The Guardian Australia

OnePlus 8T review: slick phone fully charges in just 37 minutes

- Samuel Gibbs Consumer technology editor

The OnePlus 8T replaces the OnePlus 8 released just six months ago, with a flatter and faster screen and incredibly quick charging.

The smartphone costs £549 or £649 depending on storage and sits between the mid-range £379 OnePlus Nord and top-end £799 OnePlus 8 Pro.

The design of the 8T has more in common with the Nord than its predecesso­r or the 8 Pro, due to adopting a traditiona­l flat screen rather than one that curves at the sides. The switch makes the phone 1.2mm wider than its predecesso­r despite it having the same 6.55in screen.

The screen also has a higher refresh rate at 120Hz versus 90Hz, matching the best in the business for smoothness, brightness and colour.

The sides of the device are aluminium and the back is glass. The green colour variant has a new glass treatment that almost completely removes the nuisance of fingerprin­t smudges while staying glossy. The phone has OnePlus’s excellent alert slider on the side, a good set of stereo speakers and a USB-C port in the bottom, but no headphone socket nor official water resistance rating.

The 8T is on the large side of normal phones but is fairly easy to grip. It comes with a plastic screen protector applied, plus a good clear plastic case is included in the box in Europe too. Specificat­ions

Screen: 6.55in 120Hz FHD+

AMOLED (402ppi)

Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 865

RAM: 8 or 12GB of RAM

Storage: 128 or 256GB (UFS 3.1) Operating system: OxygenOS 11 based on Android 11

Camera: four rear cameras: 48MP, 16MP ultra-wide, 5MP macro, 2MP monochrome; 16MP front-facing camera

Connectivi­ty: 5G, dual sim, wifi 6, NFC, Bluetooth 5.1 (aptX/HD. LDAC, AAC) and location

Water resistance: no official rating Dimensions: 160.7 x 74.1 x 8.4mm Weight: 188g

Top performanc­e, super-speed charging

The 8T has the same Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 processor as its predecesso­r and 8 or 12GB of RAM, depending on how much storage you choose. It is 5G-enabled and supports two sim cards at once.

The 8T therefore performs just as fast and as snappily as both the older 8 and the current 8 Pro – the latter also has the same chip. That means it’s one of the fastest devices on the market.

The 8T has a new battery design and charging system. Instead of having one battery inside the phone it has two that work together. For recharging that means both can charge at the same time for a higher rate of charging.

The batteries last just under 33 hours between charges, which is about the same as its predecesso­r, making it from 7am on day one until around 4pm on day two with the screen set to 120Hz. During the test the phone was on 5G for two hours with the rest of the time spent on wifi. You’ll get longer with 5G and the 120Hz screen mode turned off.

The new WarpCharge 65 system will fully charge the phone in just 37 minutes (two minutes faster than OnePlus states), which beats practicall­y everything else. That’s a full charge in 28 minutes quicker than the phone’s predecesso­r, which was already very fast charging. It hits 50% in 14 minutes.

If charged via a third-party USBC charger, rather than the included 65W charger and cable, the phone will charge at up to rates of 27W, which is still faster than most competitor­s that are limited to 18-24W. To keep everything safe the phone has 11 temperatur­e sensors plus one in the charger to make sure nothing overheats while charging at the fastest rates, although the phone stays surprising­ly cool. There’s no wireless charging available.

The OnePlus charger can also charge other devices at 45W. It supports the latest USB Power Delivery Programmab­le Power Supply (PPS) standard, which is required by some tablets, computers and smartphone­s for fast charging, including those from Samsung. PPS-enabled chargers are fairly rare and expensive so it is very good to see one included here and removes the need for yet another charger for other devices.

Sustainabi­lity

OnePlus rates the battery in the 8T for 800 full-charge cycles till 80% capacity – better than the typical 500 cycles of other rechargeab­le batteries. Battery longevity is also aided by an optimised charging system that delays full charges overnight until closer to when you wake up so not to keep the battery stuck at 100% for extended periods. The battery can be replaced for £18 excluding VAT and labour and the smartphone is generally repairable by OnePlus in the UK, with the screen costing £130.50 excluding VAT and labour to replace.

The firm offers a trade-in programme for its own phones and models from rivals. It did not comment on the use of recycled materials in its smartphone­s.

OxygenOS 11

OxygenOS 11 is the firm’s customised version of Android 11, here making a slight departure in design from previous iterations of OxygenOS.

It gains Android 11’s standard changes, including the upgraded media controls, faster access to smart home devices and Google Pay via a powerbutto­n menu, and enhanced messaging app notificati­on controls.

But new for OnePlus is a quickacces­s dark mode toggle and an ambient display mode, which puts notificati­ons, the time and music playback informatio­n on the phone’s screen while it is not in use. It is a feature most rival manufactur­ers have had for some time, but here is executed very well.

Also new is an attempt to make using a large phone with one hand a little easier mirroring the design of Samsung’s One UI, which puts the parts of apps you interact with closer to the bottom of the screen and informatio­n that you don’t have to tap towards the top of the screen.

Overall, OxygenOS 11 is still one of the most refined and slick versions of Android available, with plenty of customisat­ion options but minimal bloat and fast performanc­e.

OnePlus offers software support for at least three years from release, including two years of Android version updates and then a further year of security updates on a bi-monthly schedule. Updates to new versions of Android are fairly fast post-release by Google too.

Camera

The 8T has the same main 48megapixe­l camera and 16-megapixel ultra-wide-angle camera as its predecesso­r plus a new 5-megapixel macro camera and a 2-megapixel monochrome camera. There’s no telephoto zoom camera, however.

The main and ultra-wide angle cameras perform very similarly to the OnePlus 8, producing excellent standard photos in good to medium light, with automatic HDR where needed handling high-contrast scenes well. New is an automatic Nightscape mode that kicks in when shooting in low-light for better photos.

The 5MP macro camera is an improvemen­t on the really poor 2MP version in the OnePlus 8, but I still got sharper images using the main camera and zooming in a bit.

The 2MP monochrome camera doesn’t shoot images directly. Instead it is used as a colour sensor for the main camera applying a monochrome filter through hardware rather than purely software. The results are better than a software filter and fun to play with, but the images aren’t as pin-sharp as you’d typically get with a full 20MP monochrome camera on competitor­s in the past.

The front-facing 16MP camera is fixed-focus but is really good, producing highly detailed and well-balanced images in good and medium light, with a reasonable portrait mode available too.

Observatio­ns

The haptic vibrations are excellent: short, sharp and powerful.

The alarm app can wake the phone from completely off as long as it still has battery in the morning.

Price

The OnePlus 8T comes in two versions in the UK. The silver version with 8GB of RAM and 128GB of storage costs £549 and the green version with 12GB of RAM and 256GB storage costs £699.

For comparison, the OnePlus 8 Pro has an RRP of £799, the OnePlus Nord costs £379, the Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra costs £1,179, the iPhone 11 costs £599 and the Fairphone 3+ costs £425.

Verdict

The OnePlus 8T is yet another topspec, very well-priced, excellent phone from the Chinese smartphone brand.

It has a great 120Hz screen, good build, attractive design, the very best of performanc­e, good battery life, 5G, dual-sim and a good set of cameras. But it is the ultra-fast charging that is the real gamechange­r. A full charge in 37 minutes means you don’t have to worry about battery life, and could even turn it off overnight.

It’s not perfect. The lack of a telephoto camera is disappoint­ing, as is no official water resistance rating and only receiving three years of software updates. It’s also not really an upgrade from its predecesso­r the OnePlus 8 from April, but at £549 it is at least £50 cheaper at launch.

The OnePlus 8T is a lot of top-flight phone for the money – it undercuts much of the establishe­d competitio­n, making it yet another reason not to spend more than £600 on a phone.

Other reviews

OnePlus 8 Pro review: the Samsung killer

OnePlus Nord review: top-quality phone is true bargain at £379

Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra review: super-priced superphone

iPhone 11 review: an iPhone XR with a better camera

Fairphone 3+ review: ethical smartphone gets camera upgrades

 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian ?? Updated cut-price flagship Android phone is slick, snappy and charges super-quick.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/The Guardian Updated cut-price flagship Android phone is slick, snappy and charges super-quick.
 ?? Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/ The Guardian ?? The glass of the aquamarine back has a special finish that almost entirely blocks the appearance of fingerprin­ts and remains glossy.
Photograph: Samuel Gibbs/ The Guardian The glass of the aquamarine back has a special finish that almost entirely blocks the appearance of fingerprin­ts and remains glossy.

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