Hey guys I'm should lead from digit dot in and our topic of discussion today is the new Opel Reno 3 Pro. Now this is a smartphone that just launched in the Indian smartphone market and always throwing in some big numbers, especially around the camera of this phone. Why does it do so? It's primarily because the primary sensor here is a 64 megapixel, Sampson gw1 sensor, followed by another telephoto lens that can go up to 2 X in optical zoom and up to 20 X in hybrid zoom, then there's another 8 megapixel ultra-wide sensor and a 2 megapixel black-and-white sensor that aids in your taking portraits and adding a lot of effects and filter to your photos. Now on the front, you have a dual punch: hole: selfie camera, there are two cameras drilled right into the display. The first one here is a 44 megapixel, selfie camera I'm being told that if the highest a selfie camera has ever gone on a smartphone and that's coupled with another 2 megapixel depth of field sensor to let you take all those fancy portrait photos from the front camera now. These are all big numbers and that calls for big investigation and that's exactly what we did.
We tested the camera out across more or less much of the common situations, taking photos of things that we encounter mostly in our daily lives, but before we begin I just want to take the time out to thank you guys for all the feedback that you guys left in our videos that we published last week. Thank you so much for that and don't forget to hit the bell icon to keep up to date with all our results from our test lab. Now, with that out of the way, let's begin, let's start with the 6000 megapixel camera, the 64 megapixel camera on the Renault 3 Pro is made by Samson. It's the isis-held gw1 sensor measuring 1 by 1 point 7 2 inches in size. That's a lot of surface area to capture a lot more light in mission and deliver a higher sharpness and details in your images.
Does it really do so in some cases it? Yes, it does photos of buildings, landscapes and the usual sceneries. They come out really nice. You have a lot of good details in your textures. Sharpness is right on point and even the dynamic range is okay to work with what is not good with the 64 m PK Murray is foliage and flowers. You see, if you take a close-up of a flower, you would want to go close to capture all the nice textures on the flower and everything you can't do that with this phone.
It's because you can't really go much closer to your subject, you're using the 64 MP lens, and that can cause an issue for a phone at this price. You see. Most phones in this price range tend to do foliage and flowers pretty well. So the operator you know three kinds of seems like an outlier. In this case, um there's also a case of over sharpening when you're a dazzle mode is turned on.
Yes, that's a filter that you turn on to increase the vibrancy and clarity in your images that also results in a higher contrast, a lot more saturation and a lot of over processing, especially over sharpening. So your images when it when they were sharpening it look kind of looks like this, that in your screen, you can control it by turning it off, but know that when you turn it off, your colors also go away with that. So make what you want with that mode. If you want to use it, you can keep it on, and you'll get a slightly more saturated photo. Remove it, and you'll get a more natural-looking photo that again needs a little of editing imposed to.
You know, make it palatable for social media. Apart from that, you have your 16 megapixel build shots. Yes, that's the USP of a 64 megapixel camera. Of course, it doesn't shoot at 64m people. If it does, the file sizes tend to be a lot more, not bigger and will eat up your internal storage space in no time.
So what it does is it bins for pixels into one? It takes point eight micron pixels, that's the default size of pixel in this sensor and combines four of them to create one large 1.6 micron image. What that results in is a lot higher detail, intention and better sharpness, as you can see from the images on your screen. So let's move on to the 13 megapixel telephoto lens. Now this one has an aperture of f/4 and can deliver 2 X optical zoom and 5 X, 10 X and 20x hybrid 2. Now 2, X optical zoom is good to work with like when the light is good.
You get a lot of details and the photos come out really sharp. Now, as you go closer and closer with 5 X, 10, X and 20x, you start losing in the details. Yes at 5x, the image still looks quite sharp by default, but if you zoom in even further you're going to see the detail start to disappear at 10x, 20x, there's even lesser details and, to be honest, the only good use case I could find of the 20x zoom in this phone is to read coatings that are far away. Apart from that, you might not be needing the 20x zoom at any point of time. Good part is the 2 X optical zoom results in some pretty crisp images.
Some of those are out laid on your screen right now, so now that we have talked about the telephoto lens, let's quickly glanced over the ultra-wide lens, the 8mp ultra-wide lens on the Reynolds reprove is actually the weakest of the four lenses. Why do we say that now, while it takes decent images in the day, you might not find a lot of details in the shot, especially around the edges and at the bottom? Now, if you see from this image in your screen, the building looks nice and sharp. But if you look at the edges, especially at the bottom, which is quite dark, there's no detail whatsoever, and it's all smudged if it's sharp by default, but don't try to zoom in is what we would say now, let's talk about the low light mode or as what OPPO likes to call it the ultra night mode. The good thing about the ultra light mode is that it works with all the full lenses, including the ultra-wide 64 megapixel primary telephoto at 2, X, 5 X, all the way up to 20x, but the catch is that it's only good enough to be used from just one mood you see during the course of our testing. We figured out the Reynolds retro that was shipped to us.
It was running on an incomplete software build. Why do we say that? That's because the ultra-wide mode, when used in conjunction with the ultra light mode, results in images that look straight out of a matrix movie? Yes, you can see those images right now on the screen, and it's clear that these images are not the final output that we should expect from a phone priced as high as the Renault 3 Pro. If you can look past that the night mode is actually okay and decent to work with at 1x using six four megapixel lens with the night mode on you get decently sharp images that are ok to view by default, but don't try to zoom in because if you ride a zoom in all the details will be lost right there, but for a phone that costs, thirty thousand I would expect a lot more from this night mode. To be honest, but the night mode is not it's USB. Its USP is 44 megapixel front camera, and it happens to be the world's first smartphone to come with such a large selfie camera.
But the catch here is that your selfie still would come out at 10 megapixels because of pixel pinning plus more than that, while the promise of a high resolution sensor is always more details and higher sharpness. The AI beautification algorithm that this phone comes with mostly ruins that whole effect, the AI beautification filter will smoothen out the skin, remove all the blemishes and make you look picture-perfect, which is not always the case. You would want some level of realism in your selfies as well, and that's what the Xperia node3 grow does not offer with the AI verification to are turned on turn it off, and you're good to go with some pretty sharp images from the selfie camera. Now, let's sum it up, the quad cameras track at the back of the Renault 3 Pro is packed with a lot of features, but the performance in itself is quite underwhelming. Yes, it does certain things really nice.
We saw the camera, take perfect photos of Billy of landscapes of textures, but where it really fails, is in taking photos of close-up shots like a flower or even like bushes and shrub, and none of the features in the Renault 3 proved managed to really punch above the roof like the first Renault Tate the ran out and exhume. That's still, my favorite from the series and the Renault 3 Pro seems to be like a trickle-down effect of the 10x zoom to a more affordable segment. What it does offer is a lot of good features to entice you in, but the performance in itself leaves a lot to be asked now. I still have reasons to believe that this is not the final software that the Renault sweep Lowe is running right now, and we have reached out to a pool for an updated statement. Where are they going to push out an update on time for the launch as and when they do respond? We're going to update the comment section with the updated statement, so stay tuned for that, but other than that, we'll also be looking into the performance overall of the Renault 3 pro see how the MediaTek hello p95 performs, especially when it comes to gaming in another video, so stay tuned.
For that and do let us know what you thought of this video in the comment section below and for more videos like this stay tuned, rigid.
Source : Digit