6:00 HTC Radar
5:54 Nokia Lumia 800
5:52 HTC Titan II
5:50 BlackBerry Bold 9790
5:47 HTC One X
5:45 Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro
5:44 Pantech Burst
5:38 Meizu MX
5:27 HTC Rhyme
5:23 HTC One V
5:20 Nokia Lumia 900 for AT&T
5:18 BlackBerry Curve 9380
5:09 HTC Rezound
5:03 Sony Xperia P
4:30 LG Nitro HD
4:17 LG Optimus 4X HD
4:14 LG Optimus 3D Max P720
3:28 Nokia Lumia 710
3:27

We tested the Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802 using only one SIM card, but its standby performance proved to be excellent. So, even with two cards you should get plenty of battery life. Talking actively uses only one SIM (the other is in standby) and the other two tests don’t really depend on the number of SIMs, so we think the results are telling enough as they are.

Anyway, with just one SIM, you can expect to go 42 hours before you need to charge the phone (that’s if you do 1 hour of calls, 1 hour of web browsing and watch videos for 1 hour every day).

The Samsung Galaxy Ace Duos S6802 showed average performance – considering it’s an entry level device, that’s better than expected. Still, we’d recommend sticking to 2G mode if you need to make a lot of calls (there’s a “2G only” setting).


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