Introduction

The Huawei Ascend P7 is the sequel to the ultra-thin P6, the phone that proved, beyond any doubt, Huawei's ability to create visually appealing handsets. The new model builds on the original with a 5" 1080p screen, superior camera and chipset, plus a number of other improvements.



Huawei Ascend P7 official pictures

The defining feature of the Ascend P6 was the 6.2mm thin body (touted as "the thinnest smartphone") and a faux metal back. The new Ascend P7 can claim neither of those things as it's thicker (7.1mm) and has a glass-covered back. But what a double textured finish indeed! One to fall in love with!

There is metal framing, and the whole thing is sandwiched between two layers of Gorilla Glass 3 - especially welcome on the front, where the new 5" IPS screen of 1080p resolution is well worth protecting. Even without having the P6 and P7 side by side, we instantly appreciated the extra clarity afforded by the higher pixel density.

Enough teasing the new specs, here are the other ups (and downs) of the Huawei Ascend P7.

Key features

Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE; penta-band 3G with HSPA; LTE Cat. 4

5" 16M-color 1080p IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen with Gorilla Glass 3, usable with gloves

Android OS v4.4.2 KitKat with Emotion UI

Quad-core 1.8 GHz Cortex-A9, Mali-450 GPU; 2GB of RAM; Huawei Kirin 910T chipset

13MP autofocus camera with LED flash, 1080p video recording @ 30fps

8MP front-facing camera, 1080p video recording, selfie panorama mode

Dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi Direct and DLNA

GPS with A-GPS and GLONASS

16GB of built-in storage (12GB available to user)

side-mounted microSD card slot, hot-swap

microUSB port with USB host, USB OTG

Bluetooth v4.0

FM radio

Standard 3.5mm audio jack

Accelerometer and proximity sensor, compass

Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic

2,500mAh battery

Main disadvantages

Chipset benchmarks poorly

Thicker than its predecessor

Non-exchangeable battery

Below average loudspeaker performance

The Ascend P7 takes photography seriously, especially selfies. The front-facing camera has an 8MP BSI sensor and features modes like face enhancement and selfie panorama. The camera on the back is sourced from Sony and is a 13MP shooter with 1080p video capture.

Huawei has also popped in a new chipset that brings more processing power and LTE support. Another plus is that the company claims to have fixed the overheating issues thanks to a more advanced manufacturing process. The phone comes with Android 4.4.2 KitKat with the most recent Emotion UI, while its P6 predecessor is still on Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean.



Huawei Ascend P7 at ours

The new chipset is still based on Cortex-A9, which is normally a notch below Qualcomm's Krait-based offerings, never mind the higher clock speed in the P7. Having seen the four Cortex-A7s do well enough in the Moto G though, we shouldn't be quick to judge on core architecture alone.

Follow us through the next pages where we explore the Huawei Ascend P7 in detail.