11 Mar

گوشی Huawei Honor 6

Huawei Honor 6 review

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Huawei Honor 6 official photos

The Honor 6 comes in an understated all-glass body that could have easily carried an Xperia badge. Speaking of, Honor is the only sort of branding and the Huawei logo is nowhere to be seen. Whatever marketing strategies are at play, the company’s expertise is undeniable and is surely carried over to the Honor 6.

Just because the Honor 6 isn’t readily identifiable though, doesn’t mean it’s not well built. Actually, if you manage to keep it clean, it’s quite a looker.

Yet, its focus is clearly elsewhere. The device is aiming for a top spot on the bang-for-your-buck chart and on paper its outlook is promising. The phone packs a powerful home-brewed Kirin 920 chipset with an octa-core processor, backed up by an ample 3GB of RAM. You get a 5″ display which some consider the limit for pocketability, and it’s also a FullHD panel, so everything should be tack-sharp.

Imaging is duly covered both back and front. A 13MP main camera with dual-LED flash for the major photography occasions is backed by a 5MP wide angle font-facer for the selfies that just have to be posted and shared. Another solid spec is the battery capacity, where Huawei claims the 3100mAh unit will keep the Honor 6 going for two full days.

Key features

  • 5.0″ 1080p display for a crisp 445ppi density
  • HiSilicon Kirin 920 chipset
  • Octa-core processor built on the big.LITTLE architecture with four 1.7GHz Cortex-A15 performance cores and four 1.3GHz power-efficient Cortex-A7′s, Mali-T628 MP4 GPU
  • Flagship-grade 3GB of RAM
  • 16/32GB of built-in storage, expandable via microSD up to 64GB
  • Extensive connectivity options, including cat. 6 LTE for download speeds up to 300Mbps
  • 13MP main camera with dual-LED flash and 1080p video
  • 5MP front shooter, 720p for video calls
  • 3,100mAh battery capacity
  • FM radio
  • Android 4.4.2 with EmotionUI 2.3
  • Adequate build, at 130g very light for a 5-incher with such battery capacity

Main disadvantages

  • No Lollipop at launch
  • Non-removable battery
  • All-glass body is a fingerprint magnet
  • Basic retail package

The above list points to a rich and balanced package with no major flaws to speak of – except perhaps the OS version but that’s mendable. The hardware is well-thought of and promises solid performance, hard to match in a device costing €300/$340. While the battery may not be user-replaceable, its high capacity should offset that shortcoming. And the other disadvantages clearly fall in the “minor niggle” category.