Maximum Level

The maximum output level is derived from the 1kHz test tone used to determine THD+N. The higher the output from the headphone jack, the louder it can drive a pair of headphones. More importantly, having more power available means when you have dynamic music passages that call for power you are less likely to clip the waveform.

There is no chart to show here, just a number that the Audio Precision gives us. In our test data, the most powerful phone was the iPhone 5, at 32.46 mW of power. Next is the Nexus 5 at 22.24 mW, though we can’t drive it that high. Then the Note 3 at 11.81 mW and finally the Galaxy S4 at 3.895 mW. Doubling the power, from 4 mW to 8 mW, produces a 3 dB increase in volume level. 3 dB is the smallest change in volume levels we can easily hear. So even though the iPhone 5 produces 32 mW vs. 4 mW, that is only a 9 dB difference in volume. 10 dB is doubling the volume, so it isn’t even twice as loud. If you have demanding headphones, you will want as much power as you can get.

Frequency Response

To measure the frequency response we measure a set of 61 tones from 20 Hz to 20 kHz. All of these are then equalized to 1 kHz so we can see the maximum deviation from that level. An ideal phone will be perfectly flat here and allow you to adjust this with an EQ setting, or though your taste in headphones. On this test our best performing phone is the Galaxy S4, as seen here.

The total variation from 1 kHz is only 0.014 dB which is very good. The worst performing phone is the iPhone 5, but its variation is only 0.089 dB.

The iPhone 5 also picked up the 20 kHz tone while the Samsung and many others missed it. If we dropped this tone then it might be just as flat. The iPhone 5 test was run slightly differently, as it can't run the Android test program, which might account for this. For a phone with a different response, here is the HTC One with Beats enabled. Other HTC One testing is still in progress as I write this article.

Here we see that Beats is adding a +3.5 dB boost from 60 Hz to 90 Hz, but the deviation from 0 dB goes from 30Hz to 300 Hz. Past 6.5 kHz we also see a rise in the treble. People often mistake boosted treble for extra detail, which is likely the reasoning behind this. As we see it is far different than the other two examples we looked at.

THD+N Dynamic Range, Crosstalk, and Stepped Response
Comments Locked

188 Comments

View All Comments

  • sonci - Friday, December 13, 2013 - link

    Thanks Anandtech,
    Nice for doing these reviews, one of my top reasons for choosing a smartphone is audio quality, and im not talking about the voice of my wife, but the music reproduced through earbuds.
    Please keep going testing at full volume not only for those who use them with an external integrated, but because that's the right way, if manufactures bost the volume and allow clipping than thats a flaw, also if a phone measure good at full volume than its super good at low volumes, you also can measure them at a specific sound pressure levels, though the difference should be small, but anyway these are not reviews for the casual listener,
    and Yes unfourtunately iphones sound very good.
    I also would be interested in measuring some old and new mp3 players, though in that case its different to be objective, because for a n audio player SQ is a major selling point, but I dont see Lumia selling more than Galaxie because of better SQ.
    If you cant find any old mp3 player, we are crazy enough to send them to you, hoping to have them back once tested.
    Thanks
  • Mokona512 - Saturday, December 14, 2013 - link

    Can you do a comparison of smartphones and dedicated mp3 players?

    for example my sandisk sansa running rockbox firmare gives much better audio quality than my smartphone, especially when driving my akg k240.
  • cb474 - Saturday, December 14, 2013 - link

    I appreciate the sophistication and thoroughness of this review. But I have to say that I have never had a smartphone where I've thought, boy this audio quality is unacceptable. Especially with earbuds or plugged into an external system. Unless you're an audiophile, they all seem pretty good to me.

    Speakers on smartphones are obviously another story.

    But to me the real issue is call quality, including earpiece volume, sound quality of the mic (for one's caller), and especially noise cancellation. Anandtech, thankfully, covers noise cancellation in its reviews with a meaningful babble track test. But I wish there were still much more focus on call quality. There are real differences when it comes to call quality, even amongst flagship phones, and this is an area in which, on a daily basis, I experience frustration. It's amazing how much the "phone" functionality of something that is after all phone is ignored.
  • kevmitch - Sunday, December 15, 2013 - link

    I agree. Excellent article. I hope to see more like it and on the subject.

    I wouldn't mind the "sensational" scales so much if they were at least used consistently. It was difficult to compare for example the THD FFT responses by tabbing between them in browser windows because the scales aren't the same.

    While the max volume should really be set correctly, it would nevertheless be interesting to see the THD FFT for what SHOULD have been the max volume (i.e., a step or two below the G2). I have to say I'm a lot less excited about getting a Nexus 5 now - the Galaxy 4 looks much more appealing in spite of the significant price increase. These results even had me consider getting an iPhone for about half a second.
  • vang024 - Monday, December 16, 2013 - link

    Sorry, but shouldn't you be using lower impedance headphones? The grado is rated at 32 ohms and the K 701 is rated at 64 ohms. The grado might be ok for portable electronics use but the K 701 is more difficult to drive than the 64ohms it is rated at. Not only that, but they are both open headphones which leaks tons of sound and not prefer for anybody using a portable electronic as their music source.

    I think you have to inform the reader the difference between a closed and open headphones(assume they don't know the difference). I see people purchasing a HD600/650 or an AKG Q702 and complains about the sound leakage when these headphones are design to do so. Most of the time people will purchase headphones like a B&W P5/P7, KEF M500, Bose, or Beats for portable use because they are closed design with low impedance. I would say those are targeted for smartphone users.

    I am not saying you shouldn't test smartphone devices with higher impedance headphones, but The Grado and AKGs are not designed for the average joe who don't know much about headphone technologies.
  • bogdan.anghel - Thursday, December 19, 2013 - link

    i listen to a lot of music on headphones, i own a S3, and i want to upgrade to S4 and everywhere i see a review the audio quality and power is very bad. should i go with the HTC One? audio and design is very important to me. (i love the S4 but in terms of audio and design, it's crappy) do any of you guys test or compare those 2 on the same headphones?
  • manveruppd - Friday, December 20, 2013 - link

    It's great to see you pushing the boundaries of phone reviewing by testing things that noone else bothers to, and with a scientific precision no one else can match, but i do have a couple of suggestions:
    firstly, how about also testing the quality of the built in speakers, rather than just the headphone amp? after all, sound qquality in calls is an important consideration when buying a phone. as for the loudspeaker, while i agree that noone except annoying teenagers would listen to music through their phone's loudspeaker, a lot of people use the speakerphone function on their phones regularly, so it's a legitimate area of testing.
    secondly, i wonder if it's fair to test all phones with a set of ear buds designed for one phone? if i were a manufacturer i would make sure to bundle a set of buds that sound good driven by the headphone amp i built into my phone, and i would expect it not to do as well with a higher impendance pair of headphones,for example. so to test on apple buds is probably not quite fair on other devices. i would simply pick 3 pairs of headphones, one each of high, low, and medium impendance, made by some reputable audio brand rather than by the manufacturrer of one of the tested devices.
    good job though, looking forward to future review
  • synaesthetic - Thursday, December 26, 2013 - link

    output impedance please!
  • seshraj - Wednesday, January 1, 2014 - link

    Thanks for another wonderful post.

    One suggestion to include one Xperia smartphone in your list to test. I personally use an discontinued model Arc S for close to 3 years now and have always been pleased with the bravia audio quality and output, sunlight visibility and camera. I am not a techie or a heavy user of a smartphone; but amazed with the audio quality of this device. I am sure the newer models like Xperia Z would have a more upgraded and better sound quality.
  • jcazes - Tuesday, January 7, 2014 - link

    Can anyone comment on how these deficiencies translate to A2DP streaming over bluetooth? I have an LG G2 and am looking at finding something with Apt-X / aptX support (or cooking it in via a custom ROM, if possible). If the phone can't output audio properly over any channel then I don't want to waste my time.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now