Video Recording

Video recording on the iPhone is known to be extraordinarily good in terms of quality. The iPhone 11 series is said to improve in this regard thanks to an improved HDR with more dynamic range (though Apple still stores video in SDR format). Naturally of course what’s also exciting is that we’re now able to capture video with a wide-angle lens, and seeing a lot more content of a given scene.


  
  

Apple has improved the EIS this generation, and it now results in a much smoother video capture experience than the past iterations. When you have with a lot of detail in a scene though, you can sometimes see the jitter caused by the OIS and EIS interacting with each other.

In the wide-angle recording, the EIS was a bit haphazard. In the first part of the video walking down the path it doesn’t look to be stabilizing much at all, when I turn left to the second path suddenly the EIS kicked in and things were a lot less shaky, and it then again loses the stabilization for few steps until it finally resumes again. This happened all three recordings with the wide-angle camera, and I don’t know it was me holding the phone any different between those two paths.

The quality and detail of the videos are all great. The one thing noticed though is that there’s the occasional exposure flicker in some areas. In effect Apple here is doing two exposures per frame and combining them together like Smart HDR – we can notice that in parts of the scene, and most visible the sky is flickering or pulsing in brightness.

The handling between the three camera sensors is very good, it’s particularly fast and seamless to switch between the main and wide-angle modules, while there’s a small delay to switch to the telephoto module. Switching between the three modules is only possible in 30fps recording modes; it’s still possible to record 60fps in any of the three modules but you have to start out the video with the camera that you want to use, and you’ll be limited to digital zooming only while recording.

Speaker Evaluation

In terms of audio for the iPhone 11 series, Apple’s big addition is the inclusion of Dolby Atmos. Naturally you have to watch multi-channel audio content to be able to take advantage of the feature. For regular stereo audio playback, we investigate if Apple has done any changes to the speaker setup and if it differs to that of the XS.

Speaker Loudness

In terms of audio volume, the iPhone 11 Pro is ever so slightly quieter when being held in portrait mode. The bigger difference that’s definitely more audible is when holding the phone in landscape mode with both hands and the palms cupped – the usual way one would hold a phone in landscape. Here it’s 3dB quieter than the iPhone XS, which is a noticeable amount.

Speaker Stereo Bias

Investigating the phone’s stereo bias thanks to a binaural microphone setup, we see that that things have notably regressed for the iPhone 11 Pro when compared to the XS. It’s relatively normal for the main speaker (Right side) to appear louder, however it’s extremely weird that it’s now 1.6dB more biased than on the iPhone XS. Indeed when comparing the 11 Pro and XS side-by-side, and muting the main speaker by holding a finger on it, volume being equal and otherwise calibrated between the two phones, it’s immediately audible that the 11 Pro earpiece speaker is much quieter compared to what we experience on the XS.

This has a rather large knock-on effect on the spatial sound reproduction of the 11 Pro as it just isn’t able to fill up the surrounding area quite as well as on the XS.

Looking at the frequency response between the 11 Pro and the XS, we see that things are extremely similar up to the high mid-ranges, with a more noticeable peak at 95Hz for the 11 Pro. Towards the treble we see some more deviations, it’s here that the 11 Pro is a bit quieter and I think that’s due to the weaker earpiece speaker.

Overall, the sound signature of the iPhone 11 Pro hasn’t changed all too much, and it is actually more of a downgrade in audio playback due to the weaker earpiece speaker calibration. The Galaxy S10’s notably stronger lower mid-range and mid-range still make for a much superior audio playback and is in my experience the device to beat in terms of speaker quality.

Camera - Low Light Evaluation Conclusion & End Remarks
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  • willis936 - Friday, October 18, 2019 - link

    I wish that an outlet (like this one) would analyze the tradeoffs of glass backs. Namely the thermal limitations of glass vs. metal. I always use a case and screen protector, because when I don’t I sink my 5 year device. But sustained loads on hot days see serious throttling which gets worse with a case.
  • cha0z_ - Friday, October 18, 2019 - link

    Ofc it will and depending on the case it will be more or less. It will always be significant tho.
  • cha0z_ - Friday, October 18, 2019 - link

    Same for me, I used my phones naked and never broke or scratch any (always face up, always alone in the pockets, I even clean my left phone pocket after washing). The problem is, a lot of people like us who take care of their phones and use them naked - got a scratched screen in day one/first days. Not one, two or 30 people - a lot more just in that thread and this is now while the phone is still not available in a lot of places. I am worried that mine would scratch too and hold on the purchase for now thus I ask you how yours hold. Not sure if it's a bad batch or all are like that. Thanks for the answer! :)
  • Peskarik - Thursday, October 17, 2019 - link

    It is a great piece of kit.
    But as long as I cannot connect to PC and throw my music on it a-la-Android-phone, I am not interested.
    I currently have Pixel XL and I love it for the ability to connect to PC and just throw files on the phone like on a external storage.
  • geegee83 - Friday, October 18, 2019 - link

    Use a third party app and access the sandbox through iFunbox to drop it in or drop it into Google Drive. It is a little more complicated but it works without needing to sync with iTunes.
  • geegee83 - Friday, October 18, 2019 - link

    Third party app: i meant third party media player.
  • TheHomieTL - Thursday, October 17, 2019 - link

    A phone isn't officially reviewed until Anandtech does it! Again, brilliant detailed review, hats off guys!
  • beggerking@yahoo.com - Thursday, October 17, 2019 - link

    this looks more like an advertisement than a review...nothing exciting yet headline is all these functionalities elevated... when it should be... Boring...
  • Jostian - Thursday, October 17, 2019 - link

    iPhone is pretty middle of the road, its jpeg processing is still very harsh with a very smeared look to photos, and foliage looks like a water painting, the others are not dissimilar but are not as harsh, the Mate 30 Pro blows everything out the water in the low light scenes though, wow!
  • Kishoreshack - Thursday, October 17, 2019 - link

    Soc explaination
    GHz or MHz ?

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