The CUBOT H1 Smartphone Test: A Month with 3-4 Days of Battery per Charge

The last time I did a full road test of a smartphone, I was switching from the rather beat-up Samsung Galaxy S2 to the “glorious” 6-inch HTC One max, and at the time my smartphone use consisted of taking photos and basic gaming. Two years passed and I upgraded again because the One max had become extremely slow and I now use my phone a lot to write reviews on the road. The phone I chose for the next round comes from a whimsical, but humble, number, from CUBOT, a Chinese company based in Shenzhen.

Now, phones aren’t the best place to multitask like a desktop is – even a tablet or iPad Pro works best when using just one or two apps. However, when you start increasing your volume, especially when using browser tabs, it helps to have a responsive device with a lot of memory so you can reduce switching times. That’s why having only 1 GB of RAM and an older eMMC for storage were limiting factors, and the cubot Cell Phone’s reduced battery life made a change inevitable, even if the large 6-inch device build is now my platform of choice. Another factor is older Android versions that cannot benefit from the latest updates. Granted, there were suggestions that I should do a factory reset, or flash Android updates, but I decided to do the regular user thing and upgrade – I’ve been uncomfortable using flash tools on personal devices before, as some users have been without vendor software Flashing the BIOS feels uncomfortable. But now is the time to invest in new equipment for a number of reasons.


So, through my search, I finally decided that one big thing that is very important for a smartphone is the cubot Cell Phone battery life, I want something that can last more than a day or two. I usually carry a battery pack, but it’s just an extra item I have to remember to charge and carry with me. Whether it is a large battery or an efficient design, coupled with a mid-to-high-end SoC and a considerable amount of DRAM, it is the icing on the cake. Of course, it’s almost impossible to get all of this for £200, but I sure hope so. Of course, GSMArena became a good place to search for cell phone batterysizes, and I quickly found the Gionee Marathon series. When looking at one of the Gionee smartphones on Amazon, the CUBOT H1 appeared in the recommended list with a  CUBOT H1 battery capacity of 5200 mAh (for comparison, the iPhone 5c has a  iPhone 5cbattery capacity of 1510 mAh and most high-end devices have a battery capacity of 2500-3000 mAh). I read through the specs – the 5.5-inch display is a plus, the 1280×720 resolution is lower (arguably but a good idea to extend the battery life of the CUBOT H1), and it comes with Android 5.1 It lists DRAM/storage capacities of 2GB/16GB, which isn’t great but is certainly an upgrade, and the 1 GHz quad-core MediaTek A53 doesn’t exactly fill me with hope compared to the 1.7 GHz quad-core Krait 300 That was in One max. It also has a removable battery, dual-SIM support (a feature I’ve been wanting since I’ve been traveling a lot this year), and dual-SIM-independent microSD support. 


 Aside from battery life, one element that does jump out from the page is the price. It’s priced at £125 (equivalent to $160 before tax) for a 5.5-inch 720p smartphone. It’s obvious that a smartphone at this price is going to cut corners – aside from the fact that the SoC is one of MediaTek’s talked about “super-midrange” processors the body is plastic and only one SIM slot is LTE Cat 4 and the other is just GSM. The camera is also very basic, and the Wi-Fi is only single-stream 802.11n, which would usually be a cause for concern

In terms of dimensions, it’s slightly deeper than other smartphones (9.2mm compared to the usual 6.7-7.8mm is redundant) and it also weighs 201 grams due to the HTC One max battery , but surprisingly It’s lighter than the HTC One max’s 217 grams. Also worth mentioning is microSD support, which only supports up to 32GB and isn’t usually listed on spec sheets. Still, giving up my hard – Earned money was an easy enough choice. Probably the biggest concern about the price is the screen, and whether the 1280×720 resolution is high enough for my use, or whether the color accuracy is sufficient for normal content consumption. So if the monitor’s blue is oversaturated (which it isn’t, but as an example) then it will be quickly ignored. One factor mentioned among others was the battery,

with some colleagues concerned it might be a cheap design that would fail after three months. That being said, a spare  cell phone battery y should be cheap enough that if I blow it completely I can get a brand new one and still have it in my pocket compared to the high-end Zenfone 2. Color options from third-party sellers on Amazon are listed as black, white, or gold (sic). I naturally seek glory.

Most smartphone boxes are pretty basic and this one is no exception, but at least it’s a proper retail box rather than some basic cardboard thing. Alongside the H1 smartphone comes a simple plastic silicone case with holes for the rear camera and speakers, a pre- applied screen protector on the front, and a second one in the box. On top of that, there’s a wall charger and a USB-A to micro-USB cable that allow you to use the H1 as a CUBOT H1 battery pack to charge other devices.


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