Nokia 5.1 review: Hands on with the Nokia 5’s more powerful sibling
The Nokia 5.1 has good build quality, a bright display and an even snappier performance
UPDATE: Nokia has now discontinued the original Nokia 5 (reviewed below) and replaced it with the Nokia 5.1. The new phone brings a number of changes, of which the most noticeable are the phone’s display and the placement of the fingerprint sensor, which has been moved from the front of the phone to the back.
The size of the screen is up from 5.2in to 5.5in – all down to the phone’s tall-thin 18:9 aspect ratio – and resolution is sharper, moving to 1080p from 720p.
The build quality remains top-notch and is arguably a little better this time, with an all-metal unibody that comes in a selection of colours: copper, blue and black.
Click here to see our gallery of Nokia 5.1 pictures
As for performance, there’s a switch from the quad-core Snapdragon 430 to the octa-core Mediatek 6755, and the phone’s rear-facing camera also receives a spec bump, going from a 13-megapixels to 16-megapixels. The Nokia 5.1 should be a phone that’s quicker and takes better photographs as a result.
The Nokia 5.1 will be available in July 2018 with prices starting from €189 (£180) for the model with 2GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage, rising to €219 (around £210) for the 3GB of RAM and 32GB storage variant.
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Continue reading for our original review of the Nokia 5
Nokia 5 review: What you need to know
The Nokia 5 is a 5.2in smartphone with an HD screen, a Snapdragon 430 processor, a front-mounted fingerprint sensor and a 13-megapixel camera.
The processor is able to handle intensive tasks, but is let down by the limited amount of RAM at its disposal, which means multitasking isn’t always smooth.
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Its display is extremely bright, but the 720p resolution is a disappointment when competitors offer Full HD displays. Ultimately the Nokia 5 doesn’t bring anything special to the table. For a similar price, we’d recommend the better specified Vodafone Smart V8, or the Lenovo P2 with its phenomenal battery life.
Nokia 5 review: Price and competition
The Nokia 5 costs around £160 SIM-free, or it can be found on contract starting from £13.99 a month. It’s available in four colours – Copper, Blue, Black and Silver.
It isn’t short of competitors, such as the Lenovo P2 from around £185, the Smart V8 at around £165, the Moto G5 from £149, and the Honor 6A from around £145.
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Nokia 5 review: Design and build quality
Perhaps the best thing about the Nokia 5 is its physical design. It feels every bit as nice as much more expensive handsets. Its soft round edges make the device easy to hold, and with its aluminium unibody, the phone should survive a knock or two.
At only 8mm thick, the device is slender too, and it only weighs 160g too, which is rather lightweight for a 5.2in device.
A fingerprint sensor is integrated into the home button, with capacitive buttons to either side. The power and volume buttons are on the right-hand side. A nano-SIM tray and microSD card expansion slot are found on the opposite side. The latter lets you add an additional 256GB of storage on top of the internal 16GB.
At the bottom of the device is a micro-USB charging port, and at the top, there’s a 3.5mm headphone jack. You’ll find an 8-megapixel camera at the front, and a 13-megapixel shooter with flash at the back.
The phone isn’t waterproof, water-resistant nor dustproof, and its 3,000mAh battery cannot be swapped out.
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Nokia 5 review: Display
The Nokia 5 has a 5.2in HD (1,280 x 720) IPS display, topped with Corning Gorilla Glass. That’s a lower resolution than you’ll find on the Vodafone Smart V8 and Lenovo P2, and it results in a low 282ppi pixel density, which makes text look a little less sharp than on rival devices.
On the plus side, the screen is extremely bright. Tested through the i1Display Pro, it reached a searing 578cd/m2. It’s one of the brightest displays I’ve laid my eyes on, so even in the mid-day glare you won’t have any viewing problems. For comparison, the Lenovo P2 achieves a maximum of only 326cd/m2.
The IPS display also has good colour coverage, hitting an impressive 92.8% of the sRGB gamut colour space; colours look vibrant and pop to life, and colour accuracy isn’t half bad either with an average Delta E of 2.89. Its 1,028:1 contrast ratio and 0.56cd/m2 black level are fine, but on the low side for an IPS display; if you’re watching a film with dark scenes, things might look a little on the grey side.
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Nokia 5 review: Software
Unlike other manufacturers that insist on customising Android and preinstalling a bunch of their own apps, Nokia has gone the purist route. The Nokia 5 runs a completely stock version of Android 7.1.1 Nougat, so there’s no bloatware or unfamiliar overlays to deal with. We like that very much.
Nokia 5 review: Performance
Inside the Nokia 5 there’s an eight-core 1.4GHz Snapdragon 430 CPU and 2GB of RAM. I’d have liked to see more RAM included to better deal with multitasking: if you’re playing Pokemon GO with a few tabs open on Chrome in the background, you’ll find the phone struggling to keep up.
When it comes to single tasks, though, the Nokia 5 can cope with anything you throw at it. In the multi-platform Geekbench 4 benchmark, it outpaced almost all of its competitors, and was only marginally beaten by the Lenovo P2, which features a more powerful Snapdragon 625 processor.
^ Nokia 5: Geekbench 4
Like most budget phones, the Nokia 5 isn’t really up to handling intensive games. You’ll be able to play Candy Crush and Temple Run perfectly smoothly, but in the GFXBench Manhattan 3.0 onscreen test it managed an average of only 14fps.
^ Nokia 5: Battery life
Battery life is fantastic. The Nokia 5 lasted 14hrs 53mins in our video rundown test, so it’ll get you through a day of use. For comparison, the Moto G5 lasted 11hrs 51mins in the same test, while the Lenovo P2 that leads the way with a staggering 28hrs 50mins.
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Nokia 5 review: Camera
The Nokia 5’s rear camera is a 13-megapixel model with a f/2.0 lens. Detail is good, and there isn’t any noticeable smearing, but with default settings, things can come out looking rather drab. For example, see the image below of an overcast day: the building looks dark, there are lots of shadows around the trees to the right-hand side of the image, and the glass room on the left-hand side is quite hard to distinguish.
^ Without HDR enabled, colours are rather dark, but image detail is good
Happily, when you toggle HDR on, images suddenly come to life: everything becomes a lot brighter and colourful. Comparing the image below (with HDR) and the image above (without HDR), you’ll see the trees are a lot greener, the building at the foreground has a lot less shadows and the glass at the left-hand side looks a lot better.
^ With HDR enabled, the image is a lot more vibrant and accurate
Unexpectedly, the Nokia 5 camera does suffer a little from lens distortion, which isn’t something I’ve noticed in other sub-£200 smartphones. In the HDR image below, you’ll be able to notice the BT Tower is almost like the Leaning Tower of Pisa. If you’ll be taking a lot of landscape shots with the Nokia 5, you might need to use an app to correct them after the fact.
^ Lens distortion occurring on the BT tower to the right-hand side of the image
Low-light performance isn’t the best either, with a lot of image noise obscuring detail. Turning on the flash improves the lighting, and gives you much sharper pictures, but unfortunately, it also gives everything an unwelcome blue tint.
^ In low light, the camera struggles to keep image noise down
^ Shot taken with the flash can come out with a blue cast
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Nokia 5 review: Verdict
The Nokia 5 is an attractive phone, but it lacks a standout feature that would justify choosing it over other phones in this price range. Its biggest strength is the extremely bright screen, and its impressive battery life, but that’s not enough to swing the deal.
Instead, I’d suggest you stick with the Lenovo P2 that offers better battery life or Vodafone Smart V8, which is speedy – both are great sub-£200 phones that really do stand out from the crowd. Thus, my verdict from late-2017 hasn’t changed. There are better phones out there for the same price. Put the Nokia 5 at around £120 and we’ll have ourselves a real contender, till then, its rivals will always have a one-up on it.
Hardware | |
---|---|
Processor | Octa-core 1.4 GHz Cortex-A53 Snapdragon 430 |
RAM | 2GB |
Screen size | 5.2in |
Screen resolution | 720 x 1280 |
Screen type | IPS |
Front camera | 8 megapixels |
Rear camera | 13 megapixels |
Flash | LED |
GPS | Yes |
Compass | Yes |
Storage (free) | 32GB |
Memory card slot (supplied) | MicroSD (128GB) |
Wi-Fi | 802.11 b/g/n/ac |
Bluetooth | 4.1 |
NFC | Yes |
Wireless data | 4G |
Dimensions | 149.7 x 72.5 x 8 mm |
Weight | 160g |
Features | |
Operating system | Android 7.1.1 |
Battery size | 3,000 mAh |
Buying information | |
Warranty | 1 year RTB |
Price SIM-free (inc VAT) | £179 |