Neither of these budget phones does Honor proud. In particular, the company needs to address the poor performance that's the main drawback of both handsets.
Honor, Huawei's affordable handset brand, often gets credit for coming up with phones that pack in the features at a fraction of the cost of flagship phones -- including those from Huawei itself. I liked this year's top-of-the-range Honor 10, for example: at £399 (inc. VAT), it delivers very good value for money.
Here are the key specifications for the two handsets:
Honor 7A
|
Honor 7S
|
|
Dimensions (WxDxH)
|
73mm
x 152.4mm x 7.8mm
|
70.9mm
x 146.5mm x 8.3mm
|
Weight
|
150g
|
142g
|
Display
|
5.7
inches, 1,440 x 720 pixels, 18:9 aspect ratio, 282ppi
|
5.45
inches, 1,440 x 720 pixels, 18:9 aspect ratio, 295ppi
|
OS
|
Android
8.1.0
|
Android
8.1.0
|
OS overlay
|
||
Chipset
|
||
RAM
|
2GB
|
2GB
|
Internal storage
|
16GB
(8.79GB free)
|
16GB
(9.7GB free)
|
MicroSD expansion
|
yes
|
yes
|
SIM slots
|
2
|
2
|
Rear camera
|
13MP
+2MP
|
13MP
|
Front camera
|
8MP
|
5MP
|
Fingerprint sensor
|
yes
|
no
|
NFC
|
no
|
no
|
Battery
|
3,000mAh
|
3,020mAh
|
Price (inc. VAT)
|
£129.99
|
£99.99
|
The main differences are in screen size, processor, cameras and the presence of a fingerprint sensor. Both phones use Micro-USB for charging and both include a 3.5mm audio jack.
One big plus for both handsets is that they are dual SIM and don't sacrifice a SIM slot for a MicroSD card -- the caddies are longer than usual with three bays so that two SIMs plus a memory card are catered for. This is something every handset maker could learn from.
The Honor 7A (left) and 7S (right) can support dual SIMs and a MicroSD card at the same time -- an unusual but welcome feature.
The £99.99 Honor 7S is a relatively small (5.45-inch) handset by current standards, although the screen's 18:9 aspect ratio keeps up with the current trend. The display resolution (295ppi) is moderate, but text is still readable and image quality (including video) perfectly adequate.
The real problem is the entry-level MediaTek MT6739 chipset, which means there's a noticeable wait for web pages to load, and scrolling through them is often jerky. It's the same story when waiting for individual apps to load. Overall, there's too much waiting around for things to happen.
This was an issue right from the start, and I never got used to it. I thought I was mishandling the keyboard when it failed to register letters for setting up my account, but in fact, it was just the processor being very slow indeed. This continued to cause problems with data entry. Texting was particularly painful.
The other key issue with this handset is its 13MP rear camera. This makes a reasonable stab at shots where the lighting is good, but indoors it's almost unusable: without the flash, images are far too dark and grainy, while using the flash produces over-bright images. The 5MP front camera also delivers grainy images. It's all a far cry from what we expect even from affordable handsets these days.
The Honor 7S's saving grace is its 3,020mAh battery, which delivers reasonable longevity -- I was able to get through a day without charging, for example. That said, I did abandon many of the tasks I would normally do on my handset such as regularly checking websites, looking at the video and reading my latest ebook. I even abandoned texting because of the slow responsiveness.
So, does the Honor 7A, which costs £30 more, fare any better?
The short answer is yes, although there are caveats. It is a larger (5.7-inch) handset than the 7S with the same pixel count (1,440 x 720) and aspect ratio (18:9), but slightly lower pixel density (282ppi). Text looks a bit grainy, but that's not the deal-breaker here.
The cameras are also disappointing, with the images I took generally seeming a bit dull in color and lacking in detail. Indoor images tended towards the grainy, but at least the flash did its job close up, and so photos were usable.
The Honor 7A's 3,000mAh battery didn't deliver the longevity we got from the 7S, and I never quite made it through a day on a full charge. That could be because I used this phone more during the day -- I wasn't quite as put off by its performance limitations. Giving this phone more to do than the 7S will have put more stress on the battery.
The addition of a fingerprint reader on the back of the chassis adds appeal, and while I found it a little hit-and-miss at times it did work if I slowed down and took my time. Maybe I was again expecting too much of the processor. If fingerprint unlock proves too painful, there's also the option of face unlock as well as a PIN.
Honor has a couple of youth-oriented features up its sleeve with the 7A: you can connect up to 8 handsets into a speaker array, which could be fun if you can find other owners of this phone; there's also a karaoke mode that prioritizes your voice over a tune when you're wearing the provided earbuds.
I ran the Geekbench 4 benchmark on both the Honor 7S and the 7A, with multi-core results of 1,834 and 2,905 respectively. By contrast, the somewhat more expensive Moto G6 Plus (£269 when I reviewed it in May, now available for nearer £230) delivered a multi-core score of 4,167 and offers a much smoother ride.
Conclusions
Neither of these phones does Honor proud. In particular, the company needs to address the poor performance that's the main drawback of both handsets.
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