Dynamic Range

The dynamic range of the phone indicates the difference between the loudest possible sound and the background noise. The more residual noise in the background, the lower the dynamic range. Phones with more powerful amplifier sections will typically produce a greater dynamic range. The residual noise level is often constant, so as the overall volume level increases the difference between the music and the noise increases as well.

The best performer here is the iPhone 5 again, with 92.214 dB of range. The worst is the Nexus 5 with only 89.332 dB. A difference of 3 dB is not something I would concern myself over. If we see a phone or tablet that drops down below 80 dB then I will start to show more concern.

Crosstalk

Crosstalk, like dynamic range, is just a number here. This is the measurement how much signal leaks from one channel into another. If an instrument should only be in the right ear, some of that signal will leak into the left ear, but we want that as low as possible. The results are expressed in -dB, or how much quieter one ear is than the intended ear.

On the Note 3 we see a wonderful crosstalk measurement of -117.2 dB so the sounds in one ear are -117 dB quieter in the other ear. This makes them impossible to hear. The worst is the iPhone 5, with only -75.624 dB of isolation.

Stepped Response

The stepped response uses a 1 kHz 0 dBFS tone but measures output level from maximum volume to minimum volume. We can see how large the volume steps are and how many there are. It doesn’t produce a number we can use, but it ties back into our other results. For a good example, we can look at the Note 3.

We see steps that are around -5 dBu each. The final level is muted and just the background noise of the device. Each step is clean and even but as we get lower and lower we see noise start to intrude. This is the background noise starting to become audible in the signal. The flatter the levels are, the quieter it will be. Now, let us look at the Nexus 5.

Notice at the very top how the right and left channels do not overlap. That is the clipping we talked about at the very beginning. It isn’t until the 4th volume setting that the level difference is down to nothing. Because of this, I would consider the top 3 volume settings of the Nexus 5 as ones that should be avoided. They each have enough THD+N introduced into them that it will sound poor, and one ear will be louder than the other.

Maximum Level and Frequency Response Nexus 5 and LG G2 Issues
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  • JasonQG - Monday, December 9, 2013 - link

    I'll be curious to see how the iPhone 5s compares to the iPhone 5. I noticed a definite improvement when I upgraded, at least to my ears' perception.
  • ClockHound - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    Nice to hear you're taking sound semi-seriously with devices that have a semi-important audio task. At least for those who use smartphones for aural communication and music playback.

    Nice to see the Audio Precision in action. Great unit. However, please, consider putting a little more thought into the scaling of your FR graphs. What appears visually as a huge peak in the htc Beats graph barely has a 3dB rise. That's not a huge peak.

    A 1dB rise at 10k is not much of a rise and since it doesn't display enough data, we can't tell if it's a low Q event or not.

    The Audio Precision can scale the vertical axis to make plots more informative rather than sensational.
  • pandemonium - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    Awesome stuff. Keep it up AT!
  • kreacher - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    Great article, would it be possible to test audio input (the mic) in this much detail. Noise cancellation as well as how it does in speakerphone mode / video recording. I know earlier reviews / articles have mentioned this are but it would be great to have detailed numbers like this article.
  • Cyleo - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    This is awesome. I truly love this, please continue this work ;)

    Any change one of the more recent Sony models makes the test (Xperia z comes to mind)
  • Pastuch - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    Chris, fantastic article, way to bring me back to Anand. Please include results of the Iphone 4s and any other phones you get your hands on. My girlfriend and I are phone whores, she's Apple, I'm Android. I'm constantly playing with all of our phones and cans trying to find the best audio combo.

    I run Sennheiser HD-25s, Sennheiser Momentums, V-Moda Crossfade M-80s, and Koss Porta Pros (Awesome since the 80s!).

    Best sounding phone I've ever heard:
    Iphone 4S sounds way better than the new Iphone 5. It's definitely louder and fuller. Too bad the 4s doesn't have APT-X codec for Bluetooth.

    Runner up:
    Samsung Galaxy S with Voodoo sound Rom (Note, you need to load a non-standard rom to make it sound great)

    The rest:
    SGS2 (International Model): Too quiet, poor quality, disappointing dynamic range.

    SGS3 (North American Model): Poor quality, lots of cross talk, disappointing dynamic range.

    HTC One (Beats Audio OFF): Sounds great, really no complaints. A step above most Android phones. Still miss the Wolfson DAC though.

    IPhone 5: Still sounds great but it doesn't live up to the 4S. I'd say it sounds slightly better than the HTC One but the difference is really marginal.

    Nexus 5: Sounds better than the SGS2 or 3. The V-Moda M80s sound good because they aren't hard to drive. The Sennheiser HD25 needs the top volumes and the clipping is obvious. The HTC One sounds a little better.
  • vision33r - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    HTC One audio is a joke. Which features a software sound enhancer AKA Beats Audio which any custom rom can cook into their roms.

    I've had the S3 with the Beats Audio software and took it off flashed a better DAC amp app.
  • Traum - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    As a head-fi audiophile, I want to THANK YOU for doing this!
  • MWisBest - Tuesday, December 10, 2013 - link

    Nice article, definitely curious as to how my Galaxy Nexus would fare in this, as I'm a bit of an audiophile.
  • hrrmph - Wednesday, December 11, 2013 - link

    Awesome topic and write-up :)

    Keep these coming, please.

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