Cellular

Cellular on the Lumia 800 is supplied courtesy the MSM8255’s onboard baseband. Like all the Qualcomm S2 parts, this means GSM/EDGE/WCDMA with HSPA+. The Lumia 800 also takes a microSIM as noted earlier, and I tested on AT&T in my market. There are actually two Lumia 800 variants, each with different WCDMA bands - we were sampled the European variant which worked with AT&T’s PCS 1900 MHz WCDMA in my market. The Nokia Lumia 800 Specifications page is a bit misleading since it would have you believe that there’s only one variant with quad-band WCDMA when there are actually two different tri-band WCDMA devices.

Nokia Lumia 800 - Network Support
GSM/EDGE Support 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 MHz
RM-801 (Europe) WCDMA Support 900 / 1900 / 2100 MHz
RM-819 (USA) WCDMA Support 850 / 1900 / 2100 MHz
Baseband Hardware QCT MDM8255 w/QTR8200
HSPA Speeds HSDPA 14.4 (Cat.10) / HSUPA 5.76 (Cat.6)

I couldn’t do my usual stats collection and histogram on the Lumia 800 since there’s no way to export that data from any of the speed test applications on Windows Phone. However, I did run some tests and see acceptable levels of throughput out of the device.

 
Some speedtests taken with BandWidth on WP7

WiFi

WiFi and Bluetooth 2.1 EDR on the Lumia 800 is supplied courtesy of a Broadcom BCM4329 combo chip which we’ve seen numerous times before in a number of different smartphones. Though newer devices are starting to ship BCM4330, I wager that WP7.5 includes drivers for just BCM4329 (which a huge majority of Windows Phones include) and BCM4325 (Venue Pro). On the Lumia 800, this means single spatial stream 802.11b/g/n connectivity only on the 2.4 GHz band.

WiFi Performance

Regardless, WiFi range on the Lumia 800 is totally par for the current generation of devices. In addition, WP7.5 continues to do a great job at deciding when to hand off and back onto WiFi when leaving the coverage radius of your house. It’s the small things like these that (to me at least) really demarcate the previous generation of smartphone OSes from the new breed. Unfortunately, in our throughput test which consists of loading a 100 MB PDF hosted locally on an 802.11n network, the Lumia 800 isn’t quite up to the speed of other BCM4329 devices. I’d wager this has more to do with the OS than anything else, though running network throughput applications on the Lumia 800 also gave a similar number to our normal PDF download test.

I should also note that WP7.5 also includes the ability to connect to WiFi APs that don’t broadcast their SSID. There’s a tab under Advanced in WiFi that now allows you to enter all that information and connect away, this wasn’t possible until Mango.

Speakerphone

In calls, the speakerphone on the Lumia 800 is honestly a bit too quiet, and our testing with a sound level data logger backs this up. Even at absolute maximum (where we test, of course) I found the sound level inadequate while using Nokia Drive or placing calls. It isn’t so much the position of the speaker at the bottom that’s a problem (in fact this is a good place to locate it), it’s just not loud enough.

Speakerphone Volume - 3 Away

Hopefully, this can be addressed with some software tweaking of the gains for speakerphone volume.

Nokia Lumia 800 on AT&T Test Call by AnandTech

I also recorded some call quality test samples on the Lumia 800. The smartphone also does have the multiple microphone system for common mode noise rejection, though I'm not certain whose IP is being leveraged - perhaps Qualcomm's Fluence?

Nokia Lumia 800 - Noise Cancellation Sample by AnandTech

Noise rejection on the Lumia 800 is very good at all but the most extreme volume levels. Still, there are handsets that can completely reject the ambient noise that you hear at our maximum volume level. Unless you're in an absurdly loud environment, chances are the Lumia 800 will do a good job rejecting noise common between the two microphone system.

GPS

The Lumia 800 uses the GPS/GLONASS (GNSS) system onboard MSM8255 which we’ve seen numerous times before. Though WP7 doesn’t have API access to NMEA data so we can see SNR from individual satellites, the Lumia 800 does seem to get a GPS lock speedily enough even in some tough environments. In both the maps application and Nokia Drive I had no issues getting a GPS lock in under a 5 seconds keeping the lock for the duration of navigation.

Display Analysis Conclusions and Final Thoughts
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  • Nataku - Thursday, January 5, 2012 - link

    problem is that they will need to rebuild another eco system, market the hell out of the thing, and then there is the amount of apps they need to overcome... before that they will need to find ways to tell people why it is superior to other OSes to regular consumers that can't tell the difference between android and ios if you only show them the app screen

    well, meego would've been great if it came out before android...
  • designerfx - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    Interesting read up on the wp7 attempts, as that's what I still consider them at this point.

    I'd like to see a review on the HTC rezound if Brian/Anand has one in the works, to compare the two 720p phones.
  • ecuador - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    Ok, the N9 is out for a few months now and I don't understand why there wasn't a review of it here. Especially now with the Lumia 800 review, the obvious question is how do they compare? Did Elop have a point? I can understand Nokia trying to bury the N9 given their new direction, but I would expect tech sites (especially anandtech) to be really curious about this comparison.
  • Thermogenic - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    Because Nokia didn't send them one. I don't think AnandTech typically goes out and buys things retail (ala Consumer Reports), but rather reviews what companies ship them. I think reviewing things purchased at retail is the better way of doing it, but it costs more money and guarantees your competitors will get their reviews out much sooner than you will.
  • sicofante - Friday, January 6, 2012 - link

    AnandTech should ASK Nokia for the N9 and tell us they didn't want to provide one if that was the case.

    There's little excuse for reviewing the Lumia 800 and not reviewing the phone that actually was designed to be inside its case.
  • Iketh - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    "There’s an huge amount riding on the Lumia series, which are Nokia’s first devices running Windows Phone 7.5."

    This is the SECOND SENTENCE of the article. Do you have any idea how many first-time readers will immediately move on with their search and never return? The "There's an" and "which are" are incorrect (Lumia series is singular, key word THE.) Instead, try "There's a lot riding on the Lumia series, which is Nokia's first to run Windows Phone 7.5."

    "On the right side, Nokia’s puts their volume rocker above the power button, and then at on lower quarter is the mandatory two-step camera button."

    "raises that backside up off surfaces"

    "the looks and feels department"

    "which we’ll also be reviewing soon" should be "which we'll also review soon" (this is a poor writing style, not a mistake)

    There are more from the first page. Brian, this article is full of information, but it's just too difficult to extract. What has always been the cornerstone of AT is the beautifully written articles. For the love of God, hire an editor. I'd edit your articles for $100 a pop.
  • antef - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    Agreed, a single read-through should be enough to catch most of these things, no editor required. I don't understand how any of these make it through unless the author simply types it up and immediately hits "post." Very unprofessional.
  • Nataku - Thursday, January 5, 2012 - link

    i actually didn't notice it until lketh's comment lol...
  • bplewis24 - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    "There's an" is incorrect, but "which are" is correct. It has nothing to do with pluralization of "Lumia" and everything to do with "first devices." You wouldn't say "which is Nokia's first devices."
  • Iketh - Wednesday, January 4, 2012 - link

    "are" is referring to series which is one thing, a series

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