Oneplus 5 fixed the main issues I had with the OP3T. - OnePlus 5 Guides, News, & Discussion

WiFi performance was mediocre on the OP3T. Due to the lack of MIMO, the antenna design its predecessor had led it to poor WiFi connectivity (at least when comparing it with other flagships.)
OP5 now actually pulls the same data speeds over my WiFi network as my brother's Galaxy S8. So no corners were cut this time around.
As for LTE connectivity, I noticed the OnePlus 3T had a noticeably worse connection strength than other devices....but as much as -10dBm. This was pretty bad by flagship standards. This device now can grab/hold onto signals much better and reaches better dBm values for the signals it does have (on par with the S8 in strong signal areas, haven't tested edge of coverage.)
That and the camera was just average on the OP3T. I believe the camera on the OP5, while not as good as the S8, is great and is definitely one of the better smartphone cameras on the market (I'm by no means a professional photographer, but it's definitely a good camera imo.)
Just wanted to share my findings. My only gripe with this device so far is lack of cases, and I don't really like the camera lens position, but it's something I can get used to.

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My Note 4 thoughts

I figured it might be a good idea to share my thoughts on the Note 4, since I always put a lot of research into smartphone buying and someone might find it useful There are some of you that are still leaning toward different flagships all of the time (like I did!), so I hope this helps.
First of all I would like to mention that about a month ago I made up my mind to give up my LG G2 and switch to a new smartphone.
The Xiaomi mi4 came up first.
I liked the design, UI, price, specs. Everything about the mi4 is just above average, but thats about it. It didn't have that even slightest "wow factor" that I needed to push me to buying one. It's a very good phone, but the warranty would require me to send the phone far into the unknown in case something was wrong, I wasn't sure If I would pay tax as well. Nobody had the 64 gb model either (16gb and no card expansion, really?!). I decided that this would probably be a wise choice but it didn't offer anything more than what I already had on the G2, and in some cases, it was worse (camera). I passed.
My second choice was the LG G3.
So like always, I started researching, checking out different variants and prices, digging through the specs, looking for its strong sides and flaws. I liked the quad hd display at first, the SD 801 SoC, good camera with laser autofocus. The UI was a nice upgrade from the LG G2's cartoonish look. The 32 gb model seemed a good option with its 3gb of ram (although I didn't like the design as I wanted something different from the G2).
As I started to dig deaper though, I noticed that the display isn't all that awesome, as there is more to it than just resolution. I think they might have made the phone much better if they sticked to a 1080p panel and focused on other aspects like color reproduction, brightness, power consumption. I found out that the 801 chip is stretched to its limits (even over them..) with that display, which caused overheating, throttling and lagging in demanding tasks and games. I believe a smartphone should be able to handle anything you throw at it so I dumped the G3 from my plans.
Then the Z3 came up.
So again- researching, digging, looking at the cons and pros. I liked the design a lot better than the G3 (besides the plastic corners, although I can justify the reason they used them for). The display was beytter than the Z2, with very good brightness and color reproduction after making some adjustments to the stock settings. The audio quality is superb as well, the whole phone is waterproof and its battery life was very well above the current smartphones.
The camera in the Z3 is top of the line, but I didn't like how it overheats. Making the phone thinner wasn't necessary in my opinion and sony might have thought about the component allocation in the device, as putting everything in the top part of the phone wasn't too smart of a choice. The UI was something that I didn't like the most though. I know I could throw a custom ROM at it in a while, but I wasn't sure how that would work with the camera, battery life and other features sony offered in the stock ROM.
I almost made my mind up on the Z3, as it had everything I wanted and I could live with its cons but then the price came into my mind: 515 pounds including tax.
Thats the part the note 4 came into play.
I watched the Note 4 presentation: the phone impressed me in overall, I liked the design, UI, hardware etc. So I started digging again.
I've always wanted the best out of my phone, no matter if I was going to use all of the functions it had or not. I used my phone for calling, texting, making notes in google keep, gps, playing games, listening to music, browsing the web, taking pictures. Usually I endep up rooting it and putting a stock like ROM on it (although I used the stock LG G2 ROM all the way). The design of the phone was always important for me, thats why I had an iphone 4s and 5 for a month before ditching it cus of the awfully simple and boring OS.
The Note 4 seemed to be a very good phone that offered what I wanted and much more beyond that:
1. The display
It's resolution could have been not increased. Samsung could have stayed with a 1080p panel. But thats not whats important about this panel. This is what the DisplayMate test results are:
"The Galaxy Note 4 delivers uniformly consistent all around Top Tier display performance: it is the first Smartphone display to ever get all Green (Very Good to Excellent) Ratings in all test and measurement categories (except one Yellow for a Brightness Variation with Average Picture Level) since we started the Display Technology Shoot-Out article Series in 2006, an impressive achievement for a display. The Galaxy Note 4 has again raised the bar for top display performance up by another notch. "
The display is a window through which you interact with your phone, and it is a component that must be top of the line. There should be no compromise here. Samsung exceeded my expectations in this matter.
2. Performance
There are 2 variants of the Note as most of you know. I'm still having a hard time with both of them. At first I thought the Snapdragon is an obvious choice considering it was superior to all of the other chips last year.
But then the 64-bit affair came into place. Anyone would like their phone to be futureproof, and a 64-bit SoC would be a wise choice. The exynos and snapdragon chips offer pretty much the same performance. I tried looking at the benchmarks, real world usage, gaming, but one outpaces the other in different things and it is very hard to tell the difference. I believe the fluidity of the UI and overall performance must be taken into consideration the most, as I believe both chips will handle anything you throw at them when apps and games are optimized. The choice is either taking the 20nm exynos and hope for better battery life and 64-bit support OR the snapdragon one and expect better dev support.
I wanted the Exynos for the wolfson chip, as I like good quality music from my phone. I'll be using good headphones and PowerAmp so I figure I wouldn't notice much difference anyway. At least not enough to pay extra and import the exynos variant.
I'm pretty much set on the Snapdragon 805 as I believe the battery life should be good on both (the andreno 420 is powerful with lowered power consumption). Like I mentioned earlier I might change the ROM after a while if something good comes out. It's a matter of personal taste- NOT performance of the chips. Thats my opinion on the matter.
3. User Interface
Touchwiz was out of the question for me up until I saw the Galaxy S5 UI. I actually liked the flat style and functions it offered. The note 4 UI is pretty similar. I really like the S-Pen experience, it should be a great change for people who haven't used it before. I love taking notes and I'll use it often. I like the functions it offers, the selection in different UI elements, the ease of copy/pasting, more precise touch input.
Touchwiz has a lot of useless apps that I might not like, but I'm sure it will be possible to get rid of the ones you don't like later on, the dev community in here will surely help. I could go on about the stamina mode, multi-window, the ability to resize apps etc, but you've all seen that on videos. The most important fact for is that touchwiz had been improved, it is eye pleasing, smoother and faster than ever. It is the best custom android OS you can get atm.
4. Camera
On paper both of the cameras looked really good to me, but I wanted to wait and see the real world results. I wasn't disappointed. there were some early comparisions done, but some of them were pictures or videos not taken with the note 4, so getting a correct view at the performance was quite hard. We have these results now and the note camera is a top notch performer. I find day pictures top of the line, the details are there, colors are popping, OIS helps as well. 4k shooting isn't all that important to me but its a nice addition. The camera seems to be very capable and will perform great in a day-to-day user's hands as well in an experienced person ones.
You may find the night shots worse than of the lumia or z3, but thats just terribly trying to find a flaw to me. Come on- who the hell is going to photograph a piece of paper in the dark of the night!? insane. There are pictures taken with the note at night, i like how the lights aren't blurred and everything seems very crisp and detailed. Do remember what you'll be using the phone camera for, and the Note 4 delivers more than I want in those terms.
5. Battery life
Many people find this very important. I thought the Note 4 might get bad results cause of that screen so I checked out some vids of the LTE-A Galaxy S5 with the higher res display. The results were the same as the standars S5.
I am not sure if its the chip that is more power efficient, some power saving changes in the OS, or the screen, or maybe all of these at once, but the results people are having on the Notes they recently picked up are very pleasing to me.
Final words
I probably shouldn't, cause its so ridiculous, but I'll mention the gap gate as well- I don't give a crap about it. I wont even notice it. Especially with the case I'm going to put on the phone. And its something that samsung probably addressed already in the new batch of phones. There are other things I should maybe mention, but these 5 are most important for me. I really like the performace of the Note 4, its UI, functions, metal frame design, micro SD storage expansion, camera, battery, IR blaster and everything else that seems to be a full package that many will find good enough to put their money on. I surely will. On the black one of course
You have really done some good work digging up info and comparing them.
Just to add couple points to OP's excellent write up:
The battery life concern in #5 is actually addressed in already mentioned DisplayMate article, right towards the bottom it clearly states that the new screen, despite having larger number of pixels is more power efficient than 1080p screen of Note3 (0.05W for 50% and 0.2 W for 100% brightness), about 5 to 10% more efficient and Note 3 has proven itself to have very good battery life already.
The gap between screen and frame around might be by design, due to combination of plastic, glass and metal having different expansion rate due to temperature changes. My thinking is that if the phone was brought from very warm room into very cold outside, metal frame would cool and shrink much faster than the rest and could even possibly crack the glass, doing so. The gap possibly allows for contraction/expansion without doing any damage. Either way, outside of aesthetics, it doesn't affect anything and it's a non issue. Probably blown out of proportions as an attempt to shift attention away from bendgate.
pete4k said:
The battery life concern in #5 is actually addressed in already mentioned DisplayMate article, right towards the bottom it clearly states that the new screen, despite having larger number of pixels is more power efficient than 1080p screen of Note3 (0.05W for 50% and 0.2 W for 100% brightness), about 5 to 10% more efficient and Note 3 has proven itself to have very good battery life already
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think he was referring to the increased GPU load due to the higher resolution which is a valid concern.
But as it has already been said, even the S5 LTE-A with its Snapdragon 805 and QHD resolution has the same battery life as the regular S5 with Full HD and Snapdragon 800.
Still, it would be interesting to see the battery life on a Snapdragon 805 device with only a Full HD display.
I would prefer the note 4 to have a 1080p panel with the same characteristics. But how many people actually use their head before buying a phone? It's a spec war for android phones..
han4mi said:
I would prefer the note 4 to have a 1080p panel with the same characteristics. But how many people actually use their head before buying a phone? It's a spec war for android phones..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Normally I would agree that FHD 1080p would be more than enough. However, since the GN4 is going to host the Gear VR, with magnifying lenses, I'm happy it went for the QHD
Sent from my Surface Pro 3 using Tapatalk
Audio Quality
Thanks for taking the time for the write up.
One area I would really like to know about is the quality of the rear speaker.
The sound quality is much more important to me than the placement (and sometimes the rear placement actually helps when you put it on a flat hard surface). I ruled out the Note 3 because its speaker was worse than the Note 2 which is still my current phone. The Note 2's speaker is actually pretty decent if the 4's is equal or better I would be thrilled.
Any input?
ymmp said:
Thanks for taking the time for the write up.
One area I would really like to know about is the quality of the rear speaker.
The sound quality is much more important to me than the placement (and sometimes the rear placement actually helps when you put it on a flat hard surface). I ruled out the Note 3 because its speaker was worse than the Note 2 which is still my current phone. The Note 2's speaker is actually pretty decent if the 4's is equal or better I would be thrilled.
Any input?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have the same question, ´cause I am afraid, that speeker-quality will be on low level and I am used to fantastic stereo sound of my current htv one m8.
I think, the price for Note 4 ist extremly high. Meanwhile Samsungs flagships are playing in the same €-league with the latest iphons. So I want to hold it in my own hands first before buying it. In center of Europe the Note 4 will be available in about 2 weeks.
Maybe the new Nexus 6 has a better balance between price and specs. We´ll check it out.
Just read Phone Arena's review. Here's a quote:
"Unfortunately, the audio portion of the media experience isn't so spectacular. The single speaker of the Galaxy Note 4 is rather quiet and lacking any depth, making it sound thin and weak. It's not too bad, but it's far from the best we've heard"
How disappointing! The new Moto X is supposed to have an amazing front speaker. I just wonder if it is more like the Note 2 or 3.
I believe the speaker will be good enough to play the ringtone I choose. I prefer earphones+ Poweramp for my music. Like I said, it depends what you're expecting to use the phone for. The Note 4 meets my demands in key aspects and thats why I'm going for it. I don't want THE BEST PHONE. Such a phone does not exist. All of the flagships have their strenghts and weaknesses and a smart person would take the one with the most personally suitable set of features.

Has the battery TECHNOLOGY changed between the S3 and S6?

As an S3 user who can upgrade the value proposition seems slim unless newer battery technology has been incorporated. I tried the ATT s6 and s6 edge in store, compared to my custom lollipop it seems just as snappy. Many people say the battery life between both models has been ambiguous with icnreases in technology being eaten up by higher hardware demands. My phone isn't going to be used for media heavy applicatoins, and the s3 can stream the quality of video I need over any network.
So this brings up the propsitiion ,s it worth moving from the s3 to s6. What new battery technolgoies should I be on the look out for in newer phones or new phones themselves?
The main technology (li-ion) is the same.
Your phone will have better battery life due to more efficient processor, but some of that is negated by more pixels on the screen.
You'll get a better camera, in every way, with the S6.
You'll get significantly more LTE bands, so travel will be less of an issue.
Those are the main advantages, I would say you'll see faster sppeds/better multitasking, but you'll mostly see it in games, not so much everyday use if you have a good custom ROM.
You'll lose a lot of the custom ROM scene though. Only a few to choose from and no custom kernels or recoveries due to the locked bootloader.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk
For me, the camera and nice screen are the best selling points. I came from an LG optimus G (basically a nexus 4, late 2012 device). The LGOG is on an AOSP based 5.1.1 ROM, that is stable, and just as fast and smooth, from a UI standpoint, as the S6. It has a moderately smaller battery, with something in the neighborhood of 800 charge cycles on it - battery life between the two phones is reasonably comparable - 16 to 18 hours off charger and 3.5-4 hours screen on. Head to head, the S6 might have a slight advantage, but I only have one active SIM so can't do a real test. The S6 does definitely out perform the LGOG in more processor intensive takes (as it should) but the LGOG is still hugely superior at multitasking.
But the camera on the S6 is amazing. Took some video on my bike yesterday at twilight - the camera/display combo was actually brighter than reality. Very cool. The image quality is just leaps and bounds ahead. I've never had a phone with a "good" camera before, and it's very nice not to have to try to decide if it's worth it to carry my point and shoot camera anymore. The phone is now better.

Is there Some kind of known Camera issue/hatred for op3t

Sending back my Nexus 6p to replace with op3t been wanting this phone for some time. Aside from asking many different questions my main thing would be the camera . Initially videos and blogs on the camera said it's in n par with a s7 or note 5 quality . But I'm hearing negative talk about the rear cam blur and clarity. Is there a known issue ? A camera mod or fix or is this just bias opinion. I guess I'll find out soon .
Sent from my Nexus 6P using XDA-Developers Legacy app
androidddaaron said:
Sending back my Nexus 6p to replace with op3t been wanting this phone for some time. Aside from asking many different questions my main thing would be the camera . Initially videos and blogs on the camera said it's in n par with a s7 or note 5 quality . But I'm hearing negative talk about the rear cam blur and clarity. Is there a known issue ? A camera mod or fix or is this just bias opinion. I guess I'll find out soon .
Sent from my Nexus 6P using XDA-Developers Legacy app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For me the camera it just fine , I mean I don't expect professional results it is a phone camera if I want better results go for a pro one
One a bright day the camera is perfect wonderful pics , but as light reduces the camera loss some quality and sharpness
I mean for 439 dlls it a good camera
Sent from my ONEPLUS A3000 using Tapatalk
I love this phone and the latest. Oxygen OS update fixes alot of the camera issues witch were fine according to me but im not a camera guy. I got it for the processor and 6 gigs of ram and so far this thing has only impressed at ever corner you can't go wrong with this phone especially at this price point.
I'd say given good amount of lightning, the camera gets pretty decent performance. Once its in lowlight, it definitely has some catching up to do compared to devices like S7, 6p.
There is apparently an issue with the camera on OnePlus 3T where focus stops working. I have read multiple reports now and I am affected myself. Some say this is a hardware issue and some had their phones already fixed by OnePlus. Someone else said a software update fixed it for him so maybe there are multiple issues at work. But those are all defects where the camera stops working properly. Until this happened, the camera was fine and I couldn't complain about the quality at all.
Outdoor photos with any degree of sunlight are excellent. Indoors, with any amount of sun coming through windows also are great. Indoors, with artificial lighting is where it gets trickier. The lower the light, the longer it takes to auto focus; and if your subject is moving, the pics are more likely to blur. If you have some patience, and know how to take pictures, you can get decent results. And you may have to take several photos, knowing some will have blur.
The best example would be indoor pics of my young kids (which I take a lot) which can never stand still for long, even for a picture. But even with some decent amount of artificial light, and a bit of patience, I get some very good pics most of the time.
Another option on the OP3T, is you can change the camera to "manual" mode. This allows you to manually set the ISO, white balance (type of light), etc. This can get you faster focus and better results in lower light. But not everyone may want to take the time to manually tweak these settings.
I take a good amount of smartphone pics, and the camera is important to me. Overall, I'm pleased with the camera on the OP3T. But given, I'm coming from an older phone, the HTC M8 (which is going on 3 years old). On the other hand, the amount of effort it takes to get unblurred photos on the OP3T is not out of line with when I use my DSLR camera.
Maybe a phone like the Samsung GS7 can take more focused pictures, more consistently, and with less effort. And of course there is something to be said about that. But there is also a price. Most folks who criticize the camera on the OP3T are comparing it to flagships like the iPhone 7 or Samsung GS7 which cost almost twice as much (okay, the price of phones vary a lot over time and by region - but you see what I'm getting at). The OP3T simply can't compete as it lacks the fancy features such as dual camera, laser focus + phase detection etc. which all cost money. But what you have is a phone which competes with the current flagships on almost every level (processor, RAM, build quality) with just a bit of compromise on the camera, screen resolution, and waterproofing.
came from a 6p, have had trouble getting my camera to focus, but still love the phone

Poor 3g/4g reception

I've noticed that my Nokia 8 always loosing the bayle with pretty much any phone on the market.
Once I'm in poor signal reception areas I'm not getting connected to network while any other phone is getting enough good reception to get online.
Almost the same problem with WiFi.
Lenovo tablet, xiaomi Redmi note 4, even ancient LG g pad 8.3 will have fully working WiFi connection while Nokia 8 is dropping it all the time.
Does anyone else noticed that?
Not at all, having better Connection than Colleagues with iPhone X and S8+ etc... (same carrier ofc)
It's normal. The Nokia 8 lacks antenna. The snapdragon modem can usually do 4 of them, but Nokia cheaped out and has 2. Thats also why speed on wifi is lower as there's no mimo like on higher end devices. The real problem is that stuff like this isn't on a specsheet while it matters a lot. The antenna configuration is actually the same as on the iphonex which is also horrible when it comes to connection, but because it has more glass, there's less metal absorbing the signal like on the Nokia 8. Nokia 8 antenna placement means you block it very easily with your hands as well. It's a really bad design. Those that state otherwise... well they haven't opened up their phones to find out for themselves.
You can try this yourself, connection is much better in landscape if you hold the device with the volume buttons on the bottom instead of volume buttons on top.
Some tests have been done here: https://www.notebookcheck.net/Nokia-8-Smartphone-Review.259132.0.html
There are a few other... problems with the Nokia 8 that aren't on the spec sheet either. It's unfortunate. It makes me regret the purchase somewhat. It's also cheating a little bit like apple does, only focusing on the quality of items that are directly on a spec sheet and cheaping out on the rest.
You'll notice the microphones for calls/speaker are surprisingly terrible as well.

Anybody noticed? Realme missed this features !!

Anybody having a different opinion in the following?
1. Lack of high speed carrier combinations (4g+). Even older phones have better network speed since they have better 4g+.
2. No HDR+ in Netflix. ( Somebody got so lazy that it seems the device missed certification and now netflix won't add that feature ever, remember lack of HD in poco f1?)
3. No 4d vibrations on games
4. Camera optimization - it is a hit and miss. ( Sometimes produces reddish coloured images)
Not at all eligible for a flagship category. (The device isn't much cheap).
Not sure with 4g+ as I only use WiFi... But I will say the connection speed on WiFi is far better then most phones.
The device supports everything needed to play hdr+ content on Netflix and as far as I'm aware Netflix needs to enable this?
4d vibration is supported on this device and needs to be implemented by the game developers to work in this phone.
Camera is relatively new and needs time to optimise and mature in terms of software... But yes can be a bit hit n miss.
Regarding flagship status then it depends what you class as flagship... To me it's more flagship then most phones available... 90hz super oled, 50w charging, 3.5mm jack, upto 12gb ram, 855+, ufs3.0, Dolby enabled stereo speakers, gorilla glass 5 front and back with aluminium frame, 64mp camera, vapour cooling, latest gen optical inscreen fingerprint etc etc.
There's pros and cons to all phones but no phone beats this on what you get for the money.
4g+ is just a marketing term some other phones use when they connect to band 40 of 4g lte. Almost all phones have and connect to band 40 but doesn't show it as 4g+ but its the same thing. These companies want to make a fool out of people who doesn't know more about these things more. The same thing is being dome by AT&T by marketing their 4g as 5ge. When people see this they will think its 5g but it is actually 4g. The same thing is being done with 4g+. There is no thing called for 4g+. Its a marketing term for faster band 40
I do have the 4G+ carrier aggregation icon in my status bar sometimes. So thge does support it.
I see if I can find a screen shot or I need to take one when I'm in an area with 4G+ the next time.
Edit: found one, if you look closely it shows 4G+
Same case with me regarding 4g+. I did check this along side with POCO F1 which shows 4G+ for Jio.
The speed is almost same while I try on fast.com website.
Secondly, sometimes I see 4G+ icon on my screen but no substantial difference in speed
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Yes, I agree, 4G+ is a big thing in other countries I tried, e.g. in Singapore and Malayisa (Maxis) where 4G+ on OP3T goes beyond 100 MPBS but 4G reaches maximum 30 35
I have 4g+ very often on my two sim card, Tim and Optima (Vodafone) in Italy, no problems at all

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