Display

While the iPhone 6 Plus’ display is largely similar to the iPhone 6’s display, there are still a few areas worth talking about. The first area is resolution, which is noticeably better on the iPhone 6 Plus on close examination. In general, there’s less aliasing that is visible on the display. While text rendering in general is even better, the improved resolution is most obvious in the rotation lock symbol, which is noticeably smoother and rounder. The use of the 2208x1242 resolution with downscaling should also have a similar effect to FSAA (Full Screen Anti-Aliasing), which will reduce the effects of aliasing on the display.

Outside of simple resolution testing, we also need to test all other aspects of the display. In order to do this, we turn to SpectraCal’s CalMAN 5 with a custom workflow. As always, we use a spectrophotometer to measure color to ensure accurate results. For this review, I won’t go over viewing angles as that’s covered in the iPhone 6 review.

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

Our first test is of peak luminance and contrast. At maximum, the contrast difference between the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus is relatively small, and the difference in peak luminance is relatively small as well. I suspect that this means that Apple isn’t quite at the point where backlight luminous efficiency is rapidly falling off the way it seems to at 500+ PPI RGB LCD displays.

Display - White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Display - Gamut Accuracy

Display - Saturation Accuracy

Display - GMB Accuracy

While I normally walk through each type of calibration test, there’s relatively little need in this case as the iPhone 6 Plus is close to the iPhone 6. There are some differences and the iPhone 6 is nearly perfect while the 6 Plus ends up being better than the 5s but not quite at the same level as the 6. I suspect this could be due to production variance, but these are different panels so without additional test units we can't say for certain. The iPhone 6 Plus display is quite close to the iPhone 6’s display in most regards, only larger; this is effectively as good as it gets for an LCD display.

Camera

Ultimately the change to the camera is the one difference that really sets the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus apart outside of the change in size. This one difference is optical image stabilization, or OIS. However, at first it's almost impossible to tell whether OIS is active. As someone who has used multiple cameras with OIS, this is a very odd sensation. Normally, OIS means that it's possible to see the effect of reverse accommodation in either the camera preview or while recording video, but I never saw these effects while recording video, whether in daytime or at night. In fact, I'm not even sure that video is ever optically stabilized, as seen in the videos below. I'm not sure why Apple chose to do this, as video recording is already cropped and would hide most of the odd effects that occur at the edges of the field of view when using OIS.


Putting aside OIS in video, it's obvious that the one area where OIS would be put to use is low light photography. Examining the EXIF data of low light photos, I was rather surprised to discover that in single shot mode (burst mode caps shutter speed to 1/15s) that the iPhone 6 Plus never exceeds 500 ISO. However, in order to keep pace with the iPhone 6's maximum of 2000 ISO and 1/15s exposure time, the iPhone 6 Plus drives exposure time as far as a quarter of a second, which is four times as long.

I really can't emphasize how incredible it is that Apple has pulled this off as it felt like something was wrong when I was testing low light photos as seen below. Normally, such a long exposure time entails noticeable trade-offs, but as far as I can tell motion blur is close to what I see on the iPhone 6 in low light. This seems to be the product of the multiple exposure combination that was mentioned in the keynote, and it really does work as advertised. While some benefit can be seen in the lightbox shot above, it's really in low light conditions like the photo below where we see significant benefits.


As you might expect, there's not much difference in daytime photos. I'm guessing that OIS is disabled above a certain shutter speed in order to reduce the distortion and blurriness that can come from OIS.


Battery Life and Charge Time Software and Final Words
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  • Parhel - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    A manufactured scandal if ever there was one. Just wait until the "will it blend" videos start popping up. Then we can have blendergate.
  • joe_dude - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    I'm looking for real test results, not conjecture. Anandtech could settle the issue by doing a 4 point test along the buttons. I'm guessing it bends at that spot with just 30 to 40 lbs. of force. Generic performance and battery tests, any review site can do. This is Anandtech, so I expect more in terms of technical nitty-gritty.
  • yofa42 - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    +1
  • Parhel - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    They plainly stated in the article, if you care to read it, that they're not going to destroy phones for the purpose of this review. So you'll have to get your "technical nitty-gritty" elsewhere.

    The link you posted is disingenuous. It's astroturfing, a "viral marketing" advertisement.
  • joe_dude - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    Oh please. Joshua simply glossed over the issue without mentioning the video that started the whole #bendgate debate. Give us some hard numbers to show whether there really is a weak spot that would be prone to bending. Many people want to know if it really is an issue. Anandtech should help settle it once and for all. That's what Anandtech is supposed to be about - products that are thoroughly reviewed!
  • Alexey291 - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    Nah all we're getting now is engadget style clickbait reviews with predictable (aka forced) conclusions.

    I am betting that every device (unless its REALLY crap) will get the same kind of "its the best device to buy right now" conclusion.

    Because you know... Anandtech's looooong since sold out.
  • Parhel - Wednesday, October 1, 2014 - link

    It's hard to find a single review on Anandtech where somebody doesn't accuse them of being paid off. Doesn't matter if it's a hard drive, a video card, a phone, an OS. There's always somebody ready to make a baseless accusation without any evidence. That's the Internet for you. It's made everybody an expert in everything.

    But, you know, some guy on Youtube bending iPhones . . . that's a guy we can all trust, right? I've seen the videos too. I wouldn't buy a car from that guy, I can tell you that.
  • OreoCookie - Thursday, October 2, 2014 - link

    For a scientifically conclusive test, you need to destroy tens of iPhones. That's an investment of a five-digit amount. Moreover, if AnandTech's phone is a review unit, they need to return it -- intact. Consumer report has at least quantified the force it takes to bend and break for a single phone and, important point, compared that to other phones. The tested iPhones 6 and 6+ were more robust than an HTC One M8, a phone for I have yet to see a report that it has a propensity for bending and breaking. Every single year the tech press finds something wrong with iPhones (e. g. the iPhone 4's antenna), to the degree that much more significant problems (e. g. the botched iOS 8.0.1 update) disappear in the bendghazi cacophony.
  • InTheBoilerRoom - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    Is there a particular reason that the Nokia Lumia 930 and 1020 were not included in the camera comparisons for the iPhone 6 and 6+? You have results for both (posted in the 920 review) and those are much more relevant benchmarks than the other phones included. I'm more interested in how close Apple's cameras are getting to the class leaders than to middle of the road phone cameras.
  • underseaglider - Tuesday, September 30, 2014 - link

    Apple has always set the bar to the highest when it comes to their models. They always make sure they come up with the first of its kind and iPhone 6 has been creating buzz even it was questioned with its bendability.

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