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XOLO Q3000

Price: Rs. 17962 - Rs. 20999
A 1.5GHz Quad-core processor powered dual-SIM phablet featuring a gigantic 5.7 full HD display and a 4000mAh battery that will easily last you for more than a day. Enter Xolo Q3000, the company’s new flagship which looks like it’s made to rival the Samsung Galaxy Grand 2. At a price tag of Rs. 20,990, the Q3000 seems quite a catch but let’s see if the phone manages to ace our tests.
The contents of the box contain the handset itself, a charger, battery, earphone, a USB cable for charging and data transfer, quick start guide, warranty information and surprisingly an OTG (On The Go) Cable and screen guard. The phone itself has no screen guard attached out of the box. The packing was neat and extremely well organized. There is a flip cover inside the box that can be used to protect the phone from scratches to the body but we did not like the quality of the cover even though we can’t complain much as

The build quality is neither great nor bad. The back panel is a removable lid with a smooth rubberized feel to it which makes it a bit difficult to hold in one hand as the phone is too large for one hand operation. The rear panel takes smudges and fingerprints quite easily which is annoying. The camera lens and the flash are surrounded by a metallic color cover which is not removable. The speaker is located right under the metallic cover. On removing the back cover, you are exposed to a huge battery with two SIM slots and the memory expansion slot above the battery slot. Both the USB charging slot and the headphone jack are located at the top.
The display is a glossy 5.7 inch Full HD IPS screen. The power button is located on the right and the volume rocker key is on the left side of the phone. Both keys are made of hard plastic which feel cheap and hard to press and the power button gives a delayed response when unlocking the phone. The bottom front features the regular Android keys with the menu button on the left, the home in the middle and the back key on the right. The front camera is located in the top right corner. The LED light is located right beside the speaker.
The Q3000 is powered by a 1.5GHz MediaTek MT6589T Quad Core Processor with an integrated PowerVR SGX544 GPU. The phone’s processor is definitely not the fastest in the market, but it still manages to do its job. It has a 2 GB LPDDR2 RAM with 16GB internal memory. There is also an option to add more memory through a memory card slot which supports 32 GB expandable memory. The display, which is one of the major attractions of the phone, is of the 5.7 inch Full HD IPS variety with a resolution of 1920x1080 pixels, bringing its pixel density to 386 ppi, which helps the screen look quite sharp. The rear camera is 13MP while the front camera is 5MP. Both have BSI (Back Side Illumination) sensors with the only difference being their BSI versions. The rear is a BSI 2 sensor while the front is the standard BSI sensor. The quality of images was not as impressive as one would expect from a 13MP camera. The videos were quite good though.
The Full HD IPS display on the device feels smooth and the colors look natural. Due to the high pixel density, the screen is easy on the eye which makes it great for reading text and watching videos. It has good viewing angles and offers smooth touch but the responsiveness was not as expected and the phone seemed to ignore a few touch inputs at times. On the other hand, video playback was quite impressive. Full HD videos looked slightly grainy even though there was no lag (the slight redraw was easy to ignore). Color output on the videos looked natural as well.
What we didn’t like was that the display turned out to be a smudge magnet and you will have to clean the screen of fingerprints every few minutes.
The phone supports the ‘one hand operation’ Android feature, something we saw in the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 as well. The big issue was that the phone totally gave up in this mode and lagged so much that it was almost unusable. The reason that the phone came with such a mode is clearly due the size of the phone. The phone is so big that it can’t be used with just one hand, This even goes for people with large hands. If you are fine with using a phone with two hands then it shouldn’t be a problem.
The phone comes with Android 4.2.1 Jelly Bean out of the box which is was a letdown. We would have expected Xolo to launch it with 4.3 Jelly Bean preloaded, at least. The OS is the stock version which gives pure Android experience without any unnecessary problems caused by custom UIs.
Every time you connect the phone to your computer, you have to enable the USB mass storage mode, something we found quite annoying. The phone supports OTG operation and comes with an OTG cable. This means you can connect your pen drives, gaming controllers and other supported USB devices to the phone.
We did some benchmark testing on the Q3000, here are the results:
If you are looking to play high end games on this device then look somewhere else because this phone is not built for intense gaming. We played Modern Combat on it and the phone couldn’t handle it well. The gameplay lagged a lot which made the game unplayable. The specs given are definitely outdated for such games. We played a casual game Beach Buggy Blitz which lagged if we increased the graphic quality, forcing us to play it on the lowest quality.
Thanks to the impressive display, watching videos on the Q3000 was a pretty good experience. We played a few Full HD videos and there was a slight grain in the videos with a slight redraw but nothing that really spoiled the entire experience.
The music quality is nothing great with the provided earphones. The earphones are not the in-ear ones and feel quite cheap in built quality and audio clarity. The main speaker on the back has good sound clarity but quite a low output. One would have expected louder sound from the speaker.
The 13MP camera took decent photos in bright daylight but the letdown was its quality in low light. The photos are not as sharp as one would expect from a 13MP lens with BSI 2 sensor. The output is grainy on normal settings and the autofocus was pretty bad. The quality was better in HDR mode. The camera takes photos instantly and there is no operational lag. There is no dedicated camera key which would have been nice considering the size of the device which has ample space on the sides for additional keys. But we didn’t have any problems taking pictures or videos with the device.
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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
By Mahesh
12 May 2014
Overall Good Phone
Pros:
Best Phone... under 20ks
Cons:
Not yet found
Summary:
I got this phone from Quikr.com. Actually 2 months old phone. and i have rooted the phone and updated with Custom ROM as well and working great.
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