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Introduction


Vivo enjoyed a good run with the X-series in 2015 and even snatched the world's slimmest phone title with the nativeChinese version of the X5Max. In 2016, the company is clearly trying to hold that momentum into the midrange with the V-series.


Vivo V3Max review


The company has made a reputation for collection nice concepts from rival makers and swing a spin of its own to them. The V3Max is no different however currently that Vivo already rings a bell globally, perhaps it's concerning time it stopped trying around for inspiration and vie to its own strengths.

Having said that, the Vivo V3Max is hardly a venturer. It bets heavily on the exterior it seems, like every different Vivo phone, and has more than cheap specs for the worth.

Speaking of which, here are the phone's key options.


Vivo V3Max key features:

5.5" 1080p IPS LCD  touchscreen, 401ppi
Metallic body with sand-blasted anodized aluminum alloy back cover
Qualcomm MSM8976 Snapdragon 652 chipset; octa-core CPU (quad-core 1.8GHz Cortex-A72 CPU and quad-core 1.4GHz Cortex-A53), Adreno 510 GPU, 4GB of RAM
13MP phase-detection autofocus camera, f/2.0 lens, single-LED flash; HDR, Panorama, Night, Pro mode, 1080@30fps, 1/4x slow motion recording, 10x timelapse
8MP front camera, f/2.4, 1080p video recording
32GB built-in storage
Hybrid Dual SIM/microSD slot
Android Lollipop 5.1 with FunTouch OS 2.5
Cat. four LTE (150/50Mbps); dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n; Bluetooth 4.1; GPS, GLONASS, Beidou; microUSB, FM radio
3,000mAh battery
Fingerprint reader
Standard 3.5mm headphone jack, powered by a Hi-Fi-grade 32-bit/192kHz DAC



The Vivo comes across as quite adequately equipped and even though its style is not innovative, it has e distinct premium feel and therefore the usual solid build. The Snapdragon 652 is quite capable together with the Adreno 405 GPU. The camera setup looks like a good package too, with a 13MP rear unit with a f/2.0 aperture. Vivo has a thing for this detector and it did quite well for them in previous phones.

Where things take a weird flip is the package department. The V3Max runs Android 5.1 (step it up to candy already, Vivo!) with the heavily customized FunTouch OS. The skin has a definite Apple feel thereto and will be a deal breaker for die-hard automaton fans.


this is the package





Battery life test

The battery inside the Vivo V3Max is a three,000mAh unit. While it's Associate in Nursing adequate size, it's not that big, especially considering the dimensions of the phone. Perhaps it's the most Vivo may afford to position within, given the phone's slim profile.

The V3Max managed nearly 29 hours of 3G speak time, which is fantastic. The web browsing score is ten and a 0.5hours, while video playback came in at nine hours and forty eight minutes. All that works out to an overall endurance rating of seventy hours. Standby battery efficiency turned out average.



Connectivity


The Vivo V3Max features dual-SIM with dual-standby. One of the SIM cards gets the complete 2G/3G/4G treatment across multiple bands each, while the alternative is proscribed to 2G. The slot inside the phone is hybrid, meaning you have to settle on between a secondary SIM card and a microSD card.

The smartphone has dual-band Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n with DLNA, Wi-Fi direct and hotspot support. The hotspot doesn't get a fast toggle tho', and you have to delve into the settings to show it on. There's Bluetooth v4.1, but no NFC.

The phone has GPS, GLONASS and Beidou support for location services. There's conjointly AN FM radio receiver, but no RDS.

The microUSB 2.0 port supports USB On-The-Go and lets you attach peripherals and you'll be able to conjointlyflower chain many devices. A standard three.5mm jack completes the wired connectivity package.


Performance


Vivo equipped the V3Max with the octa-core Snapdragon 652 chipset - the initial to feature a Cortex-A72 processor - the successor to the A57. The exact flower 652 configuration within the V3Max is four one.8GHz Cortex-A72 and four 1.4GHz Cortex-A53.

The GPU is also no slouch within the graphics department with associate degree Adreno 510 GPU, and there is also 4GB of RAM. Sounds nice, let's see how it will in benchmark tests.

Starting with the processor intensive GeekBench three, where the V3Max fails to score still because the equallyspec'd Samsung Galaxy A9. The reason is that GeekBench 3 tests the single-core performance of the Cortex-A53 core, which is not specifically a speed champion.


GeekBench 3

AnTuTu 6

Basemark OS II
GFX 3.1 Manhattan
Basemark X

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