Philips phones xenium w6610. Philips Xenium W6610 - Specifications. Battery life

Today for review to the editor gg I got a smartphone that could be forgiven, if not everything, then at least a lot. And all because it has an incredible capacity battery, comparable to its tablet counterparts - 5300 mAh. True, looking ahead, I can say that, in general, there is nothing to forgive the Philips Xenium W6610 - except perhaps for its considerable dimensions.

Equipment

Apart from the battery, I would say that the main advantage of the Philips Xenium W6610 is its thoughtfulness. Everything here is balanced down to the smallest detail, and this is already evident in the box and packaging. The packaging itself shows the main advantages of the device, inside – all the accessories necessary for comfortable everyday use. This is both a high-power charger (5V, 1.5A) and a screen protector. A headset is also included in the kit, but you shouldn’t expect anything supernatural from it - these are ordinary earplugs, even without soft pads, although they do have a clothespin.

In addition, in the Philips Xenium W6610 package, I found a Litres coupon with the ability to download 5 books for free.

Appearance

The Philips Xenium W6610 looks like a giant monster compared to most modern smartphones. This is especially noticeable when you compare it with other 5-inch devices. Although, I can’t help but notice that, firstly, this is due to the main advantage - a large-capacity battery, and secondly, the manufacturer has made every effort to hide the considerable dimensions of the device and make it convenient to use. So, in the end, when compared with devices of approximately the same class, it does not look such a giant.

In particular, the frame on the sides of the screen is made visually thin, and the sides themselves are strongly rounded. The frame above and below the screen is significantly wider, but thanks to this, the heavy-duty smartphone can be easily held in your hand.

The back panel is made non-removable, but it has one removable part. It is under it that the slots for two SIM cards and a memory card are hidden. The panel is fixed tightly and does not fly off, but the small recesses on its sides are confusing at first - instead of the volume or power button, the finger reaches towards them. In fact, the keys are located slightly lower, and when you get used to the Philips Xenium W6610 a little, this arrangement seems logical: you can easily reach the keys with your finger, without having to stretch.

One more point regarding the removable socket: until it is tightly closed, none of the SIM cards will work. Why is this happening, even guessing whether it’s a bug or a feature is difficult.

The rear panel contains a standard set of a camera with a flash and a speaker. I personally liked, even if it’s not that uncommon, that there is a small protrusion above the speaker. That is, even if the smartphone is lying on a flat surface, it does not stall.

An additional control is located at the very top of the right panel. This “slider”, clearly visible to the touch and tight in its movement, allows you to switch the smartphone from normal operation to economical mode. I will dwell separately on the modes themselves and, in general, on the autonomy of the smartphone as a whole, because there really is something to talk about here.

There is a standard audio jack on the top panel. On the bottom there is a micro-USB port covered with a plastic cover.

The most important and interesting detail of the front panel is, of course, the screen. Philips Xenium W6610 uses an IPS panel with a resolution of 540x960 pixels. Subjectively, the display is characterized by a good reserve of brightness, a cool gamma and standard wide viewing angles. A slight change in color is noticeable only when glancing diagonally - so on one side the gamma goes into a yellow tint, on the other - into blue. But, in practice, I have observed a similar effect more than once with other matrices, and this does not interfere with working with a smartphone. Resolution can be judged from two points of view at once. On the one hand, it is not tall and this seems to be a drawback. On the other hand, it is sufficient for comfortable work (there is no graininess as such) and the manufacturer did not have to install more powerful hardware to avoid brakes. And this has a positive effect on the duration of work. So in the case of the Philips Xenium W6610, I cannot count resolution among the shortcomings or questionable qualities at all.

As for more strict and dry information about the screen, as usual I measured it on editorial equipment. The color gamut graph is shifted down, which indicates a shift towards cool shades; this is also evidenced by the color temperature graph, which jumped far above the reference 6500K. The graph of the color components of a monochrome gradient is also very far from ideal. But the gamma curve is excellent, which means that there is practically no distortion in the transmission of dark and light areas on the Philips Xenium W6610 display. The brightness of the screen is really high, but this is both a plus and a minus at the same time. The downside is that due to excessive exposure of the black field, the contrast is low.

Among the small but pleasant advantages is the ability to work with the screen while wearing gloves, which is activated by the corresponding function in the smartphone menu. Another feature of the screen is the Asahi Glass Dragontrail II protective glass. I can’t say whether it’s better or worse than standard Gorilla Glass, but during all the testing and active carrying in the pockets of a backpack (naturally, along with other things), no scratches appeared on the display. But fingerprints and other contaminants “stick” only this way.

Below the screen there are three classic touch buttons - large, convenient and backlit. Above the screen is a set of sensors, including a light sensor and a proximity sensor. I periodically had problems with the latter. Either because of its large size, or because of its not very good location, the sensor worked adequately only if you press the phone tightly to your ear (which is not very convenient). Without close contact, the Philips W6610 begins to behave inappropriately, and most often I managed to turn on the “flight mode” with my ear, which requires a couple of steps to reach manually. In general, we can only hope that such a problem is purely subjective, but I have never encountered this with other large smartphones before.

Performance and Features

The heart of the Philips Xenium W6610 is the MediaTek MT6582 processor with a Mali-400MP video accelerator. The filling is not the most productive, but it is very energy efficient. At the same time, during all the time I have been working with a smartphone, stutters are rare - for example, I noticed one of them when opening a gallery with screenshots and photographs. The pictures took quite a long time to load, but this happened just a couple of times - the rest of the time, no problems arose. It easily copes with everyday functions and performs well in games. In Temple Run 2 I didn’t notice any lags as such; in Dead Trigger 2 they appeared only in “densely populated scenes”; you can also easily play Asphalt 8 on medium graphics settings. There is nothing to say about games like “birds” or “om noma” - there are no problems with them at all. The smartphone also copes quickly with video playback, including in Full HD quality.

The results obtained in testing programs are quite predictable. In 3D Mark, the smartphone received very mediocre scores: Ice Storm Unlimited gave it 2917 points, Ice Storm Unlimited Extreme - 2046, Ice Storm Unlimited - 2991 points. The device also showed modest, but slightly more pleasant results in Nena Mark 2 - at 50.1 fps. This means that the smartphone copes well with 3D and ok with 2D graphics.

In AnTuTu Benchmark, the smartphone earned 17,029 points, slightly losing to the Samsung Galaxy S3. Quadrant gave 5891 points. In Vellamo the results are also quite good: in HTML5 mode 1962 points, that is, approximately on the same level as the Samsung Galaxy S4; and in Metal the smartphone received 521 points, again slightly behind the Samsung Galaxy S3 and slightly ahead of the Galaxy 4, Sony Xperia Z Ultra and HTC One X.

When testing or loading with resource-intensive applications, the smartphone heats up. But only in the upper part, which (when used vertically) is not touched by the fingers. Considering that heating does not affect the operation of the device at all, most often it is not noticeable to the user at all.

A few words should be said about the sound. Philips Xenium W6610 is a fairly loud smartphone, but I would not recommend it to music lovers. The sound is normal, average in volume in headphones. In the settings there is a function for adding BesAudEnh volume, but I would not recommend activating it. Making the sound more voluminous, it suppresses low and even to some extent mid frequencies, so the sound loses a lot in quality.

But what the smartphone pleasantly surprises with is the camera and additional software for processing images. The Philips Xenium W6610 has an 8-megapixel camera, which allows you to take quite pleasant pictures both outdoors and indoors. Autofocus is fast, distortions in the color gamut do occur, but quite rarely - usually in difficult lighting in the room (several light sources with different temperatures).

Example video without effects, sepia, pencil, time-lapse

The front camera has a resolution of 2 megapixels, it completely copes with its main task - video chats.

The camera settings provide a variety of effects that can be applied not only to photographs, but also to videos. There is continuous shooting, panorama and even voice control.

Various effects and frames can be added to pictures during the editing process. The transition to the graphic editor is built right into the Gallery; I did not find it as a separate application in the menu.

Other pre-installed programs include: Kingsoft Office, Opera, file manager, video player, voice recorder, video processing utility, Xenium Club application store with the ability to pay for applications directly from your mobile account, and a flashlight. There is one interesting feature with the flashlight - you can turn it on without even unlocking your smartphone. To do this, just hold down the “Home” button. While you hold it down, the device lights up with a flash. As soon as you let go, the flashlight goes out instantly. This simultaneously increases convenience and allows you to avoid draining the battery by unnecessary navigation through the smartphone menu.

Other useful qualities of the smartphone include working with two SIM cards simultaneously, a built-in GPS navigation module that works very quickly, and support for memory cards.

Working hours

And now about the most interesting thing - the autonomy of the smartphone. According to information from the manufacturer, the Philips Xenium W6610 can last up to 33 hours of talk time and up to 16 hours of continuous use of the Internet. It sounds impressive, but before testing began, to be honest, I didn’t believe that the smartphone would be truly durable: an android is an android. But everything turned out very well.

It so happened that at the time of testing the Philips Xenium W6610, I did not have actual access to the laptop for several days. So I had to use the smartphone for almost everything and always - for mail, Instagram, communication on LiveJournal and social networks, hangouts and skype, periodically to all this was added watching videos (both from a memory card and from the network), playing music and playing games. In general, my regular smartphone would wear out after half a day of such use at best. The Philips Xenium W6610 quietly lasted two days. Having slightly reduced the intensity through games and videos, I achieved a solid three days of work, after which there was still 12% charge left. That is, another day of modest use as a regular phone and e-mail reader. If you use your smartphone as a compact video player (with wireless modules disabled), you can count on 14-15 hours of viewing. As a music player, the smartphone can work for a very, very long time: for 10 hours of playback at a volume level slightly above average, it spent about 8% of the charge (without turning on the screen in the process). As a regular dialer, the Philips Xenium W6610 can last for more than a week, unless you are used to hanging on the phone for hours.

To optimize energy consumption, the Philips Xenium W6610 provides a separate utility with the quite predictable name “Energy Saving Mode” (it is not fully displayed in the menu - apparently it is too long). In the program, you can see what exactly the smartphone is spending energy on and choose which mode will be turned on using the lever on the right panel - default or custom. In the latter, you can configure what exactly and how it will work during the transition to a state of increased energy efficiency. For example, you can select the brightness level: the minimum value is 8%. It is quite normal for working in a room, albeit somewhat unusual, but unrealistic for use under bright sun. You can also enable automatic selection of brightness depending on the lighting around.

In addition, in the utility you can set which wireless modules should be left active, configure sleep mode and enable auto-shutdown of all running applications. Unfortunately, there is no way to select a list of exception programs for this rule, but this is the only negative.

Another point related to the increased battery capacity is charging time. Even taking into account the included high-power charger, it takes about 4-5 hours to fully charge the Philips Xenium W6610.

Bottom line

The Xenium W6610 fits perfectly into the long-lived Philips family of phones, and at the same time provides a good performance reserve. There’s definitely no need to sacrifice speed or the ability to launch this or that application, and the price is quite reasonable for such a device (about 3,000 hryvnia). So the only question is ease of use - not everyone will enjoy using such a large smartphone. If this doesn’t bother you, you have big pockets and you’re far from a music lover, it’s worth taking; this device doesn’t have many analogues or opponents. Among them we can only mention the Lenovo P780, and then only conditionally. With similar performance and price, it has a smaller battery capacity: 4000 mAh versus 5300 mAh for the Philips Xenium W6610.

5 reasons to buy Philips Xenium W6610

  • Incredibly long battery life
  • Excellent work without lags or slowdowns
  • IPS screen
  • Dual SIM support
  • Good camera with good software

2 reasons not to buy Philips Xenium W6610

  • It's big and heavy compared to other smartphones
  • Weak sound, even with good headphones connected

Contents of delivery:

  • Smartphone
  • Accumulator battery
  • USB cable
  • Headphones
  • AC adapter (1.5 A)
  • Manual
  • Warranty card
  • Film on screen

Introduction

Some time ago, I already wrote that the current situation is this: smartphones are increasing their multi-core capabilities, the technical process is being reduced, the system is being optimized, and energy consumption is not being reduced much; sometimes all these tricks do not affect energy efficiency at all. Manufacturers are following two paths: the first is to reduce the size of the device and, accordingly, the battery, the second is to increase the size of the case and battery. And, alas, nothing can be done about it yet.

It seems to me that the developers in the Philips team have found a relatively optimal solution in the form of the Philips Xenium W6610 smartphone. Despite the impressive dimensions of the case and the super-capacity 5300 mAh battery, the ergonomics of the device’s design remain at a high level. Therefore, I personally did not feel the massiveness of the gadget at all.

Someone has already said on the Internet that if you want to buy a smartphone with a long battery life, you will still have to buy Android, despite the numerous jokes that the operating system “eats” resources. The Philips W6610 device is an example of this.

In the review I will dwell only on the important points, since before us is a typical “middle peasant” among the “green tanks”.

Design, dimensions, control elements

In testing devices from Philips, I often said that their appearance is different from many other similar devices. Of course, there are exceptions, for example, excuse me, the completely faceless W3500, but in general, Philips smartphones look quite original (W7555, W6500) and stylish (W8510).


The W6610 was no exception. The designers were able to even nicely decorate the front side with a black glossy edging that captures the speech speaker. The back is made of durable looking semi-gloss dark blue plastic. There is even metal - a black plate that covers the various slots of the phone. The corners of the body are smoothed, the sides are sloping. I repeat once again that despite its impressive dimensions (145.4 x 74.1 x 11.4 mm) and considerable weight (200 grams), the Philips W6610 fits perfectly in the hand and does not feel like a giant block.




For example, the Highscreen Boost 2/2se gives a completely different impression: it is angular, so it is not so pleasant to hold.


The screen has a dark surface and is protected on top by glass with an oleophobic coating. The finger glides well, fingerprints are practically invisible and can be easily removed.

There are no problems with assembly, even the back side does not bend to the battery, and there is no play, since the case is monolithic, there are only two parts that can be removed: a metal plate and a micro-USB plug.

In general, the appearance of the W6610 is pleasant, the assembly is excellent, and the body is very strong.


At the top center is the speech speaker. Unfortunately, its volume is low, but speech intelligibility and transmission are excellent. The interlocutor can be heard clearly, the timbre is closer to the midrange, there is no echo, there is no wheezing, and the speaker does not rattle at maximum decibels.


To the left of the speaker is the front camera, to the right are light and proximity sensors, as well as a small indicator for missed messages (flashes when a call or SMS is missed, lights up red when the battery is charging).

Below the display are touch buttons “Back”, “Home” and “Menu”. They are marked on the body with dark gray translucent paint. There is a bright backlight, visible in any lighting conditions.

At the bottom there is a microphone and micro-USB under a plastic cap. It closes tightly and does not pop out on its own. On the top there is only a 3.5 mm audio output.


The volume rocker key, made of glossy black plastic, is located on the left side just above the center. It is very convenient to use; your middle finger fits perfectly on the button. On the right is the power button of the same type, slightly recessed into the body, the pressure is soft, the travel is medium. Above is a proprietary metal lever that switches to the energy saving mode.



On the back side there are: a camera recessed into the body, a flash and a speakerphone. There is a thickening in the case above it, it is made so that the speaker does not close if the phone is placed on a horizontal surface.



To remove the metal plate, it must be hooked onto the notches on the right or left. I think you are unlikely to succeed the first time. Inside, there are slots for miniSIM cards on the right and left, and a slot for a microSD memory card in the center. As soon as the plate is removed, the device believes that the SIM card has been removed, but when it is installed back, the parameters are restored.



The SIM card slots are covered with only one small metal plate, so theoretically, if you want, you can even insert and use microSIM cards. Actually, that's what I did.

Comparative sizes:


Philips and Samsung S5


Philips and Nokia Lumia 1020


Philips and iPhone 5


Display

This model uses a screen with a diagonal of 5 inches. Physical size – 62x110 mm, frames on top – 19 mm, bottom – 15 mm, right and left – 6 mm each. An anti-glare layer is applied to the surface of the display.

The resolution is not very high for 5 inches - 540x960 (qHD), but pixelation is not noticeable, since the density is 220 pixels per inch.

The matrix is ​​typical for this type of device - IPS with good viewing angles, but when tilted the screen becomes very violet or yellow. There is no air gap - OGS.

The brightness of the backlight of the screen matrix is ​​average: it is enough indoors, but outdoors you would like to make it brighter. In the sun, the matrix almost completely fades, although the anti-reflective coating saves the situation a little.

The capacitive touch layer handles up to 5 simultaneous touches. The sensitivity is excellent.

White color

Black color

Viewing Angles

Color rendition

Settings:

Battery

This is what the smartphone review was essentially for. The Philips Xenium W6610 uses a non-removable lithium-ion (Li-Ion) battery with a capacity of 5300 mAh. According to the official version, the device will work up to 1600 hours in standby mode, and up to 33 hours in talk mode.

If you use the phone for about 40 hours, the battery will be completely discharged provided: 20-25 minutes of calls per day, 8 hours of Wi-Fi Internet use (Twitter, mail, downloading applications and installing them), about 7 hours of mobile Internet and a couple of hours listening to music.

You can listen only to music for 65 hours, watch only video (maximum screen brightness, high volume, movie resolution - HD 720p) - just under 10 hours. If you want to play toys (like Asphalt 8), then you won’t have to save energy either - the battery will run out after only 4 hours!

The battery takes a very long time to charge from USB - within 10 hours, from the network adapter it is also slow - in 3.5 - 4 hours.

The Antutu Tester shows a result of 1600 points, which is more than the result of Highscreen Boost Boost 2/2SE.

Communication capabilities

The smartphone operates in 2G (GSM/GPRS/EDGE, 900/1800/1900 MHz) and 3G (900/2100 MHz) cellular networks. There are two SIM cards: both can work in 3G.

Available Bluetooth version 4.0 for file and voice transfer. There is a wireless connection Wi-Fi IEEE 802.11 b/g/n. The device, of course, can be used as an access point (Wi-Fi Hotspot) or modem.

The device has GPS. It functions poorly. During testing, I couldn’t get it to work adequately: it can at least determine the approximate location using cellular and Wi-Fi networks, but it doesn’t want to use GPS alone. Perhaps you came across such a copy of the phone.

Memory and memory card

There is 1 GB of RAM installed inside, on average there is quite a lot of free space - about 550 - 650 MB.

Flash memory is not enough. Total 4 GB, of which 1.72 GB for data storage, approximately 1 GB for installing applications. There is a slot for a microSD memory card.

Camera

The Philips Xenium W6610 uses two camera modules: the main one is 8 MP, the front one is 2 MP. There is a single-section LED flash.

The main camera aperture is F2.2. Not a bad aperture, but it does not play, in fact, any role, since the smartphone takes frames of mediocre quality. The main complaints boil down to a narrow dynamic range and low sharpness.

The smartphone records video in FullHD resolution at 15 fps. Front camera – 640x480 pixels at 18 fps.

The rear camera takes photos very well, and “selfies” will be successful. The front camera aperture is F2.8.

EXIF information

Video file characteristics:

  • File Format: 3GP
  • Video codec: MPEG-4, 8400 Mbit/s
  • Resolution: 1920 x 1080, 15 fps
  • Audio codec: AAC, 128 Kbps
  • Channels: 1 channel, 48 kHz

Examples of photos taken with the main camera:

Example photo with front camera:

Performance and Software Platform

Most of these devices have a Taiwanese MediaTek chip. The Philips Xenium W6610 smartphone is no exception. It has recently used the MT6582 chipset, the most common among state employees: a Cortex-A7 processor, 28 nm, 4 cores at 1.3 GHz, a Mali-400MP2 graphics accelerator with a clock frequency of 400 MHz.

For comfortable operation of the device, this processor is more than enough. There are problems with games, but only with powerful ones like Asphalt 8. The device does not glitch, does not slow down, and works relatively smoothly.

Brief information about phone parameters and performance tests (Quadrant, Antutu, OpenGL 2.0):


The device is equipped with the ancient Google Android operating system version 4.2.2. I'm not sure that 4.3 will be released, much less 4.4. Although I personally don’t see any point in them, especially in inexpensive gadgets. The branded shell, in fact, is absent here.

Battery capacity: 5300 mAh Battery type: Li-Ion Talk time: 40 h Standby time: 1200 h

Additional Information

Contents: phone, charger, USB data cable, instructions

General characteristics

Type: smartphone Weight: 200 g Control: touch buttons Case material: plastic Operating system: Android 4.2 Case type: classic Number of SIM cards: 2 Multi-SIM card operation mode: alternating Dimensions (WxHxT): 74x145x11 mm

Screen

Screen type: color IPS, 16.78 million colors, touch Touch screen type: multi-touch, capacitive Diagonal: 5 inches. Image size: 960x540 Pixels per inch (PPI): 220 Automatic screen rotation: yes Scratch-resistant glass: yes

Calls

Type of melodies: 64-voice polyphony, MP3 melodies Vibrate alert: yes

Multimedia capabilities

Camera: 8 million pixels, 3264x2448, built-in flash Camera functions: autofocus Video recording: yes (MPEG4, H.263, H.264) Video playback: MPEG4, H.263, 3GP, H.264, DIVX Audio: MP3, FM radio Voice recorder: yes Headphone jack: 3.5 mm Max. Video frame rate: 30fps

Connection

Interfaces: Wi-Fi 802.11n, Bluetooth, USB Internet access: WAP, GPRS, EDGE, HSDPA Standard: GSM 900/1800/1900, 3G Satellite navigation: GPS Synchronization with a computer: yes Modem: yes Protocol support: POP/SMTP , IMAP4, HTML

Memory and processor

Processor: MediaTek MT6582, 1300 MHz Number of processor cores: 4 Built-in memory: 4 GB RAM capacity: 1 GB Memory card support: microSD (TransFlash), up to 32 GB Memory card slot: yes, up to 32 GB

Messages

Additional SMS functions: text input with MMS dictionary: yes

Other functions

Controls: voice dialing, voice control Sensors: proximity Speakerphone (built-in speaker): yes Airplane mode: yes A2DP profile: yes

Notebook and organizer

Organizer: alarm clock, calculator, task planner

Today, smartphones perform a huge number of functions and they use components that consume a lot of energy, so having a high-capacity battery that will ensure long-lasting operation of the phone is very important. Philips devices have long gained a reputation as phones with long battery life. And now a new model has been released that really impresses with its battery: the Philips Xenium W6610 smartphone.

The device's large battery could not but affect the appearance of the phone. The new product turned out to be quite large and heavy. The whole concept of this phone is aimed at long-lasting and functional performance, and the appearance has naturally become less of a priority. From a purely external perspective, this model will look out of place in a woman’s hand, and it won’t be very convenient for girls to use a smartphone.

The design of the Philips Xenium W6610 is as simple and utilitarian as possible. The body is made of dark blue plastic. On the back cover of the phone there is a metal insert that covers the compartment for two SIM cards, and space for a microSD slot. The phone case is non-separable, so you won’t be able to replace the battery yourself. According to the developers of the model, the battery is so powerful that it will last for a very long time, and therefore there is no need to change it.

On the left side of the device there are buttons for adjusting the volume. The port for connecting microUSB is located at the bottom and is covered with a plug. On the right edge of the model there is a button to turn the phone off/on. Next to it there is a lever for switching energy-saving modes - this innovation is currently only available in this model. This once again shows how much the manufacturers have tried to make the phone last longer.

Of course, the device is inferior to many models in terms of ergonomics, but this can be considered a price to pay for the duration of operation. Therefore, the device will definitely find its share of buyers who will prefer functionality and a powerful battery to design.

The dimensions of the smartphone are 131 x 67.5 x 11 mm. Weight – 170.5 g.

Performance and Software

The smartphone has an MTK 6582 processor with four cores and a frequency of 1.3 GHz. The Mali-400 MP adapter is responsible for the graphics. The phone has 1 GB of RAM. The internal memory capacity is 4 GB, there is also a slot for installing additional microSD memory.

Philips Xenium W6610 runs on the Android operating system version 4.2. The interface is virtually unchanged, almost the same as it was originally developed by Google. Phillips made only a few small additions. There are two application stores: Google Play and Xenium Club.

The model has a new application installed that configures energy saving modes. It works with settings for display turn-off time and brightness. It also has the ability to quickly and conveniently turn on and off wireless modules.

Like all modern smartphones, this model has Wi-Fi, GPS, 3G, and Bluetooth modules.

The device supports the following networks: GSM/GPRS/EDGE (900/1800/1900 MHz), WCDMA/HSDPA (2100 MHz)

Display

Philips Xenium W6610 is equipped with a five-inch display with an IPS matrix. The display resolution is not very high - 960x542. Although the display is not very expensive, the touch controls work well. You can also operate this model with gloves - the screen will also be easy to “listen to”. The image quality is quite mediocre, although for a smartphone that costs about $300 it is quite acceptable. Asahi Dragontrail II glass is used to protect the screen.

Camera

The Philips Xenium W6610 smartphone uses an 8 MP camera. The quality of the photographs, although not ideal, is still of good clarity. In general, the camera used here can be classified as middle class, especially since this phone clearly did not place the main emphasis on it.

Battery

We can safely say that the battery is the strongest part of this smartphone. Its capacity is 5600 mAh. The phone really surprised me with its battery life. Watching Full HD quality videos, the battery lasted for a full 14 hours! More than one competing model can boast of such long-lasting performance.

Naturally, the large battery capacity also affected the charging time. It takes about four hours to fully charge the device.

Conclusion

Philips Xenium W6610 is a multifunctional smartphone with good hardware components. The main advantage of this model is its very long battery life. For those who are looking for a mid-price phone with a full range of functions of a modern smartphone and powerful batteries, this model is best suited.

The average price of a new product is 10,190 rubles.

Philips Xenium W6610 video review: