Benchmarks

It seems somewhat silly to run performance benchmarks when most media outlets talk about high performance smartphones most of the time, but my point to consider is my old phone, and whether moving from quad core Krait 300 at 1.7GHz to a MediaTek quad core A53 chipset at 1.0 GHz but running a newer Android is better or worse. For some of the regular smartphone tests I don’t actually own the prerequisite hardware of our smartphone team, but here are some tests I was able to run, and the devices I had to hand at the time:

Devices on Hand for Testing
 
Cubot H1 MediaTek 6735P
HTC Desire 610 Snapdragon 400
HTC One Max Snapdragon 600
Huawei Mate S Kirin 935
Huawei Nexus 6P Snapdragon 810
Google Nexus 7 2013 Snapdragon S4Pro
Amazon Fire HD 6 (Limited) MediaTek MT8135
OnePlus X Snapdragon 801

JSBench

Google Octane

Mozilla Kraken

WebXPRT 2013 - Stock Browsers

WebXPRT 2015 - Stock Browsers

PCMark: Work Performance Overall

PCMark: Web Browsing

PCMark: Video Playback

PCMark: Writing

PCMark: Photo Editing

3DMark: Ice Storm Unlimited, Graphics

3DMark: Ice Storm Unlimited, CPU

3DMark: Ice Storm Unlimited, Overall

When we talk about Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 400 family or Intel's partnership with Rockchip partnership for Sofia and Atom, it makes me somewhat sad we don't have many new data points to compare to the MediaTek MT6735P inside the Cubot H1. However the one benchmark were all interested in is the battery life:

So let's put it this way - the H1 on a full charge breaks the Geekbench3 test to the point that it thinks you are cheating. Oops.

With the PCMark test it gets over 15hrs compared to the 6hrs of the Galaxy S6. When you have a large battery and not many pixels to push, with the right efficiency the device will last a night out with only 25% left in the tank in the way that high end smartphones do not. Anecdotally, as I'm writing this, I just spent a few hours in meetings across the other side of London - I spent 30 minutes each way on the tube with Evernote open and being used (albeit with no wireless or updates), and the battery went down from 38% to 33%. That's an hour of solid writing with black text on white for at most 5% of battery.

  
Initial use, first battery run down and more aggressive use

When I first started using the H1, the graph on the left was my battery usage estimation. Saying ‘approximiately 4 days left’ is almost unheard of, but with a regular 10% screen on time, the result was the graph in the middle, successfully predicting four days of battery. On the right is another example of my use, although a little bit more aggressive with some charging. Yes, I can confirm that there seems to be something wrong with those percentage calculations. But a quick charge in airplane mode for a few minutes gives a few percentage points of battery – while a lot of smartphones offer quick charging for the capacity to fill quickly, it still depends on the capacity drain of the SoC. It helps to have the best of both worlds. Of course, the downside of this is that it can take 3hrs and up to fully charge the H1. The H1 does come with a cable so you can charge other devices though, as 5200 mAh matches some battery packs.

The Feel, The Camera and Video Final Words
Comments Locked

116 Comments

View All Comments

  • KPOM - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Part of the reason Ian gave for wanting a dual-SIM phone is that he travels for business. If he travels to the US, he should be aware that AT&T is shutting down its 2G network on January 1, 2017. After that, he'd be limited to T-Mobile's 2G network (which is pretty awful). Hence, my question.
  • But1er - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Yeah, that's just something you have to pay attention to before buying any unconventional phone from overseas.
  • Ian Cutress - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    I did travel to the US while testing this device, but I did not get a SIM card while I was there due to time. My current UK ISP is a steaming pile when it comes to international, so I didn't bother with them (they want $100 for 500 MB or so and charge near $3 a minute on calls). But it's good to know.
  • Pissedoffyouth - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Giffgaff? On Three its hit and miss bit usually if its in Feel at Home its fantastic
  • KPOM - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    To clarify, AT&T is shutting off their 2G network on January 1, 2017. T-Mobile is keeping theirs on for another 3 years. So, for that matter, are Verizon and Sprint, but they are CDMA networks. So after 1/1/17, if you are here, just pick up a pre-paid T-Mobile SIM.
  • KPOM - Thursday, December 24, 2015 - link

    I checked again and it does support the PCS (1900) band for 3G in the US, which AT&T uses, though coverage and strength of signal vary.
  • Fiah - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    well to each his own, I got an LG G3 and an extended battery for it
  • xaueious - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    This review has limited usefulness without Androbench IO benchmarks
  • Shadowmaster625 - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    I like the size and the resolution. But that SoC is jsut garbage. I wish they would take some surplus S810's and throw them into a device like this. Given how much of a flop the S810 has been, I bet supply wouldnt be an issue. And that SoC would flourish in a device like this.
  • jjj - Wednesday, December 23, 2015 - link

    Good that AT is starting to broader it's horizons.
    Maybe you could compare the wifi range vs some metal flagship, chances are the result would make that plastic a plus.
    Are you aware of Innos D6000 or Oukitel k10000?
    Anyway, maybe in 1-2 years you'll give us a similar article about a phone with great price, battery and CPU perf since that's about to become more and more doable.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now