Display

Smartphone displays are one of the most important features of any device. It is the prime method of interaction, it provides information, and for a lot of people, it is their window into the world. We put a lot of testing into displays because of their importance. The Lumia brand contains both Liquid Crystal Displays (LCD) and Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) panels depending on the model, and in the case of the Lumia 735 it has a 1280x720 resolution OLED in an RGBG format. While not as high resolution as many flagships today, the 4.7 inch display still packs in 316 pixels per inch, so based on that number alone it should be fairly sharp.

Lumia displays often pack in extra features as well, and the Lumia 735 is no exception. The protective outer shell is Corning Gorilla Glass 3, which has an “Easy to Clean” coating on top. The lower end Lumia phones lack this coating, and it can give them a surface with too much grip, making it difficult to move your finger around smoothly. Thankfully the Lumia 735 has no such issues. Nokia added ClearBlack to most of their models, and the Lumia 735 does have this polarizer to help with outdoor visibility and improve black levels. Another feature of many Lumia phones is the Super Sensitive Touch which allows the display to be used with gloves on – a boon when you live in colder climates or on Hoth. It also features the same Sunlight Readability Enhancements as other Lumia models such as the 930, which is content-adaptive backlight control software called Assertive Display from Apical. This makes the screen much easier to use outdoors, as this image from our Lumia 930 review shows.

Sunlight Readbility Off (upper picture) vs On (lower picture)

To test the displays characteristics and accuracy, we turn to SpectralCal’s CalMAN 5 software suite with a custom workflow. The X-Rite i1Pro Spectrophotometer is used to test color accuracy, and the X-Rite i1Display Pro colorimeter is used for contrast ratios and brightness. Since this is an OLED display, we generally ignore contrast ratios and black levels due to the black level of OLED being zero, meaning the contrast ratio for OLED displays is infinite. I once tried to graph infinity but it did not go over well.

Display - Max Brightness

At about 300 nits, the brightness of the display is on the low end. This is fairly common with OLED displays, and high white levels can be a real strain on the battery. LCD panels can generally have higher brightness levels, although at the expense of true black, so as always, this is a compromise. The Sunlight Readability Enhancements and ClearBlack polarizer do help with outdoor viewing though, and I never had any issues using it outside.

Display - Grayscale AccuracyDisplay - White Point

The white point and grayscale accuracy of the Lumia 735 is very good. Greens get a bit high in the middle of the range, but overall a dE value of 3.01 along with a white point close to 6505K makes this panel a lot better to use than older OLED, which tended to have a very blue cast to it.

Display - Saturation AccuracyDisplay - Gamut Accuracy

Moving on to the saturation sweep, we can see the Lumia 735 is not as accurate with colors as it is with grayscale. Measuring to sRGB, you can see that the panel is oversaturated on all of the colors, which once again is a tendency of OLED displays. It does hit the entire sRGB gamut though, which is something that we still do not see on many notebook computers. The saturations are not terrible, but they are far from perfect.

Display - GMB Accuracy

We can see that in our colorchecker test, the good grayscale helps the poor saturation sweep in the overall result. It is a better result than the Lumia 930 gave, but we want to see values under 3 if possible. When I originally tested the Lumia 630, I was pretty amazed at the display accuracy and hoped that it would continue with the other Lumia reviews, but that has not been the case.

The debate about OLED vs LCD may never end, but we have seen some accurate OLED displays in the past year. The Lumia 735 is not a terrible display by any means, and has a good white point and solid grayscale performance. Brightness could be a bit higher for outdoor use, but with the other display features I never found it to be a chore to use it outside. The OLED display shines in any sort of use case where darker subject matter is being displayed, since the LCD has always had poor performance with dark scenes.

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  • maximumGPU - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    i don't believe glance is just software, it actually requires a special type of display with "memory". Apparently none of the amoled lumia's have that, therefore glance is missing from even the top end phones like the 930. It is however present on lcd displays like the 1520 and 830.

    It still baffles me that Nokia/microsoft agreed to ship all those new phones without the required displays for Glance to work. It is afterall one of the best lumia featurs. As if they didn't need all the help they can get flogging phones.
  • Brett Howse - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    It's true that none of the AMOLED phones this year have Glance, but they all did last year, so it seems to be more of an issue with Nokia not being able to find displays with memory, but that's not going to excuse the feature missing in my review because I love Glance.
  • melgross - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    Price. These are not expensive phones. And when you sell as few as they do, likely losing money on every sale, you try to keep cost down as much as possible.
  • Thermogenic - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    Lumia 930 is not a cheap phone and does not have Glance.
  • melgross - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    That's true, but it's more of an exception, isn't it? Or else, Microsoft is going to eliminate it entirely over time.
  • Brett Howse - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    The just launched Lumia 532 has Glance. So it's not price, and it's not getting phased out. I'm sure it's more to do with sourcing the correct components, but now that Lumia falls under Microsoft this will hopefully end.
    http://www.anandtech.com/show/8893/microsoft-launc...
  • Daniel Egger - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    The 620 supports Glance with an LCD (thus being highly inefficient because it needs the backlighting permanently on). I don't think that display memory makes such a huge different in power consumption especially in "peek" mode. So it's really more a matter of software rather than hardware.
  • Dorek - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    I have a 920, which is an IPS LCD screen, and the battery hit from Glance is miniscule.
  • Brett Howse - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    It's only slightly larger, which may bother some people, but not all. And the 830 is only 15 grams heavier. Noticeable with both in your hand, but not huge.
  • Cpt. Obvious - Tuesday, February 3, 2015 - link

    The Glance Screen is available as a download from the app-store. See: http://www.windowsphone.com/en-us/store/app/glance...

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