6000mAh Innos D6000 review specifications 3GB Qualcomm 615
Full review now finished. Click here to go to full Innos D6000 review.
It’s not thin at just under 12mm, it’s not light at 188 grams, and it’s not super-powered SoC wise, but beyond being priced right, it’s got a ton of special tacked on.
In keeping Gizbeat PG rated, I won’t be using some of the words I’d like in this preview. Suffice to say, put your Samsung, HTC and Sony up on Craig’s list, toss your iPhone in a lake and post on YouTube your Elephone being ground up in a blender. Here’s the Innos D6000, set to smack your current mobile into the junk drawer.
Innos D6000 review SoC
The SoC in the Innos D6000 is Qualcomm Snapdragon 615 (aka MSM8939). This SoC, in regards to power is generally considered a mid-range SoC, sitting behind the Snapdragon 800 series. Some of the phones that carry this SoC are the Oppo R5, Alcatel Idol 3 and HTC desire 820.
It’s not the most powerful setup, but is beyond powerful enough to run Android and demanding 3D games. To give benchmark geeks an idea of what we’re talking about, think 30,000 Antutu with 6500 3D (1920*1080).
The 615 carries a 64-bit 8-core CPU set in big.LITTLE configuration. That is, 4 Cortex-A53 cores set at 1.5GHz for doing the big-boy stuff: think gaming, CPU intensive apps, heavy websites. And, 4 Cortex-A53 cores set at 1.0GHz for lighter tasks: think chat apps, book reading apps, light web pages and for web pages after they’ve already rendered.
big.LITTLE is an excellent configuration setup to offer both performance in regards to processing power and battery life.
Innos D6000 review RAM / ROM
RAM on the D6000 is a hefty 3GB and is well beyond what’s required to run Android smoothly.
ROM storage is 32GB. Excellent to see Innos step up here and provide 32 as opposed to the standard 16. Assuming SD-storage expandable, 16GB is plenty for power users , but assuming they relegate all storage to one partition, this 32GB can be considered huge and provides an enormous amount of space for installing large games along with hundreds, if not thousands of apps.
In addition to the 32GB, the D6000 supports TF-SD expansion up to 128GB.
Innos D6000 review camera
Things just get better and better with the D6000. The rear camera on the Innos D6000 is outstanding, being the OV16825. This is a true 16MP 1/2.3″ sensor. This sensor size is the same as nearly all consumer compact stand alone cameras. It means sharper images and better low-light performance. Along with the sensor-size is the sensor technology. The OV16825 is 2nd generation BSI (back side illuminated), which further improves low-light capabilities.
From OmniVision:
OmniVision’s OV16820 and OV16825 are 16-megapixel CameraChip™ sensors that support 16-megapixel burst photography and can capture 4K2K or Quad Full High Definition (QFHD) video at 60 frames per second (fps). Built on OmniVision’s high-performance 1.34-micron OmniBSI-2™ pixel architecture
The 1/2.3-inch CameraChip sensors are capable of operating in full resolution (4608×3456) at 30 fps, 4K2K (3840×2160) video at 60 fps, and 1080p HD video at 60 fps with extra pixels for electronic image stabilization (EIS).
Beyond the sensor size and BSI specs, the OV16825 is capable of some impressive stuff; 30fps 16mp video and 60fps 4K video, as well as pixel-binning. Pixel-binning is a method which improves overall image quality and reduces noise (at the cost of decreasing sharpness when viewing huge crops).
The 30fps 16mp video is especially interesting. It means you can take a 1-second video and have 30 full resolution frames (or for example, 5-seconds and have 150 full res frames) to choose as the best shot. Great for important moments when you need to catch something at the perfect moment: think kids playing, pets, sports.
The OV16825 supports manual shooting, which allows the user to adjust aperture, shutter speed, and ISO if they wish.
Also supported is digital image stabilization, which means those little hand movements and slight shaking which cause blurry images can be significantly reduced.
Keep in mind, these are the capabilities of the camera sensor, it doesn’t necessarily mean the Innos D6000 will carry the software to support all of these features. Time will tell. At the very least, the true 16mp, BSI-2, 1/2.3″ sensor will provide significant improvements over the typical 13mp 1/3.2″ sensor in many China mobiles and flagship brand mobiles.
Innos D6000 review battery
Beyond all that I’ve mentioned prior, the big news here is the enormous battery, or batteries I should say. The Innos D6000 includes an already adequate internal 2480mAh battery, along with a huge external 3520mAh battery, making for a combined meganormous 6000mAh.
At this point there are some questions as to how these batteries will be utilized: will the external battery kick-in after the internal is low, or vice versa? Or will they be drew upon equally as one large battery? Or perhaps some other configuration such as alternating between batteries, or having the batteries power different components.
Whatever the case, it’s a huge amount juice and guaranteed to provide even the most heavy users beyond adequate battery life. As an educated guess, the phone should provide 12-15 hours onscreen time with standard use (WiFi, lux 140, 720p video, both SIMs in, surfing, chat, Facebook).
Specs at a glance
- 5.2″@1080P JDI Pixel Eyes™ 423PPI Gorilla Glass 3 protected
- 850/900/1900/2100 worldwide 3G WCDMA UMTS HSPDA
- 1/3/7/8/20/38/39/40/41 4G LTE
- Snapdragon 615 (MSM8939)
- GE Lexan * EXL1414 Polycarbonate (PC) siloxane Copolymer Resin back piece
- 4+4 [email protected] & 1.0GHz
- 3GB RAM (LPDDR3 933MHz)
- Adreno 405 GPU
- Wolfson sound processor
- 32GB ROM storage
- GLONASS GPS support
- OV16825 16MP 1/2.3″ BSI-2 rear camera
- OV5648 5MP 1/4″ OmniBSI+ front camera
Innos [email protected]
It’s been awhile since I’ve been this excited about a new release. The best part? The Innos D6000 is right around the corner with a scheduled release date of August 15th. There’s a presale special going on at Gearbest. First come, first serve. You can bet Gizbeat will be in line.
https://gizbeat.com/8258/6000mah-innos-d6000-review-specifications-3gb-qualcomm-615/https://gizbeat.com/wp-content/uploads/innos-d6000-review-5-450x231.jpghttps://gizbeat.com/wp-content/uploads/innos-d6000-review-5-150x150.jpgFeaturedInnosQualcommRecentFull review now finished. Click here to go to full Innos D6000 review. It's not thin at just under 12mm, it's not light at 188 grams, and it's not super-powered SoC wise, but beyond being priced right, it's got a ton of special tacked on. In keeping Gizbeat PG rated, I...Damian Parsonshttps://plus.google.com/107879368390224447304 [email protected]AdministratorHi, I'm Damian Parsons. I've been working with Android phones since the first Droid came out. I'm fascinated by computers and technology. My first BBS were ran on an old Apple IIc and Commodore 64. I work hard to bring the latest updates to you every day - without all the boring fluff. Please subscribe to keep up on the newest China tech. See our forum -> www.chinaphonearena.comGizBeat
Wow! This is looks great!
LCD, Storage, RAM, Connectivity, Battery, Sensors, Lolipop. All in higher standards.
Eeh, Do I missed something?
Does it have these?
→NFC
→OTG
→LEDs notification
→Miracast/MHL
And why it’s use soft instead capacitive button?
Is that volume buttons? Why they are separated far enough?
Overall, it’s rare to see 3GB/32GB combo and I love it :) It’s sucks to see new phones only 16GB internal storage.
My old phone with 32GB requires new phones with 32GB minimum with spare SD slot max 128GB if not 200GB (Sandisk).
IMHO, this is a non-Mediatek phone which attracts my attention.
Sorry for the late reply Marucok.
NFC, no…
OTG, yes…
LED, yes – pulsing / red only
Miracast / screencast , yes
MHL, have not tested, but probably not
I don’t know why they chose soft instead of capacitive. I haven’t found it to be a problem.
That’s power button and programmable action button on right side.
Yes, excellent to see 32GB. All relegated to internal storage.
Review coming tonight or tomorrow.
Regards
At £170 this does seem like bargain, especially compared to my Note 4. What’s the catch????
Hello Pete,
The main catch is that it’s a China brand. It doesn’t have Samsung, Apple, HTC or Sony on the box.
Also it’s a medium powered SoC, not the flagship 800 series. And no local warranty or repair available.
I think this is about the maximum most people are willing to pay on the risk.
It seems like a very good price, but there are reliable, more powerful phones available for $100 less (Mlais M52, Mlais M7, Umi eMAX, Lenovo K50), and slightly less powerful phones (eg MT6592 Mlais M9, Blackview Zeta) at 1/3rd the cost of the Innos.
Of course, they don’t contain the goodies that the D6000 does, but they’ll perform general phone functions and run Android just as well.
Let’s see. We will be reviewing this phone in the near future. I have high hopes and I think they’ll be met.
You can’t say enough about a phone with a huge battery. My current phone (x550) has a 5000mah battery and holy crap is it nice to use the thing all day and still have 50% battery. I’ve left for work with like 25% and made it through the day just fine.
This is pretty compelling. I don’t think going down to 5.2″ from 5.5″ would be a huge loss, considering it is a 1080 screen.
Yeah, this looks pretty damn good.
Hello Nate,
I’m with you here, man. I’m checking out the specs and I see the battery info. Excellent. I continue checking it out and see camera, worldwide 3g, Wolfson sound chip, JDI display, 3GB RAM.
Normally I prefer 720p, but on a phone with a battery this big, 1080p is not going to make a significant difference. For example, 12 hours vs 15 hours onscreen, that’s not going to affect anyone’s life.
Very much looking forward to this one.
Hi,
how about D6000M Mediatek version?
any news?
No new news that I’ve seen Alexia about Innos D6000M MediaTek version, other than vague reports from a few months back. Please let me know if you have some solid new news. Regards.
Do somebody know, if it’s prerooted? If not can somebody know how to do it?
Can I load there some custom roms?
Will custom roms recognize two batteries, or it’s just unique for this innos firmware?
Details of software is necessary to buy, because without root it’s useless.
It would be nice to get some more details of its software.
I wish it was possible, because its worth its price whit this battery.
Hello Tommy,
It’s unlikely to be pre-rooted. But root is very likely possible. It’s a very new phone, only released this last week.
As far as custom ROMs, I think shouldn’t be a problem for serious developers to maintain dual-battery functionality.
Hello
I’m really interested in the camera of this phone. Can this phone really support everything that the sensor can do?
Can you provide some screenshots of the manual controls and camera samples(video and pictures)?
Thanks
Hello Kren,
Unfortunately the phone software does not seem to currently support a lot of what the sensor is capable of, I will go more into this in the review. There will be picture samples up in the review as well.
Thank you for your answer.
Could you try out FreeDCam from Play Store. It enables manual controls on many phones, maybe also on this one?
I had experimented with Camera FV-5, and now tried FreeDCam. There are several settings in FreeDCam that I didn’t see in FV-5. Those are EIS (electronic image stabilization) under Qualcomm, and focus mode (macro / infinity / auto / manual).
One thing I didn’t see in FreeDCam was ability to lock AE and focus which is a nice capability. Maybe it’s there and I just didn’t see it. Also didn’t see exposure length. In FV-5, it allows you to set exposure length. Another cool feature.
In both apps there ISO / bracketing / exposure compensation.
Setting it to 4K didn’t work in either app. Just bumped it back to 1080P. Drivers not supporting 4K it seems. Also unable to set FPS beyond 30.
I’m still impressed by the camera, and these two camera apps should cover my needs. I’m keen to give the Qualcomm EIS a try and see if we can have it make a difference. EIS, if executed appropriately can really help out hand held images.
Review coming up in about 2 hours man.