Organizer
Gadget news
Hands-on review: UPDATED: LG G5
3:00 am | March 17, 2016

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones | Comments: None

Hands-on review: UPDATED: LG G5

Update: The LG G5, not to be forgotten, is in our hands in prototype form. We updated our first impressions of the Android phone, but the full review awaits.

The LG G5 is a massive change from the manufacturer – doing away with the confusing leather in favor of a full metal body, yet keeping fan-favorite features like a removable battery and microSD card.

That’s a big deal, because Samsung disappointed a vocal minority a year ago when it ditched its swappable battery and expandable storage hallmarks in the Galaxy S6.

Okay, the LG G5 isn’t as ornate as Samsung’s glass-and-metal-fused phone, or Apple’s aluminum iPhone 6S, but it’s a step in the right direction after the leather-and-plastic-backed LG G4.

Watch our hands on and first impressions LG G5 video:

YouTube : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRP7QyXZ2JI

Not only does it include perks for power users, the South Korean company changed the way we access the battery, inventing a cartridge-like input so you don’t have to remove the back cover.

This ‘magic slot’ is located in the bottom frame of the phone and doubles as an accessory port. Add-ons so far include a battery grip with physical camera controls and a Hi-Fi audio module.

LG G5 review

You don’t really need either of these accessories to enjoy the camera and audio, though. LG G5 has a dual-camera setup on the back, with one lens that provides extra-wide photos.

The front is highlighted by an always-on, 5.3-inch display. It never goes to sleep, with the time, date and notification icons always visible when the phone is off.

There are lots of parts to the LG G5 – so does it all add up to a best phones contender when the newly launched Samsung Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge have topped our best phones list? Let’s explore.

LG G5 review

Design

The LG G5 looks and feels completely different from last year’s phone, and that’s thanks to the metal body that rightfully kicks the plastic to the curb. It’s not seamless, but that’s part of the modular fun I’ll explain in a second.

LG G5

This isn’t just a metal finish, either, like the metallic-painted LG G4 variant that was plastic through and through. The all-metal phone body feels smooth, although a bit hollower than an iPhone or Huawei.

However, unlike Apple’s handset, the LG G5 won’t be notorious for antenna lines. It doesn’t have any of those unsightly bands, instead relying on Micro-Dizing to cover up antenna slits.

This allowed me to focus on the colors, and it comes in four shades: Silver, Titan, Pink and Gold. There’s nothing too outrageous here in terms of new colors. LG G5 plays it straight.

LG G5

In fact, this is an LG that phone plays it so straight that it no longer curves like the LG G4 or its even curvier cousin, the LG G Flex 2 from last year. It still feels easy to hold in one hand.

Downsized from 5.5 inches to 5.3 inches and roughly the same amount of bezel on the sides, the LG G5 feels light at 159g and easy to hold in one hand. It measures 149.4 x 73.9 x 7.7mm.

LG G5

I can reach apps across the entire display without resorting to using two hands, which ties into LG’s goal of making the phone all about ease of use and something to recommend to mom.

LG G5’s volume rocker has shifted to the left side of the frame, ending the company’s opinion-dividing practice of having buttons flank the power button on back.

Here's where the new volume rocker is located: on the left side, not the back

While I got used to that quirky rear-facing volume rocker and clean edges, LG’s signature feature was a flaw to many. I’m indifferent about the new side volume rocker. It’s no better or worse.

The still-back-facing power button doubles as a fingerprint sensor, and it’s definitely better than what LG has experimented with on the LG V10, even if it’s still too small.

LG G5

Like the Nexus 5X and Nexus 6P, it can light up the phone and unlock the screen without you having to press the button down. It’s not a two-step process, as it was on the press-in-and-hold-hold-hold LG V10.

What I don’t like as much is the headphone jack and speaker placement. Headphones plug into the top, unless you have the 32-bit Hi-Fi DAC module. It adds a second headphone jack to the bottom. Odd.

Worse, the speaker is on the bottom. I was really hoping that the LG G5 would upgrade us to a pair of front-facing speakers for stereo sound without resorting to headphones. Not this time around.

LG G5

LG has redesigned its bottom port, however. It uses a USB-C connection, which means all of your micro USB cables are useless. The advantage? It’s reversible, unlike all other USB forms.

That’s a huge win for anyone taking advantage of that always-on display and plugging in their phone in the dark. Just be prepared to carry around both cables, as micro USB is probably going to be used by every other gadget and accessory you own for the next few years.

Display

The LG G5 doesn’t try to squeeze more pixels into its 5.3-inch display, and that’s something I’m actually happy to see. Quad HD resolutions are the ceiling that no one needs to break.

LG G5

Lighting up the phone screen reveals there’s little difference here. The smaller size increases the pixels per inch to about 554ppi, but everything else looks similar, including the brightness.

LG has, instead, upgraded its IPS LCD to include always-on display functionality, something you won’t see until the phone is asleep. It keeps most of the screen dark, but leaves minimal information there, like the time, date and notification icons.

LG G5

This is useful because, when not wearing a smartwatch, I check my phone at least 100 times a day for the time and various notifications. LG says people do this closer to 150 times a day.

Whatever your number is, an always-on display puts the essentials at your fingerprints without you having to wake the phone and its power-hungry processor.

LG G5

The Moto X Style display does something similar, but the LG G5 pulls it off without the need for hand-waving gestures to trigger a bunch of IR sensors. It’s the true meaning of always-on.

LG says the battery only drains an extra 0.8% an hour with its new second screen, and that seems like a great trade off at first blush.

It has a pre-loaded 360 rollercoaster video that is a neat party trick

But that adds up to be 19.2% over a full 24 hours. It may not be worth keeping this feature if you don’t have a smartphone-glancing obsession.

Specs and software

The LG G5 specs have a shot at keeping up with the Samsung Galaxy S7 thanks to the fact that it uses Qualcomm’s latest processor and 4GB RAM, a must-have for flagship handsets in 2016.

LG G5

There’s a Snapdragon 820 processor pumping at the heart of this new LG phone, and that really contrasts with the LG G4 when it comes to raw horsepower.

A year ago, the company purposely held back on the troubled Snapdragon 810 processor by using the steadier Snapdragon 808 chip. Samsung ate its lunch (and everyone else’s, too).

LG G5

It’s now a more level playing field between the two South Korean phone giants, at least in the US where Samsung uses the same Qualcomm chip. The advantage for LG is that it includes a microSD card slot – with adoptable storage.

That expands its standard 32GB configuration, the same as the LG G4, to a theoretical 2TB, though someone has to actually make a microSD card in that XXL size first.

LG G5

LG’s user interface gets a splash of paint, but it’s not a total overhaul. Icons appear to be a little more rounded and the quick settings menu isn’t so drab.

It’s all combined with Android 6.0 Marshmallow, which should prove useful for its battery-saving tricks more than anything else.

LG G5

Scrolling through menus on the LG G5 felt smooth and incredibly snappy, even with all of my apps loaded onto the device.

I’m just wary of the fact that LG got rid of the app drawer. My entire home screen exploded with apps when I loaded everything on there. Like an iPhone, it’s all on the main home screen with folders being your only relief to the clutter. It’s simpler, but not.

Explosion! The app drawer is gone, so all of your apps appear on the homepage. Get cracking on folders

We don’t have LG G5 benchmarks just yet since this is a prototype, but when we test out the phone for its final review, we’ll be sure to add them and compare them to the Samsung Galaxy S7.

Camera

The thing I like about LG and its smartphones is that it always seems to take chances with new technology, and that inventiveness is fully realized in LG G5 dual rear camera.

LG G5

It uses both a 16MP and 8MP camera, and while the smaller 8MP number makes that second camera automatically seem inferior, it’s my actually favorite due to its use of a wide-angle lens.

At a dramatic 135 degrees, the camera actually sees more than the human eye of about 120 to 124 degrees. It’s field of view is able to capture everything you see and more.

That means the large iconic building or tower behind you in vacation photos can be captured without your stranger-photographer having to back up to a seemingly infinite degree.

You could resort to a panoramic photo, but that’s more time-consuming and I wouldn’t trust anyone else but me to smoothly pan with my new phone. I wanted to get myself, my loved ones and everything else in the shot, and this is a clean way of doing it.

Snapping away on the beach, I was able to capture the entire horizon from end to end, not just a small segment of the sand. It looked good, but its practicality is limited.

What is missing is a selfie camera that does the same, and I found even more useful in the LG V10. It really impressed me with its wide angle front-facing camera, it’s not here.

I can almost always do just that when using a rear-facing camera, or resort to a panoramic if I’m not in it, but I can’t back up on a selfie photo. My arm is only so long, and no, Samsung’s software-stitched wide selfie always turn out blurry and are not a real solution.

I want the best of both world, and this one falls short of providing that.

Accessories

Launching with an entire posse, the LG G5 already has accessories that are supposed to take the phone to the next level. I like the ideas of each, but unconvinced since they’re not built in.

LG G5 review

The LG Cam Plus replaces the phone’s metal chin with a rubberized camera grip that juts out the back. It has physical shutter button, a dial to zoom in and out and a 1,200mAh battery.

It was a bit more satisfying to have the autofocus by half shutter key, but it’s not really enough to make me want run out and upgrade my LG G5 with a strange camera grip bump.

The same can be said about the Hi-Fi Plus. It’s a portable Hi-Fi digital-to-audio converter that’s small, but still extends the size of the phone by replacing the metal chin.

Tuned by Bang & Olufsen, LG has cornered the market on 32-bit Hi-Fi DAC in the mobile world. It did a nice job of this on the LG V10, but its bigger phablet had the perk built-in, not as an accessory.

These “friends” as LG called them, make the LG G5 smaller in size, but I’m skeptical that I’m going to go out and buy them – or not lose them – and want to use them on a regular basis.

Battery life

The LG G5 battery life is still a big question mark given its newly confirmed capacity. It’s just 2,800mAh, down from the 3,000mAh battery of the LG G4 last year.

LG G5

Battery size doesn’t always mean anything. It has the much more energy efficient Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 chip and better software. Android 6.0 Marshmallow should also help.

The biggest benefit may be the fact that the LG G5 battery pack can be swapped out for a fresh one at any time. It’s easy enough to change out, but the good news is it takes some fingernail work to properly slide-out battery button that’s flush with the left side of the phone. You’re not going to accidentally hit this thing willy nilly, won’t worry.

LG G5 review

We’ll be sure to run extensive battery tests on the final LG G5 and take note of how it performs while not using it to see if Android 6.0 Marshmallow has an impact on this handset.

LG G5 review

Early Verdict

The LG G5 has a plain look, side-mounted volume buttons, a fingerprint sensor and a 5.3-inch display, making it like the metal version of the Nexus 5X with an extra tenth of an inch. That’s okay, because LG also built the Nexus 5X and it was a great phone for its price, and the two phones only look similar on the outside.

Inside, the LG G5 specs provide a significant upgrade, with a wide angle second camera on back, always-on display on front and the promise of modular accessories. The microSD card slot and removable battery remain, while the new Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 and 4GB of RAM touts significant speed boosts. The Samsung Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge launched first, but it should be enough to give you some pause before you use Android Pay to check out.

Powered by WPeMatico