Huawei P30 Lite review By GSMArena Official

By GSMArena Official
Aug 15, 2021
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Huawei P30 Lite review

Hey, what's up guys, we've already taken an in-depth look at who always p-series flagships, the P 30 and the P 30 Pro? So now, let's take a look at the mid-range P 30 light. It had to cut a few corners in order to reach that lower price point. So does this still offer a solid smartphone experience and will for DSM marina, and this is our Huawei P 30 light review, even though it's less expensive, the Huawei P 30 light brings the same. Captivating looks you get from the more premium P 30 the back is made of glass, though here, instead of an aluminum frame, there is a plastic one, but it definitely doesn't feel flimsy or cheap, though the pearl-white model looks spotless, with chrome accents. In contrast, the peacock blue was a bit louder with this shiny metallic gradient. If you catch the light just right on the blue one, you get a wavy s.

Like reflection, pretty neat, my only real gripe with the build is that the large camera bump makes a wobble quite a lot on a desk, making it almost unusable there and, of course, there's no waterproofing. But it's hard to expect that at this price point on the front, the p30 light features a tall, 6.1 5 inch, IPS LCD with a 1080p resolution. There is a small water drop notch cut out for the selfie cam and as you'd expect from hallway, you can hide it with a black bar. If you want at 415, PPI content looks decent on this screen. It posted very good numbers, for contrast, though we have seen better in this class and colors can be impressively accurate in the RGB color space.

Maximum brightness is pretty good for an LCD at 501 nits in auto mode. In bright conditions, we did notice a contrast shift when tilting the screen and with a white background, you can notice that the panel looks a bit dimmer around the edges. The p30 light does have a notification LED up at the top above the notch. So you know if there's something that needs your attention for your audio there's a single speaker down at the bottom next to the USB port. It scored excellent loudness in our tests, but the output is lacking in the highs and the lower frequencies.

There is a regular headphone jack to plug into and sound through. Headphones are below average volume wise, but has good clarity. There is FM radio when you're plugged in as well. You can unlock the phone with a fingerprint scanner located on the back, it's quite fast and reliable and there's a face unlock option too. With the usual caveats it isn't as secure as a fingerprint, at least in this type of setup.

You get quite a bit of storage, onboard the p30 lights at 128 gigs, and it is expandable to do the hybrid micros slot. The user interface is Android 9 Pi, with hallways emu 9.0. On top, it isn't 9.1 like he got on the flagships, so you're missing the fancy new file system. Here all of your apps are on the home screen by default, but you can choose to keep them in an app drawer. Instead, swiping down on the home screen will open a search bar for your apps and contacts and going to the left on the home screen.

Brings you to a Google, News Feed. If you need to easy access to the notification shade, you can pull it down by swiping your finger on the fingerprint scanner, and, if you want, you can use gesture navigation instead of the on-screen navigation keys under the hood of the p30 light is hallways Cary, 710 chipsets in either four or six gigs of RAM. It delivers decent performance on par with competitors like the Snapdragon 660 and the Hello P 70. He has managed quite well and games run mostly without a hitch. Battery left on this phone is actually perfect.

It has a 3300 William hour battery, and it's scored a 94-hour endurance rating in our proprietary tests. That's a much better than last year's p20 lights. You do get fast charging as well. With the bundled 18 watt charger. We were able to go from 0 to 35% charge in half an hour.

The p30 light has a triple camera setup on the back. There's a 48 megapixel main camp, an 8 megapixel ultra-wide cam and a 2 megapixel death sensor for portrait mode, just like on Huawei's other recent phones. The main cam uses a quad Bayer filter and pixel visit, so its default output is 12 megapixels in good light. These look great with a good, colors, excellent detail and impressive dynamic range. You can opt to take photos and 48 megapixels, but this takes longer to capture and is a bit finicky when it does work as it's supposed to you can get a good image, but you often get a noisy photo digitally upscale from 12 megapixels.

There is no telephoto cam on the p30 light. So if you do decide to zoom, it's done digitally the ultra-wide camera produces good 8, megapixel images and the distortion correction, worse' straighten out the results. Fine detail is in grades, then an emic range is narrower than on the main camp. But colors and contrasts are excellent. We were quite impressed by the p30 lights portrait mode, especially for a mid-ranger.

These shots come out in 12 megapixels and have excellent subject: separation. The edge detection is pretty hard to fool, and transitions are well done in low-light, 12 megapixel shots from the main camera have good color, saturation and exposure. There is some noticeable noise, though, and highlights do get clipped if you switch to the dedicated night mode. All shot takes a bit longer. You'll have to win a few seconds, but the results are much better with more detail.

Even exposure, tolerable noise levels and accurate colors Clerk highlights are rescued too. There may be a little too much sharpening, though there is no night mode for the ultra wide-angle camera, which is a shame since his regular low-light images aren't very good. The p30 light has a 24 megapixel selfie camera with an f 2.0. Lens focus is fixed as usual. If you get the distance right and if there's plenty of light, you can get some detailed shots with spot-on colors video can be recorded and up to 1080p at 30 or 60 FPS.

The 30fps mode has electronic stabilization, which is always on this footage is quite nice with good contrast, lively colors, an impressive dynamic range, though the result detail is just average. Video is taken with the ultra wide-angle camera lacking in detail, but still have good colors in excellent dynamic range. So that's the Huawei P 30 light. It brings a sharp looking design, loss of storage, great battery life and nice camera performance all at a much lower price in the flagship versions. But ironically, it's the price that makes this phone tough to recommend, simply because there's so much competition in the market.

Right now at 350 euros, the p30 light isn't exactly cheap for a mid-range ER and there are other phones that can do what this guy can, or even better for less money. Once the price does go down, though it might be worth looking into thanks for watching guys and see you on the next one.


Source : GSMArena Official

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