Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus vs LG V50 ThinQ 5G Camera Comparison By Grant Likes Tech

By Grant Likes Tech
Aug 21, 2021
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Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus vs LG V50 ThinQ 5G Camera Comparison

Positive run Brett here and welcome back to another camera comparison, video and in this video I've got the content. Creators dream the LGA 50 up against the big boy, the Samsung Galaxy, Note, n plus, and so what you're saying is that blurred background effect, and so that is the portrait video from the LGA 50 and the live focus. Video from the note, 10 plus, and so this is being shot from the front facing cameras at 1080p and, like I, do in all my camera comparison, videos I'll, show you a bunch of photos and videos to give a pretty good idea of how these cameras are performing and in full disclosure. All this was being shot in auto mode, so pretty much running, gun, point-and-shoot style straight out of camera and I know that LG b---fifty has that great manual mode, but I want to show it in full, auto because I think that's what most people will be shooting with, and that's what I wanted to show you in this video and so with that being said, let's get on with the rest of the photos and video every one. So here's a bit of a video test from the rear facing cameras on each phone here at 1080p, and so both of these phones can record with all three cameras in 1080p wide-angle mean and telephoto, and so this is the wide-angle lens right now, I could switch over into the main lens on each. So it's nice, and you can actually switch between them while actually recording 1080p video, and it's a very nice blue, clear sunny day and just in the viewfinder is the LGA.50 is a little more realistic while the Samsung seems to be really producing some deeper blues, and I'm saying, but that could just be the displays we'll see when we compare this once it offloads the video here, but we'll pan over here to the right, and we'll go ahead and use the telephoto lens on each to focus in on that cell tower, and each of these has a ten times: digital zoom. So we've, if V 50 here 10 times zoom and that is extremely clear and stable from what I'm, seeing so usually 10 times.

Digital zooms don't look very good and are very shaky. But this is looking pretty good, so we'll go back to the main lens there, and we'll go ahead and zoom in on the note.10 plus my voice should have become more. He picks up the audio from whatever's in the distance, so I should be a little softer. As far as my voice. Here and again, the note m+ is also very clear and very stable at 10 times digital.

So we'll go back to the main lens again on the note, 10 plus kind of little more here and do a little of a focus test, so LGA 51st, so autofocus, pretty quick, we'll move off of it back onto the post locks in quickly and one more time so autofocus on the B 50 looks pretty good, we'll go with the note, 10 plus, and that locked in move it away. One more time so here also autofocus seems pretty good here on the note m+, and so we can do a bit of stabilization as well. So the note m+ has super steady mode, but you cannot use it on a one of the lenses. I think the telephoto, so I don't have it on right now. It's just using whatever stabilization has built into the phone, and I'll do one last panel on the park here.

Okay, like I, said the super study shot of note. M+ doesn't support the wide-angle lens, and so I turned it on now, and this is still tape. Ii will do a stabilization test again, so you compare it to be v50 stabilization and the note ten plus super steady modes here, so I'm just walking normally not trying to hold the cameras, extra, steady or anything just normal motion, and so let me know if you saw any of the kind of difference there with the super steady shot of the note ten plus okays. So here we are at 1080p 60 frames per second and on the note 10 plus, you can only use a main lens at 60 frames per second recording and on the V 50 I can use any of the lenses wide-angle main or telephoto, but once it starts, recording I cannot change it. So these are both on the main lenses here on the V 50 and a note 10 plus at 1080p 60 frames per second, and so we can go ahead and pan over here to the cell tower, and we lose the optical zoom here.

So I can go digital zoom, that's about three times on the B 50 and I can go all up to eight times at 60 frames per second here so eight times, digital zoom at 60 frames on the B 50 and not looking as clear as it did at 30 frames per second, but still fairly steady as you pan down and back up, and so we go back out, and we can zoom in on the note M plus. So that's roughly three times zoom there on the note, M plus, and it's a little more shaky, at least in the viewfinder. It could be stabilizing in post, and this still goes up to 10 times digital. They don't lose any of that range at 60 frames per second, but again it looks a little less clear and again, if you find it a little more shaky, it could be clearing up that shaking post I, don't know zoom all the way back out and quick autofocus, that's again on the post might be 50, so that focus then really quickly move away, focused back in and a little more time to focus on that one, and one last time there you go note, 10 plus focus is in pretty nicely back away. One more time doesn't look as great at depth of field, though at least what I'm seeing here as the V 50, but still quick, autofocus and very good with a stabilization test, walking down the stairs and so usually at 60 frames a little hard to stabilize.

So let me know what you think of how stable this looks again: I'm, not really trying extra hard to stabilize them, I'm just walking. Normally we do one last patter on the park again all right, and we're back this time at 4k, thirty frames per second and so on. The V 50 I have a ten-minute recording time limit here and on the note, ten plus I have no time we're much showing. So it seems to be unlimited, 4k recording here at 30 frames per second on note, M plus again 10-minute time amount on the B 50. Now these are both at wide-angle and so again, at 30 frames per second, even at 4k I can move between each of the lenses, while I'm recording, so I can move this back to the main lens here.

B 50 and note 10, plus and I, can go ahead and pan over again to the cell tower and when you test the optical zoom here on the V 50 and on the no attempt plus, and then we go into full zoom here so again, 10 times, digital zoom on the V 50, which is looking nice and pretty clear and stable, and I can go ahead and back that out again and again. Zoom in on denote m+, also ten times digital zoom and has the audio zoom in so my voice should be a little fainter now, and this is also very stable and very clear. So I'll go back to the mainland here and autofocus v50 that focused up very quickly and refocused and finally focused in so a little slower on the V, 50 I think, but a little better depth of field, and here on the note, 10 +, smokey step quicker there to me and again and one last time so very nice on the note, M + and here's a stabilization test, walking down the stairs again for K 30. So both of these should be doing fairly well. I believe they both have some kind of stabilization here out, even for K.

So let me know what you think of that and again one last quick pan on the park to see how it handles exposure and the changing light. Okay and lastly, here we have 4k at 60 frames per second, the V 50 has a six-minute timeout at 4k, 60, again I'm, not seeing any kind of time limit here on the no attempt, + and again at 60 frames per second on both of these phones. I cannot switch between the lenses, although on the V, 50 I can use the wide mean or telephoto, but once I start recording and cannot change between them. The note M plus I can only use the mainland and recording at 60 frames per second. So these are both on the main lens here, and so I can go ahead and pan over to the tower and again no optical zoom here so no telephoto zoom, but we can zoom in with digitally all the way here on the V 50 and again, that's an 8 times zoom at 60 frames per second and again, not looking as clear at 30 frames per second but fairly steady.

So I can zoom back out and zoom all the way in on the note m+, which keeps its Digital Ranger at 60 frames per second, but also not as clear as it is at 30 frames per second, but still pretty stable and again autofocus here at 4k 60 with the V 50 one more time there. It is so a little trickier to get that focus on the v50, but again I still think it has a nicer depth of field. So there's a focus on the note, 10 plus and one more time. Okay and so again, I'll walk down the stairs for a stabilization test at 4k, 60 and, as you all know, like I've, said, 60 frames per second a lot harder to stabilize. So, let's see how these do here, and that is our 4k 60 test on both of these phones here.

Everyone. So here is a front-facing camera test outdoors here, and they're both set at 1080p. The V 50 max resolution is 1080p, while the note 10 plus can record up to 4k, but this is an apples to apples comparison at the same resolution here again from the front-facing camera. Obviously outdoors. So this is some fairly decent lighting conditions in the shade I kind of pan around so I kind of see as the lighting changes in the background how it handles that exposure there I can step more into the light and the sunlight here and count around some more so the land sunlight is now facing directly on my face, see how that's having that harsh exposure there, and we'll pan back around, and we'll do a little stabilization test here.

So I'll just start walking, and so this is kind of a stabilization and performance you expect outside it and some changing lighting conditions here, and so, if you like to vlog or just take some front-facing video with your phones, this is about what you can expect here from each of these cameras. Ok, so here's another front-facing video test again, both at 1080p but the LAB 50 can record with a wide-angle lens and so when I start recording again switch between the two, so I thought I'd show you the difference here with the lab 50 and wide angle and the note temp plus in its standard lens. It cannot shoot what angle again, both at 1080p here. So just a quick front-facing camera test, showing the difference between the LGA 50 wide angle and the note 10 plus in its standard camera. So of course, with the wide angle lens.

Obviously, you're going to get a lot more in the picture with the V 50, but here's what it would look like between a two so that wide angle definitely comes in clutch. Shooting front-facing video to me makes a lot easier to film anything like this, and especially if you want to vlog from these cameras. Okay for the last front-facing video test here, I've got the note 10 Plus in its highest resolution, which is 4k and again the LGA 50 highest Ingoes is 1080p, so these are both from the standard lens 1080p on the V 54 K, on the note M plus. So let me know if you see any kind of improvement on the note.10 plus picture quality and hot looks compared to the LGA 50 here, and we'll do a quick stabilization test. I'll just quickly walk down the path here, give an idea of how it stabilizes, at 4k, with a note, M plus, and just how these two compare here: front-facing video 1080p versus 4k everyone.

So now that you've seen all the photos and videos I just want to end this video with my thoughts about quality cameras, performed, and so I might be glancing down sometimes because I've got my notes right here, but I want to make this very conversational and just do it in one take. So you can kind of see the actual video quality here from these front facing cameras, and so this is without the live focus mode. So this is just straight shooting from the front facing cameras. You know tens and for K and the B 50s at its max resolution and 1080p, and so, let's start with front facing cameras, I think overall I prefer the LGA 50 for both photos and video I thought the colors and the detail and sharpness just come off better on the D 50, for both photos and video, and it also has a nice portrait mode, so I think LG's dramatically improved their front-facing cameras. I, never liked them too much in the past, but I think it looks pretty good here.

Even in portrait mode, the edge detection and the background blur looks very nice, and now it's not all bad for the note, 10 I think they dramatically improved that live focus mode for both photos and video I. Think you're going to like live focus, video more on a note.10 then on the V 50, and it also has those additional filters for the live focus video. So if you like to play with that, they know Tim's got that for you, while VP 50 doesn't so, hopefully, Samsung can improve the life focus mode on the s-pen and other models through software, but they noticeably improve that here on the note 10. So if you like life, focused video I, think you know, 10 is the one to go with, but for overall just camera quality and everything else I would go with the B 50, especially since the B 50 also has that dedicated wide-angle front facing camera, so they no 10 can't do wide-angle video. You can do wide-angle photos, but the field of view just won't be as wide as levy 50 so front facing camerae definitely goes to the V 50.

To me for both photos and video for rear camera photos, I was actually surprised. The basic point and shoot shots were pretty much a push to me. Usually the Samsung photos come out a little more over saturated, I think that's an overused term, but it's actually good way to describe it. They were just really punchy, colors and the v50. While you think it would be more natural for a lot of the colorful shots, the color tones came out fairly similar overall they're going to be a little more muted than Samsung, but there are more vibrant than I thought they would be so still point-and-shoot shots.

I thought were pretty much even out of both cameras and be v50 really accelerates at that close up the macrophotography. So if you like to do that, to be fifty photos for macros and close-up shots come on much sharper with more detail and a lot more natural background blur. So if you like picking macros, if you just like point-and-shoot overall, that would take to be fifty and, of course, if you like to play wrong with manual mode, you're, probably likely to be fifty more. But for the note ten I think no ten I know the V. Fifty and LG has started the wide-angle trend on cameras, but I got to give it to the note ten and even off from the S 10 Samsung's wide-angle cameras since the best tenant.

Even in this no 10 are looking really, really good. You have a wider field of view than the LG G fifties, wide-angle camera and the photos just come out. Looking a lot nicer, more detailed and just better colors and overall, more pleasing looking photo there and also life okay, so portrait mode on the note 10, even from the rear facing camera like I said, has been dramatically improved over there pre based models, and it also has more flexibility. So Samsung actually has the ability, it'll, usually telephoto lens for the primary live, focus, reported shots and just the usability of that has improved in the note 10, it's easier to actually activate that portrait mode or life focus mode using that lens, but it's still a little tricky at times, and so it has the option to do. Wide-Angle live focus, so I can actually back out to a wider field of view.

It's a lot easier to take the photo, a lot easier to activate that background, blur or live focus mode, and the photos come out looking very nice, and so, while to be 50 portrait mode does look nice to be no ten little more flexible, like that, and I was able to get better portrait shots more assistant Lee on the note 10 and the other thing that I notice about the note n is it handled bright, sunlight a lot better than the v50 did in auto mode just handled for that bright, sunlight and exposure a lot better. So if you're shooting into some brighter sunlight during the day, if you're forced to do that, the note 10 seems to go, handle that better at least an auto mode, but for overall, if you're, just doing overall point-and-shoot basic macro, photography I would take the LG if you like, to do more portrait style. Shooting you like. The wide-angle I'll go with the note 10 and with rear camera. Video I thought the here's, where the difference comes into play, I think for photos.

The colors are a lot closer, but for video LG is definitely more natural. Samsung has the punch, your colors and I think overall Samsung's going to have the more pleasing looking video. But if you like a more natural tone to your video, you want better audio, and you want better zoom stabilization, the LG v, 50 wins and those categories there and the Samsung is overall, more pleasing I. Think because of those punch, your codes, like I, said it. Has that super steady mode and 1080p, which actually works very well and Samsung's audio, is still not bad.

I. Think the V, 50 and LG audio is just gonna, be better overall, but Samsung's audio has always been tradition, pretty good and even though 10 it sounded pretty good here. It's just that. Lg was just that much better I think louder richer, but overall you're not gonna, go wrong with Samsung audio, so again, I think if you want more natural tones, you want better audio out of the camera and just want better soon stabilization. Overall, that's going to be 350.

If you want more pleasing video with a bunch of colors and that superstation shot, the note 10 does a very nice job there as well. So those are just my basic thoughts about Hogged scan was performed here in auto mode up against each other. I want to hear what you have to think, though, so drop me a comment down below. Let me know what you think, how these cameras performed and what your preferences are. So those are just my thoughts and hope you enjoyed the video and, as always, thanks for watching.


Source : Grant Likes Tech

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