The Citizen (KZN)

5G phones flow in

REGULATION­S: EASED FOR OPERATORS IN LOCKDOWN

- Thami Kwazi city@citizen.co.za Arthur Goldstuck is founder of World Wide Worx and editor-in-chief of Gadget.co.za Follow him on Twitter and Instagram on @art2gee

With LG’s release, the range available in SA started moving down the price curve.

When the new LG Velvet phone was launched via Facebook Live last week, it was hyped as “the best phone out there” by a pair of influencer­s roped in to wow the phone’s target audience.

And for the audience, namely the masses who would flock to Facebook for a product launch, that may well be true.

The key selling point of the Velvet is that it is the lowest cost 5G phone to arrive in South Africa, coming in at R13 499. That is marginally below the previous winner in this category, which also happens to be a 5G device: the LG

V50 ThinQ. It arrived in March at R13 599.

However, at the time, no 5G network was switched on for mobile phones.

Only Rain had rolled out 5G, but that was only for “fixed wireless”, meaning one had to have a 5G router in the home to pick up the signal. That is an alternativ­e to fibre-to-the-home broadband rather than to cellphone wireless broadband.

Much has changed in the four months since. Thanks to the lockdown, the communicat­ions regulator Icasa has issued emergency spectrum to all mobile operators to roll out 5G on their networks. Vodacom was first, launching at the beginning of May, followed by MTN at the beginning of July.

When the V50 was launched, its 5G capability was ignored due to the lack of network capability, but today it slots into a growing range of handsets that can take advantage of blazing speeds.

We tested it shortly after the Vodacom network was switched on, in an area with poor signal strength – lockdown restrictio­ns kept us from testing in the heart of Vodacom’s 5G coverage area at the time. The resultant 55Mbps download was the highest yet seen in that area.

Later, with lockdown easing and when one could expect that the network was more bedded down, the speeds were regularly over 500Mbps. Suddenly, 5G is a thing. Now, it makes sense to look at the available options, and to compare the phones leading the need for speed.

LG and Huawei are at the forefront in South Africa.

The best phone of the lot is no doubt the Huawei P40 Pro (reviewed last week), but it does have the disadvanta­ge of no Google Mobile Services, meaning no Google Play store. Instead, it depends on Huawei Mobile Services and the Huawei AppGallery.

Its camera capabiliti­es make up for the gap. With 50 Megapixel wide angle, 40 MP ultra-wide and 12MP telephoto, it edges out LG’s flagship, the V60 ThinQ.

The latter comes in at an eye-watering 64MP standard lens, but coupled with only a 13MP ultrawide and a 0.3MP depth lens.

Of course, it is the software that really dictates image quality, but LG has not been getting the best reviews in this department.

We’ll give our impression­s when we get our hands on the new devices, and in due course will explore the P40 Pro camera in more detail.

The price of 5G on flagship phones may well keep the mass market away. The Huawei P40 Pro ranges between R17 999 and R24 999, depending on outlet, while the LG V60 starts at R20 999.

In that context, the Velvet suddenly comes into its own. If camera is not key, and streaming speeds are important – the phone can also be used as a portable hotspot – it truly shines.

Despite being the lowest cost 5G phone in SA right now, it also happens to have two features that differenti­ate it.

It is the first of the 5G phones available here that uses Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 765G chipset. That doesn’t sound more powerful than the Snapdragon 865 used in the V60, but it is, in fact, the first mobile phone chipset from Qualcomm that builds the 5G modem into the processor.

The more powerful chips are required to be installed alongside a separate 5G modem, adding to the bulk and reducing efficiency.

This brings us to the Velvet’s second differenti­ator: it’s size and weight. Thanks to the combinatio­n in the 765G chip, it weighs only 180g, compared to the V60’s 213g and the P40 Pro’s 208g.

Suddenly, 5G is a thing.

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 ?? Pictures: i Stock & Supplied ??
Pictures: i Stock & Supplied
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 ?? GOLDSTUCK ON GADGETS Arthur Goldstuck ??
GOLDSTUCK ON GADGETS Arthur Goldstuck

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