Today Huawei announced the brand new Nova 5 series of smartphones. The company released the new Nova 5, Nova 5 Pro and Nova 5i in China with availability later this month. The new Nova 5 and 5 Pro are particularly interesting because they now represent Huawei’s lowest priced devices with OLED displays, also featuring high-end cameras and SoC options.

Huawei Nova 5 Series
  Nova 5 Nova 5 Pro
SoC HiSilicon Kirin 810

2x Cortex-A76 @ 2.23 GHz
6x Cortex-A55 @ 1.88 GHz


Mali G52MP6 @ 820MHz
HiSilicon Kirin 980

2x Cortex-A76 @ 2.60 GHz
2x Cortex-A76 @ 1.92 GHz
4x Cortex-A55 @ 1.80 GHz

Mali G76MP10 @ 720MHz
DRAM 8GB LPDDR4X
Storage 128 / 256GB
Display 6.39" OLED
2340 x 1080 (19.5:9)
Size Height 157.4 mm
Width 74.8 mm
Depth 7.33 mm
Weight 171 grams
Battery Capacity 3500mAh (Typical)
3400mAh (Rated)

40W Charging
Wireless Charging -
Rear Cameras
Main 48MP (IMX586 or GM1)
0.8µm pixels (1.6µm 4:1 12MP binning)

f/1.8 lens
no OIS?
Telephoto -
Wide 16MP f/2.2
117° Ultra wide angle 
17mm equivl. FL
Extra 2MP F/2.4 macro module
+
2MP F/2.4 depth module
Front Camera 32MP f/2.0
I/O USB-C
no headphone jack (3.5mm adapter included)
Wireless (local) 802.11ac Wave 2 Wi-Fi
Bluetooth 5.0 LE
Other Features Under-screen Fingerprint Sensor
Dual-SIM Dual nanoSIM
Colours Green, Purple, Black
Orange (Pro only)
Launch Price 8+128GB: ¥2799 (~$407) 8+128GB: ¥2999 (~$436)
8+256GB: ¥3339 (~$485)

The new Nova 5 and Nova 5 Pro are interesting phones because they are essentially the same device, with the peculiarity of having different SoC options: The Nova 5 in particular is the first phone to now introduce the new Kirin 810 chipset. The new chip features a combination of 2x Cortex A76 CPUs at up to 2.23GHz and 6x Cortex A55’s at 1.88GHz. In terms of GPU, Huawei has opted for a Mali-G52MP6 running at 820MHz. It looks like the Kirin 810 is extremely well positioned to compete against Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 730 SoC which was announced just back in April.

The Nova 5 Pro comes with the well-known Kirin 980 chipset, which has been powered Huawei and Honor high-end devices since last autumn.

As mentioned, the key feature of the new Nova 5’s is that they’re Huawei’s first OLED devices at this price range. The phones come with a 6.39” panel with a resolution of 2340 x 1080 (19.5:9 aspect ratio). The phones also sport an under-screen optical fingerprint scanner.

In terms of overall design, it’s a very familiar look, and sports the modern bezel-less design with a teardrop camera notch. This camera is a 32MP unit with an f/2.0 aperture, the same we saw on the Honor 20 & Pro.

The phone is also characterized by a relatively slim design coming in at only 7.33mm. The 171g phone still manages to sport a 3500mAh (typical) battery.

In the camera department, the phone is well equipped and seems to feature the same Sony IMX586 sensor introduced in the View20 and sported in the Honor 20 series. The 48MP sensor comes with an f/1.8 lens, and it seems that it does lack OIS as Huawei doesn’t mention it in the specifications.

The second camera module is a 16MP f/2.2 lens, again, something we saw in the smaller P30 and also in the Honor 20. Both main and wide cameras resulted in very competitive shots in our hands-on review of the Honor 20 as well as the more expansive testing in the OnePlus 7 Pro review comparison, so we expect the Nova 5’s to perform just as well.

The oddity here is that Huawei features two further modules: A 2MP macro lens, and a 2MP depth sensor. Unfortunately the macro lens was a bit disappointing in the Honor 20 Pro, so we don’t have high expectation of it here. The depth module makes portrait shots possible as the phone lacks a telephoto lens.

Finally, the phone has no headphone jack, but Huawei provides the accompanying adapter along with headphones in the box.

The regular Nova 5 comes in a 8+128GB configuration for RMB2799 (~407USD) while the 5 Pro comes with 8+128GB at RMB2999 (~436USD) and 8+256GB at RMB3339 (~485USD). The phones come in four different colours, although the interesting orange version is exclusive to the Pro variant. The phones are current available for pre-order in China. We do not have any information about Huawei’s plans for the phone in western markets for the time being.

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Source: Vmall

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  • patel21 - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    Isn't the GPU Mali G52MP6 used in Kirin 810 a bit old architecture than G72MP3 used in Helio P60 ?
  • Death666Angel - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    Yes, but double the cores (MP3 vs MP6) and probably some better clockspeeds (MTK website says "up to 800 MHz" but 7nm vs 12nm should allow some better clockspeeds for the Kirin overall, not just 820 MHz vs 800 MHz) should work out to the Kirin being better. And the A73 vs A76 is no contest, really. But the Helio is also available in much cheaper phones.
  • levizx - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    Nope. G52 is almost on par with G76, not G72.
  • porcupineLTD - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    It's newer and the GPU cores are also wider.
  • Ro_Ja - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    I wish they actually offer Snapdragon variants of these, the GPUs in their Kirins are painfully slow.
  • Death666Angel - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    Only the top of the line Snapdragons will be faster. The mid range will probably be a neck and neck race and some early benches show the Snapdragon 730 being slower in GFXBench vs this Kirin 810.
  • Achtung_BG - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    According to Huawei new Mali G52MP6 is 44% faster than Adreno 618.
  • Achtung_BG - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    Kirin 810 55fps vs 38 fps SnD 730 in 1080p GFXbench.
  • levizx - Friday, June 21, 2019 - link

    Painfully slow? The only GPU faster than Kirin 980 is Exynos 9820 and Snapdragon 855, the former is bogged down by its CPU. Kirin 810 has no GPU competitor from Qualcomm Samsung or MTK.
  • 20th Century Boy - Wednesday, July 10, 2019 - link

    do u work for Huawei? just curious :)

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