Honor 8C — review, reviews, specifications and tests on Andro-news
АвторЛян ЛиНа чтение 14 минОпубликовано
⇡#design and ergonomics
Honor 8X is a representative of the class of mid-price smartphones, with a bias towards the budget side: the device costs less than 20,000 rubles. And it is beyond this point that manufacturers usually begin to cut corners, and first of all, all designer delights go under the knife. Surprisingly, the hero of today’s review successfully passed this sad fate. The smartphone looks very attractive, not inferior in appearance to the 2-3 times more expensive Huawei P20 and P20 Pro.
Actually, the design concept here is exactly the same. The base of the gadget is metal, on the back there is glass with a texture underneath that shimmers beautifully in the light, and on the front there is a rather compact “unibrow”. There are no physical buttons on the front panel; the display occupies maximum of its area. Almost 85%, by the way, which is quite good for this price category.
Honor 8X, left side: power and volume buttons
This is the corporate style of Huawei and its sub-brand Honor. You can approach it in different ways: I know people who are not delighted with all this, but personally I like it: positive, bright, but not too pretentious. There are three color options — red, blue, and black for lovers of strict classics. The second option, for my personal taste, is optimal.
I didn’t have to get used to the ergonomics of the Honor 8X after my personal Samsung Galaxy S8 — the sizes of the cases are almost the same. But objectively, a gadget with a 6.5-inch screen diagonal is, of course, a shovel. If before this you had any 5.5- or 5.2-inch smartphone, then new experiences are guaranteed.
However, you shouldn’t be afraid of them — you’ll get used to it quickly. Moreover, the matte frame does not slip in the hand, the glass of the rear panel also does not slip out of the palm, and the developers conveniently placed the volume and power buttons on the right side, exactly in the place where the thumb rests. If you hold the device with your left hand, then your index and middle fingers touch these buttons. In theory, lefties can also be comfortable, but I’m not an expert in this regard.
Honor 8X, right side: sliding tray for SIM cards and memory cards
The glass on the back panel, of course, is very quickly covered with fingerprints, although on the Honor 8X in red this is not particularly noticeable. By the way, glass is quite easy to scratch, so it is better to handle the gadget carefully. The fingerprint scanner works quickly and accurately — during the entire testing period there were no questions about it.
The only thing that looks dubious is the solution with two camera lenses protruding very noticeably beyond the body. They always cling to your jeans pocket or scratch on the table when you put your smartphone on it without a case. Well, they collect all sorts of dust particles and other small debris.
Honor 8X, top edge: microphone
Honor 8X, bottom edge: speaker grille, microphone, microUSB, headphone jack
Display, sound and software
As mentioned a little earlier, the Honor 8X display diagonal is 6.5 inches. It is built on a widescreen IPS matrix with a resolution of 2340 × 1080 pixels. The extra 420 pixels in height come from the on-screen buttons and the notch border at the top of the screen. The aspect ratio is 19.5:9, and the pixel density reaches almost 400 pixels per inch.
From a subjective point of view, this is a very high quality screen. It has an average brightness reserve (427 cd/m2), but if you turn it up to maximum, the device is absolutely comfortable to use outdoors. The minimum brightness level is also worthy of special praise – it’s comfortable to read e-books in the dark at night.
Keep in mind that the Honor 8X display comes with a protective film attached at the factory. There is an oleophobic coating on it, but its quality is… a B with a big minus. Plus, the material from which the film is made is not very durable — already on the second day of testing, out of nowhere, a deep, long scratch appeared on it exactly under the “unibrow”.
Honor 8X, bright mode, gamma. Yellow line – Honor 8X performance, dotted line – reference range
Honor 8X, bright mode, color temperature. Blue line – Honor 8X performance, dotted line – reference temperature
Honor 8X, bright mode, color gamut. Gray triangle – sRGB coverage, white triangle – Honor 8X coverage
There are two color presets in the Honor 8X, as in all Huawei smartphones of the current year – “bright” and “normal”. By default, the smartphone operates in bright mode, which implies a color space slightly wider than sRGB, a gamma of around 2.17 and an increased color temperature (8,000 K on average with peaks up to 9,000 K).
Honor 8X, normal mode, gamma. Yellow line – Honor 8X performance, dotted line – reference gamma
Honor 8X, normal mode, color temperature. Blue line – Honor 8X performance, dotted line – reference temperature
Honor 8X, normal mode, color gamut. Gray triangle – sRGB coverage, white triangle – Honor 8X coverage
But if you change the mode to normal, the colors will be closer to normal: the gamma is 2.27, the temperature tends to 6500 K, and the curve almost does not jump, and the average deviation DeltaE on the Color Checker scale is 2, 90, which already fits within the normal range. It should be admitted that the Honor 8X display is configured very well — by smartphone standards.
Honor 8X runs Android 8.1 operating system with EMUI 8.2. The Huawei branded shell, like the design of a smartphone, can also be treated differently. But it has one unconditional advantage: the presence of quite a large number of additional settings in the menu. There is quite flexible color adjustment, the ability to hide bangs, switching between HD and Full HD, a convenient phone manager, and the ability to select sound presets for various headphones.
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Honor 8X itself, however, does not at all pretend to be a phone for lovers of high-quality audio. Yes, there is a headphone jack and aptX support, but without aptX HD. And even the Bluetooth version is only 4.2, not 5.0. Well, there’s no talk about a separate audio chip. However, is it fair to blame a smartphone that costs less than 20,000 rubles for lacking all this? In our opinion, no.
But there is face unlocking of the smartphone. Without any fancy sensors or infrared illumination, of course, just the front camera. It works quickly and quite accurately, but the latter is only true if there is enough light. The darker it is around, the more difficult it is for the front camera to recognize the user’s face. In general, it’s convenient, but there are quite a few questions about the safety of this approach.
Hardware, Performance and Wireless Communications
Inside the Honor 8X is installed Huawei’s proprietary chipset – HiSilicon Kirin 710. It is eight-core: four Cortex A73 cores with a maximum frequency of 2.2 GHz plus the same number of Cortex A53 cores with a frequency of 1.7 GHz. Mali-G51 MP4 graphics with a frequency of 650 MHz are also integrated here. Based on the specifications, it is not difficult to guess that this chip is a direct competitor to the Snapdragon 636 from Qualcomm.
There is no talk of any complaints about the performance of the system and the behavior of the smartphone while surfing the web, watching videos, working with documents, mail or communicating in instant messengers. The available 4 GB of RAM is absolutely enough for normal multitasking.
In games, the device also does not lose face: absolutely all top mobile projects can be played at least on medium graphics settings. At the same time, the phone does not heat up like an iron, but only becomes slightly warm. There is certainly throttling: in the corresponding test, 15 minutes after it started, performance dropped by 19% from the stated maximum. The loss is noticeable, but not so critical — we’ve seen worse.
There is a lot of built-in memory: 128 GB inside the smartphone for less than 20,000 rubles — that’s really cool. By the way, not even all flagships can boast of this. Well, even 64 GB in the younger version of the Honor 8X for 18 thousand looks great. And this despite the fact that the developers did not skimp on a separate slot for a microSD card. So you can enjoy all the joys of life with two SIMs, and expand the memory if you ever need it.
Communication quality is fine: LTE, although only Cat. 4, but in real life it is unlikely that you will be able to reach the maximum declared data transfer speed limit of 150 Mbit/s. Wi-Fi picks up signals in both bands and transmits and receives data very quickly.
Play video
To test the “omnivorous” nature of video playback (including support for various codecs, containers and special features, such as subtitles), we used the most common formats, which make up the bulk of the content available on the Web. Note that for mobile devices it is important to have support for hardware video decoding at the chip level, since it is most often impossible to process modern options using processor cores alone.
According to the testing results, the test subject, as is most often the case, was not equipped with all the necessary decoders that are needed to fully play most of the most common multimedia files on the network, in this case, audio files. To successfully play them, you will have to resort to the help of a third-party player — for example, MX Player.
Format
Container, video, sound
MX Video Player
Standard video player
1080p H.264
MKV, H.264 1920×1080, 24fps, AAC
plays normally
plays normally
1080p H.264
MKV, H.264 1920×1080, 24fps, AC3
video plays normally, no sound
video plays normally, no sound
1080p H.265
MKV, H.265 1920×1080, 24fps, AAC
plays normally
plays normally
1080p H.265
MKV, H.265 1920×1080, 24fps, AC3
video plays normally, no sound
video plays normally, no sound
Further testing of video playback was performed by Alexey Kudryavtsev.
We were unable to test the theoretically possible support for adapters for outputting images to an external device due to the lack of an adapter option that connects to the USB Type-C port, so we had to limit ourselves to testing the output of video files to the screen of the device itself. To do this, we used a set of test files with an arrow and a rectangle moving one division per frame (see
“Methodology for testing video signal playback and display devices. Version 1 (for mobile devices)»). Screenshots with a shutter speed of 1 s helped determine the nature of the output of frames of video files with various parameters: the resolution varied (1280 by 720 (720p), 1920 by 1080 (1080p)
Note: If green ratings are given in both columns Uniformity and Skips, this means that, most likely, when watching films, artifacts caused by uneven alternation and skipping of frames will either not be visible at all, or their number and visibility are not will affect viewing comfort. Red marks indicate possible problems with playback of the corresponding files.
According to the criterion of frame output, the quality of playback of video files on the screen of the smartphone itself is good, since frames (or groups of frames) can (but are not required) be output with more or less uniform alternation of intervals and without skipping frames. Note that the screen’s refresh rate appears to be slightly higher than 60Hz, so it won’t produce perfectly smooth playback at any standard frame rate in a video file.
When playing video files with a resolution of 1920 by 1080 pixels (1080p) on a smartphone screen, the image of the video file itself is displayed exactly along the border of the screen, but on test worlds it can be seen that the clarity is slightly reduced due to interpolation to the screen resolution. However, for the sake of experimentation, you can switch to the one-to-one pixel mode; there will be no interpolation, but the image will be smaller than the working area of the screen.
2 GB RAM 32 GB internal memory Separate slot for memory card up to 512 GB
3 GB RAM 64 GB internal memory Separate slot for memory card up to 512 GB
Honor 8S RAM speed is extremely budget friendly.
Honor 8A Pro RAM speed – 4200 MB/s, budget-friendly, for 14,000 rubles you could get memory in the region of 7000 MB/s.
The speed of the built-in memory of Honor 8S is 250/130 MB/s, not bad!
The speed of the built-in memory of Honor 8A Pro is 196/100 MB/s, normal.
Surprisingly, the budget smartphone outperformed the more expensive one, and by a decent amount.
MediaTek Helio A22 MT6761 processor was introduced last year. Quite an interesting chipset, considering the 12 nm process technology – low heating, high energy efficiency. There are 4 cores working inside with a clock frequency of up to 2000 MHz.
Towards the end of 2020, MediaTek Helio P35, aka MTK6765, was shown. Again 12 nm, but already 8 cores with a clock frequency of up to 2300 MHz.
In real life, Honor 8A Pro behaves better: less lags and slowdowns, more stable operation of all services and predictable behavior of the phone as a whole.
The Antutu test on Honor 8S failed and showed no results. The Honor 8A Pro ran the benchmark for about 15 minutes and produced 77,000 points — this is very low for an 8-core phone. Everything is fine with games on the first device, but PUBG will slow down even at the minimum settings. It is quite possible to play on a second smartphone even at medium settings of the PUBG game.
Total: Honor 8S is slow and clearly not for games, Honor 8A Pro is faster, but games are not very good either. One way or another, the older model comes out ahead in terms of overall performance.
Both smartphones operate on the Google Android operating system version 9. We did a similar review: