Honor 6X Review
The Honor 6X has been released early this year in Malaysia as the successor for the Honor 5X. Apart from the performance upgrades, the most obvious addition to this midrange smartphone is the dual camera configuration at the back. Let’s find out how does this phone performs in our day to day usage.
Honor 6X Specifications Overview
Honor 5X | Honor 6X | |
CPU & GPU | Qualcomm Snapdragon 616 4x1.2 GHz Cortex-A53 & 4x1.5 GHz Cortex-A53 Adreno 405 | HiSilicon Kirin 655 4x2.1 GHz Cortex-A53 & 4x1.7 GHz Cortex-A53 Mali-T830MP2 |
RAM | 2 GB / 3 GB | 3 GB / 4 GB |
Storage | 16 GB supporting MicroSD up to 256 GB | 3 GB / 4 GB supporting MicroSD up to 256 GB (occupies SIM slot 2) |
Display | 5.5-inch 1920 x 1080 Full HD IPS | 5.5-inch 1920 x 1080 Full HD LTPS IPS |
Camera (rear) | 13 MP f/2.0 aperture Autofocus LED flash | 12 MP + 2 MP f/2.2 aperture Phase Detection AF LED flash |
Camera (front) | 5 MP f/2.4 aperture | 8 MP f/2.0 aperture |
Battery | Non-removable 3000 mAh | Non-removable 3340 mAh |
Operating System | Android 5.1.1 (Lollipop), upgradable to 6.0.1 (Marshmallow) EMUI 3, upgradable to EMUI 4 | Android 6.0 (Marshmallow), upgradable to 7.0 (Nougat) EMUI 4, upgradable to EMUI 5 |
SIM | Dual SIM (Nano & Micro) | Hybrid dual SIM (Nano) |
Connectivity | GSM / HSPA / LTE Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n Bluetooth 4.1, A2DP GPS with A-GPS, GLONASS | GSM / HSPA / LTE Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n Bluetooth 4.1, A2DP, EDR, LE GPS with A-GPS, GLONASS, BDS |
Build Quality & Design
Trying to recognise this phone through the front will be difficult. Other than the Honor logo at the bottom chin, the rest looks pretty standard for a smartphone, even among Honor’s arsenal.
Honor offers 3 different colours for you to choose – Silver, Grey and Gold. This particular unit we have in our labs is the Silver unit.
To keep the cost low, the chassis of the phone is not made of metal. Instead, the back panel is consists of a piece of metal with plastic antenna cover at the top and bottom. As far as I could remember, the Honor 5X and 5C also uses the same design principle. Just that the 6X’s rear panel finish doesn’t seem as high quality as before. Especially the gap between the metal panel is not flush with the plastic cover and you can actually feel the grove.
The dual camera module is positioned in Mate 9’s vertical style, with the single LED flash awkwardly placed at one side.
The fingerprint scanner is strategically placed under the camera module for easy access. It may not be the fastest fingerprint scanner out there, but not the slowest either. The fingerprint scanner has improved a lot in the last 2 years and I can say the scanner on the 6X has the perfect balance among the cost, speed and accuracy.
Symmetrically designed speaker grills are just for the looks. The left grill houses the microphone while the other houses the actual speaker.
I can’t believe that Huawei has yet got their 2017 mid-range phones to equip with USB-C. Do we still need to wait for another year for the technology to trickle down?
While I prefer to have the 3.5 mm audio jack at the bottom, but at least we still have it here.
The power and volume buttons are slightly slanted towards the back.
The hybrid SIM slot at the other side. It takes either 2x Nano SIM or 1x Nano SIM + Micro SD card.
The Honor 5X did the right thing for supporting both Dual SIM and Micro SD card at the same time. I don’t understand why they decide to go for hybrid SIM tray.
Sound
Pardon the wrong focus here. The downward facing single channel speaker is actually located underneath the right grill. It is easily blocked by your hands when you hold the phone in landscape.
Nevertheless, it is sufficient for general usage which includes speakerphone calls, videos and gaming. While there is slight distortion, but it only happens at higher volumes which are around 90%.
Display
Honor has maintained the usage of 1080p Full HD IPS display for the 6X. Thanks to the IPS panel, the colour reproduction is accurate and the viewing angle is wide without suffering any colour shifting. However, sometimes I can’t help but feel a slight dullness in the colours. It just doesn’t seem as vibrant as I expected. Hey, maybe that’s just me.
Camera
Main Camera
The camera of the Honor 6X is the main attraction here as Honor has equipped it with the dual camera technology. This, however, is not the same camera module as the Honor 8 because it uses 12 MP + 2 MP combination.
The camera app is intuitive to use and covers all your basic needs such as the Pro Photo mode and Pro Video mode. Of course, it also supports other creative shooting modes such as light painting and panorama.
The camera performs well in good lighting situation but would quickly turn another way round when the light goes dim, especially the focusing performance and photo quality. The main culprits would be the cap of 3200 ISO sensitivity and f/2.2 aperture. What’s left is the slow shutter speed which leads to blurred photographs. Straight out of the camera, the colour would seem dull and un-lifelike. I double checked the exposure and white balance just to make sure I didn’t misconfigure any of the settings, turned out it is just the way how the camera behaves in low light situation.
After a few complaints as above, I have to make clear that all the above issues are pointed towards low light photographs. Like I said, it performs really well in good lighting situations but the performance contrast between the two different lighting situation is too obvious to ignore.
I’ll leave the judging up to you with the following samples.
Gallery: (High res – Flickr Album)
Wide aperture mode
Not to forget that it now comes with wide aperture mode thanks to the dual camera configuration. This feature utilises the dual-camera hardware and software to emulate the bokeh effect.
Front Camera
The front camera has received a respectable upgrade from the 5X – bumping the megapixels from 5 MP to 8 MP. Aperture wise, it gets a 2/3 stop of extra light with the new f/2.0 aperture lens, compared to the 5X’s f/2.4 aperture.
Software & Features
Honor 6X is shipping with EMUI 4.1 and it is expected to receive EMUI 5 update within the H1 2017. I’ve been waiting to receive the update on my review sample to no avail. Therefore, this review is solely based on the EMUI 4.1.
Comparing the EMUI 4.1 and the latest EMUI 5, the latter looks obviously dated. Check out our review of the Huawei Mate 9 and Huawei P10 Lite, no offence but honestly speaking, the EMUI 4.1 looks absolutely ugly.
Looking at the positive side, the interface itself at least is snappy and responsive to use. While I personally dislike having all the apps showing on the home screen, but since the next update will bring the app drawer that pretty much solved the issue. At least we now get to choose which interface based on our preferences.
Performance
Benchmark
The Honor 6X we have comes with 3 GB RAM and 32 GB internal storage. Honor 6X is also offering a higher end model with 4 GB RAM and 64 GB storage.
If you’re looking for numbers, don’t expect it to perform high and mighty as the flagships. The Kirin 655 is just a mid-ranged system-on-chip that offers reasonable performance at a reasonable price tag. The CPU performance is theoretically slightly better than the Snapdragon 625 at the same power consumption. Meanwhile, the GPU performance is another way round as the Kirin 655’s Mali-T830MP2 is obviously a weaker graphics processor than the Snapdragon’s Adreno 506.
Real life performance
So how do all those translates to real life usage? Frankly speaking, the Honor 6X performs well at all the tasks we throw at it. Be it social media apps or photo editing apps. Graphics heavy tasks such as gaming, however, is not that well with occasional slow down because of the weaker GPU. Nevertheless, with a slight tweak at the graphic settings will fix the problem.
Battery Life
Battery life is great thanks to the 16 nm CPU architecture. Above screenshot is an extreme example where I used the phone for 15 hours with 3.5 hours of SOT.
Now you may question me that why am I saying it has great battery life when the above screenshot only shows 3.5 hours of screen on time. I have to disclaim that, the above use case is an extreme example, where I had the phone unplugged for 15 hours while having 3.5 hours of screen on time, in between I actually used the phone as a portable hotspot for at least 2 hours.
If you don’t know, enabling your phone’s portable hotspot feature will drain your phone’s battery like no tomorrow. I am actually surprised that I manage to pull all those usages without having to charge in between. Speaking of charging, it is kind of a shame that mid-rangers are being ignored of fast charge feature.
Final Words
Finally, at the price of RM 1,199, it is RM 300 or 33% more expensive than the model it is replacing. No, it is not just because of the MYR currency weakening that causes the price hike. In fact, the 5X costs US$ 199 while the 6X costs US$249. If we compare the specs side by side, aside from the CPU upgrade, the next major upgrade would be the camera module. Hence, is it really justifiable that the dual camera would contribute to that amount of increment? I am no expert in the pricing of the components, but looking at the smartphone market, I have to agree that smartphones are getting more expensive than ever.
Why should you buy this phone?
Consider that the phone has reasonable performance and great battery life, this is one of the great choices if you’re looking for a mid-range smartphone that has balanced performance, features and price. Then the camera, it indeed offers dual-camera configuration, but you will have to enable the wide aperture mode to fully utilise the hardware. Otherwise, in regular mode, the camera only utilising the 12 MP sensor. Double or nothing, right?