Tuesday, May 19, 2020

One Plus 7 Review & Unboxing


One Plus 7 Review



Historically, OnePlus has had two big product launches every year. There’s one big launch in the Spring that represents a full step, and one closer to the end of the year that improves the device with whatever new tech has come out since. The latter is the “T” variant device.

Last year’s OnePlus 6T bested the OnePlus 6 with the addition of an in-display fingerprint sensor, a bigger battery, and a smaller notch. This year’s T-variant is a much bigger leap forward. Since the OnePlus 7, the company added a bigger 90Hz display, a new triple-camera system, and the newest gaming-focused processor from Qualcomm. Effectively, this is the OnePlus 7 Pro in a different body, but it’s actually better in many ways.

The OnePlus 7T is targeted at customers who want one of the fastest devices on the market for a price that’s nearly half of its competitors. If you’ve enjoyed OnePlus devices before this, you’ll adore the 7T.

Review video:






Design:

  • 160.94 x 74.44 x 8.13mm
  • 190g
  • Teardrop selfie camera
  • Flat edges
  • Circular triple-camera system
  • Stereo speakers
The OnePlus 7T looks similar to the OnePlus 7 on the front, but wildly different on the back. The display is slightly taller, giving it a longer 20:9 screen-to-body ratio. This extends the size of the display to 6.55 inches versus 6.41 inches on the OnePlus 7, and the change is noticeable in the hand. The phone feels a bit more candybar-shaped, and I’ve enjoyed the extra real-estate during my time with the device.

The waterdrop notch on the front has been scaled down a bit. While this isn’t incredibly noticeable versus the OnePlus 7, it’s nice to see OnePlus attempting to mitigate the notch as much as possible. Many of the devices the 7T competes against have eliminated the notch altogether at this point, and I’m sure OnePlus will continue to shrink the notch in its non-Pro devices over time.

What’s in the box:

 

  • 30W Warp Charge 30T charging brick
  • USB-A to USB-C cable
  • Clear TPU case
  • Quick start guide
The OnePlus 7T comes with the company’s new Warp Charge 30T charger. This is a 30W brick, but OnePlus says it has optimized energy transfer so it can charge phones 27% faster than its Warp Charge 30 brick. As with the previous brick, the charger keeps the phone from getting too hot by converting the voltage to 5V at 6A in the charger itself, instead of handling the conversion on the device.

As with the OnePlus 7 Pro, the 7T also comes with a TPU case. We’re always happy to see additions like this in the box, but OnePlus makes some of the nicest first-party cases on the market. We strongly suggest you check one of those out if you’re picking up the 7T.

Display

 
  • 6.55-inch 90Hz AMOLED display
  • 2,400 x 1,080 Full HD+ resolution
  • 20:9 aspect ratio
  • HDR10 / HDR+ certified, 42% less blue light
  • 403ppi
  • Optical in-display fingerprint sensor
OnePlus has put a big focus on displays over the last few years, and we’re happy to say the exceptional display quality of the OnePlus 7 Pro has trickled down to the new phone. The OnePlus 7T has a wonderful display.

OnePlus gave the 7T a 90Hz screen, and every time I switch back to a high refresh rate display I wonder how I ever did without one.

Simply scrolling around the phone feels weird in the best way, since most displays you use on a daily basis are 50Hz or 60Hz. It’s really hard to understand the phenomenon without seeing it for yourself, so I recommend you go look at one in a carrier store.

Performance:

  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 855 Plus
  • Adreno 640 GPU
  • 8GB of RAM
  • 128GB of UFS 3.0 storage
OnePlus’ motto has long been “fast and smooth,” and it’s no surprise this device continues that heritage. Oxygen OS is already quite minimal and streamlined, but it’s the components under the hood that really keep this thing running so quickly.

The OnePlus 7T uses Qualcomm’s premier Snapdragon 855 Plus processor, which is only in a couple of devices so far. This chip is clearly focused on gaming, with a pretty significant 15% boost to the GPU over the 855. Considering OnePlus devices have long been considered undercover gaming phones, this jump makes sense. Honestly, I’m impressed OnePlus was able to offer this chip at this price point.

The other hardware feature keeping the device running quickly is the UFS 3.0 storage. The company first introduced this much-faster storage option with the OnePlus 7 Pro, and it’s equally incredible that this feature has trickled down to the more affordable device so quickly.

Battery:

  • 3,800mAh
  • 30W charging
  • No wireless charging
The OnePlus 7T suffers from so-so battery life. OnePlus bumped the capacity to 3,800mAh versus 3,700mAh on the OnePlus 7, but the combination of the 90Hz display and higher-energy processor make this phone deliver average battery life at best. The battery lasts about as long as the Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus in our testing. 

Most days I was able to go from unplugging in the morning to after work no problem, but I often needed to give my phone a jump if I planned to go out for the night. If you care, I got about five hours and forty-five minutes of screen-on time by the time I reached five percent.

Fortunately, OnePlus includes a 30W charger with this device. The new Warp Charge 30T charger is also more efficient than the Warp Charge 30 charger included with the OnePlus 7 and OnePlus 7 Pro. The company says the new charger charges 23% faster. In our independent testing, we found it charged about 12% faster. The OnePlus 7T was able to charge from 0 to 100% in 70 minutes versus 81 minutes on the OnePlus 7, though that phone does have a 100mAh smaller battery. The 7T also charged to 75% in exactly half an hour, which gives you time to freshen up before a night out.

The Warp Charge 30T charger performs power management in the brick itself, which is meant to keep the device cool while charging, and it works fairly well. You can definitely feel the phone heat up, but it’s not bad at all; it stays much cooler than the OnePlus 7 Pro while charging.

There is no wireless charging in this device, which is a bit of a shame, but I think OnePlus is waiting for higher-speed wireless charging to become more standardized before it adds that feature.

Camera:


  • Standard: 48MP, f/1.6, OIS
  • Pixel-binned images at 12MP
  • Wide-angle: 13MP, f/2.2, 117-degree FoV
  • 2x telephoto: 12MP, f/2.2
  • Teardrop selfie camera: 16MP, f/2.0
Traditionally, OnePlus cameras haven’t been amazing. The company always touted bigger pixels and better low-light performance, but for a number of years we haven’t seen huge improvements. So, it was a surprise when the company started releasing rapid camera software updates for the OnePlus 7 Pro. 

At launch, the 7 Pro had a decent set of cameras, but they weren’t fantastic. Over time though, the images got better and better, and at this point, they are pretty damn good.

Continuing the trickle-down story of the OnePlus 7T, the company ported the improved camera software to this device. In good light, the images that come out of this phone are fantastic. For a device that costs just $499, this has got to be one of the best cameras available right now

The OnePlus 7T has three cameras on the rear, similar to the OnePlus 7 Pro. The main camera is the 48MP Sony IMX 586, which pixel-bins images to 12MP for better light gathering. The wide camera is technically a 13MP sensor, but it produces 12MP images. OnePlus does this in order to enable electronic image stabilization in video without noticeable cropping. The third camera is a 2x telephoto lens, down from the 3x telephoto shooter in the OnePlus 7 Pro. 

Unfortunately, there is no optical image stabilization in the telephoto lens, so you’ll need to hold a little more steady when using that shooter. The telephoto lens is 12MP.


Images are sharp, but not over-sharpened, and colors are overall great. There is a noticeable difference in the color profiles of the wide, standard, and telephoto cameras. It’s likely due to auto white balance using different sources at the different focal lengths.

OnePlus has added a motor to the camera system to allow for super macro shots, and the resulting images are pretty amazing. You can see individual fibers in things, and I feel that phone cameras are finally starting to become tools for everyday life.

Software:


  • Oxygen OS 10
  • Android 10
The OnePlus 7T is running on Oxygen OS 10 based on Android 10, making it one of the first devices to ship with Android’s newest release. The update brings more obvious changes like new navigation gestures and an option for dark mode, but OnePlus says there are over 370 tweaks and optimizations in the software. Other changes include a new reading mode that can show low-gamut color, an extended Zen Mode for longer breaks, and Game Space, which optimizes games on your device for high-fidelity play.

Oxygen OS, OnePlus’ Android skin, is one of my favorites. It’s simple and streamlined, and it additions to vanilla Android are actually useful. You’ve got a built-in screen recorder, reading mode, gaming mode, and more, and I love how OnePlus is able to make its OS so full-featured while also feeling streamlined.

This is based on Android 10’s gestures, so it’s not completely OnePlus’ fault, but it needs some tweaking. You swipe up to go home, pull in from the left or right to go back, and swipe up and hold to multitask. I often had trouble multitasking, and the phone would immediately pull focus back to the app I was just in. You really need to hold for the multitasking menu to pop up, and I think this could be improved.

The OS has already made its way to the OnePlus 7 Pro, and the company is one of the fastest to push Android version updates to its devices.

UPDATE: March 16, 2020 (1:00PM ET): The OnePlus 7T is still on the January 2020 security patch, which isn’t a good look. While being 2 months late to a security patch probably won’t impact your experience, we keep a hard look on devices to make sure they’re updated on time.

Audio:
  • No headphone jack
  • Stereo speakers
  • Dolby Atmos certified
The OnePlus 7T doesn’t have a headphone jack, but it does have dual stereo speakers, and they get super loud. When I tested them against the Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus, they were noticeably louder and didn’t seem to distort at all, even at max volume. The bass was a bit lacking comparatively, but it felt like the audio was more separated. All in all, I really like these speakers, and I think you’ll like them too if you’re listening to music without an external source.

If you are using Bluetooth, the OnePlus 7T supports Bluetooth 5, aptX, aptX HD, LDAC and AAC.


 


No comments:

Post a Comment