Ulefone Armor 7 rugged smartphone review

The competition heats up amongst rugged smartphone vendors

Ulefone Armor 7
(Image: © Future)

TechRadar Verdict

The Ulefone Armor 7 is a solid rugged smartphone with a very keen price tag. You’d be hard pressed to find a cheaper device with 8GB of RAM, the added bonus being its waterproof and shockproof features.

Pros

  • +

    NFC

  • +

    Wireless charging

  • +

    Great price

  • +

    Superb configuration for the price

  • +

    Dual LTE/4G SIM standby

  • +

    Good performance

Cons

  • -

    The lanyard

  • -

    Camera sensor positioning

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Where to buy?

Gearbest sells the Ulefone Armor 7 for $358 at the time of writing using the code MPHGBULE123. Note that, while this price includes delivery, it is exclusive of any taxes that may be levied by the relevant authorities or the courier companies on behalf of the vendor.   

Ulefone is the last of the big three rugged smartphone vendors to unveil a flagship smartphone based on Mediatek’s P90 chipset and a 48-megapixel rear camera. Blackview and Doogee have already unveiled their BV9900 and S95 Pro flagship models and with MWC 2020 just weeks away, an event that promises even more surprises and reveals especially as Mediatek announced a new 5G chipset

Side of device

(Image credit: Future)

Design

No real surprise here; the Armor 7 sticks to the tried and trusted, classic 4+4 rugged smartphone template. Four long sides, four rubber vertices for added protection. Not much evolution from a design perspective. The most notable change happens at the back where there’s a very smooth plastic plate rather than the usual rubber cover.

 A front facing camera sits bang in the middle of the top bezel in a water drop setup. There’s no permanent capacitive system buttons which may divide opinions and no status lights (except for the battery status).  

Back of device explained

(Image credit: Future)

The rear houses a speaker grill, three camera sensors and five LED flashlights plus a heart rate sensor; the cameras are protruded which means that they will take most of the shock if this phone hits the ground flat.

Lanyard notch

(Image credit: Future)

Note the notch at the very bottom of the device which is used to attach the bundled lanyard. Not sure why and how that is a useful addition as it makes the device a couple of millimeters thicker.

Side buttons and fingerprint reader

(Image credit: Future)

At 166 x 81 x 13.55mm for a weight of 290g, it is big without feeling like it. On the left and right edges are a SIM tray, a customisable SOS button, a fingerprint reader, the power button and two others for controlling the volume.

USB-C port

(Image credit: Future)

On the top and bottom edges are an uncovered Type-C connector (beware of dust and lint getting stuck there) and a proximity sensor.

Ulefone mentions that the phone is compliant with IP68/IP69K requirements and has been MIL-STD-810G certified under laboratory conditions. The phone, the company said, has used a bi-injection process with a waterproof glue to hold together the assemblage of metal, plastic and composite material.

IP-68

(Image credit: Future)

Hardware

The Armor 7 is one of a handful of rugged smartphones on the market that use a Mediatek P90 chipset. This Helio part was unveiled back in 2018 and sports six slower cores and two faster cores, paired with a PowerVR GM 9446 GPU.

It offers Cat-13 150 Mbps upload and Cat-12 600 Mbps download, Dual 4G SIM with Dual VoLTE standby mode plus Bluetooth 5.0, 802.11ac wireless connectivity and an NPU. Ulefone added 8GB of DDR memory with 128GB onboard storage. A microSD card slot is available but you will need to sacrifice a SIM card to use it.

When it comes to the camera subsystem, the Armor 7 uses three Samsung rear cameras; a 48-megapixel one, a 16-megapixel night photography one and an 8-megapixel telephoto lens with a 10X zoom; It can also capture 4K videos.

In the box, you four leaflets, a tempered glass to protect the screen on the Armor 7, a Type-C to 3.5mm audio converter, a 15W (5V3A) power adaptor, a Type-C to Type-A adaptor, a Type-C to microUSB adaptor and a Type-A to Type-C cable and a short strap.

A 5,500mAh battery, NFC capabilities and a 6.3-inch FHD+ display complete the specification sheet. The battery can be charged wirelessly using an optional 10W charger and the phone supports all three major satellite positioning systems.

Performance

(Image credit: Future)

Performance and in use

Spec Sheet

The Ulefone Armor 7 that was shipped to us came with the following hardware:

CPU: Helio P90

GPU: IMG PowerVR GM 9446

RAM: 8GB

Storage: 128GB

Screen size: 6.3-inch

Resolution: 1080 x 2340

Weight: 290g

Dimensions: 81 mm x 165.86 mm x 13.55 mm

Rear camera: 48MP + 16MP + 8MP

Front camera: 16MP

OS: Android 9

Battery: 5.5Ah

The display was already covered by a screen protector when we picked it out of the box and we were surprised at how easy it was to scratch; you can of course remove it but decided to keep it in place especially as it was oleophobic.

There’s a kids mode (Children Space) that allows the user to fine tune access and usage time. It is, in a nutshell, a heavily restricted virtual desktop. The heart rate monitor and the ubiquitous outdoor toolbox kit are the two other apps that are worthy of a mention. The latter includes a pedometer and a pressure sensor amongst other things. 

Since this is a Mediatek-powered smartphone, you also get DuraSpeed - which reduces resources for apps running in the background - and Smartlock which keeps your device unlocked when it is safe with you by recognising physical signals.

Competition

Benchmarks

This is how the Ulefone Armor 7 performed in our suite of benchmark tests:

Geekbench: 402 (single core); 1489 (multi core)

PCMark (Work 2.0): 9877

Passmark: 7669

Passmark CPU: 182323

Androbench (sequential): 519 (sequential read); 196 (sequential write)

Androbench (random): 149 (random read); 28.43 (random write)

3DMark Slingshot: 2131

3DMark Slingshot Extreme: 1187

3DMark IceStorm: 23222

HWBot Prime: 5370

Let’s start with the biggest rival to the Armor 7, the Doogee S95 Pro which on paper seems to be a better buy. It sells for about the same price with a smaller battery but makes up for it with a unique magnetic modular design that allows you to attach accessories to it. Shame that these include only a speaker and a battery pack.

If your budget allows, then the AGM X3 should definitely be on your list. It sports a faster CPU, the older but still very capable Snapdragon 845. It has a smaller battery and lacks the sophistication of the cameras found elsewhere but its design is far more neutral and the X3 feels more like a rugged phone you’d have no qualms using outside of work.

The BV9900 is billed as the most indestructible super camera rugged smartphone ever and has a price tag to match that at just under $500. On paper though, it is a different story; the price premium is not justified as it uses the same camera and the same processor as the Armor 7 and the S95 Pro. It has twice the internal storage though but is it worth a 40% premium? 

Final verdict

More of an evolution than a revolution, the Armor 7 has nudged the limits of what has been achieved when it comes to ruggedised devices. It is not a true flagship product; the AGM X3 has a much faster processor despite being launched in 2018.

Commercial imperatives and a price sensitive market means there’s almost no chance of having a Qualcomm Snapdragon 855 for example in a device from Ulefone or Blackview or Doogee. But all is not lost, MWC 2020 will likely see some major announcements regarding the successor of the Helio range with accompanying handset unveilings.

Back to the Armor 7 though, it is a handset that fulfills all the main expectations one would have had from a top-end rugged smartphone. Looks the part, feel sturdy, has a big battery and a few gadgets. It is very well priced against the competition and overall, performs as expected. A big thumbs up from us.

Desire Athow
Managing Editor, TechRadar Pro

Désiré has been musing and writing about technology during a career spanning four decades. He dabbled in website builders and web hosting when DHTML and frames were in vogue and started narrating about the impact of technology on society just before the start of the Y2K hysteria at the turn of the last millennium.