How's it going guys that was here from GM tech and welcome to a camera comparison between the iPhone 11 Pro Max and the Huawei P 30 pros I'm recording this with the front-facing cameras on both of these smartphones 4k resolution on the iPhone 11 Pro max, whereas it's 1080p resolution on the Huawei P 30 Pro. But with these samples you can judge how good or bad these phones do when vlogging, as well as how they pick up audio from the microphones that are on the phone. So this will give you an overall idea of whether you'd use these phones for vlogging or not. But with that being said, I'm now going to move into the primary camera samples from both of these phones to give you guys a holistic view of which phone does a better job in which sort of lighting scenarios. So with that being said, let's move on to that. So when we look at both of these smartphones, they pack some incredible optics.
It's a triple camera setup on the iPhone 11 Pro max, whereas the P 30 Pro has a quad camera setup with the additional dedicated depth sensor on the front, both smartphones pack, a single selfie camera with a varying megapixel count, and we just saw how video from both looks. But we'll begin with this first sample, which aims to get an idea of both phones. Color profiles. To be honest, the greens and blues are pretty identical, but where the different comes in is in the brown of the building, which looks a bit over sharpened from the Huawei and the Reds, which are more true to life from the iPhone there's not much to it and that could be set for the next sample as well. Dynamic range is a bit better from the iPhone here.
If you have a look at the details in the background and the overall picture has a bit more sharpness and vibrancy, which is accurate to the conditions around for the Huawei, it seems to be focusing more on making the greens in the foreground more vibrant. Unlike the iPhone, there is an AI mode on the Huawei, which normally tends to saturate colors and make them even more vibrant, but in this case it made little to no difference. Here's a look at the natural depth of field capabilities from both the primary cameras. When taking this photo, it's worth noting that the iPhone was able to lock on to the tree bark with no problems, whereas from the Huawei you had to tap to focus, but for what we are testing I liked the shallow depth of field from the Huawei, because it makes the subject stand out more, which is what we're going for here. But if you look at the iPhone, the tree bark seems to have an extra bit of sharpness to it.
Now we took this primarily to compare dynamic range right against the Sun and due to the iPhones color processing, the photo comes out looking natural, the edge of the building on the Juarez waist towards a sharp red color, which is not the most true-to-life representation. So with that, let's move to testing the zoom on both phones, we'll start at one time, zoom or standard, where the instant difference is in the color profiles, while the cooler P30 Pro looks good, the warmer one from the iPhone is the one that is more color, accurate and true to life, we're focusing on the building right in the middle, so at two times zoom. This is our result. If anything, the iPhone looks to be doing the better job here with detail retention, and so we'll go and further at three times. In this case, the sharper looking photo definitely seems to be from the Huawei, but that could be because of the color profile difference we talked about earlier.
We can go in further at five times zoom, where the Huawei sample is sharper with more details compared to the iPhone, but it is impressive to see the iPhone holding up so well. Remember. The iPhone only has a two times optical zoom lens, whereas the Huawei has a five times optical zoom lens. Lastly, this is at ten times zoom, where the Huawei's hybrid, zoom technology comes into play and crashes. The iPhones photo, in fact you can even zoom in up to 50 times on the Huawei, which is just a great feature to have, and you can capture some crazy pictures with it like this one of the supermen that keep vertically far shining every day, anyways back from that small diversion.
Let's take a look at portrait samples between these two, the clear difference comes in color processing. The iPhones colors are just way more natural compared to the Huawei's, although the hallway does have an edge when it comes to edge detection. If you look at towards the top right of the image, both phones have a wide-angle portrait option where at face value, the iPhones colors are incredible. But if you look at the slight details, when it comes to edge detection, you'll notice that the part near the inner elbows are not being blurred out by the iPhone, which has been taken care of by the P30 Pro, and this difference could be due to the P30 Pro's extra depth sensor. We also wanted to test the cameras in very harsh light conditions.
Away from the shadows were again, the iPhone skin processing reign superior over the P30 Pro with the P30 Pro making my face look a lot paler than it is. Similarly, there is a wide-angle mode here which again the iPhone dominates, but I did notice a small artifact that creeped up on both phones on the right side near my neck, I, don't know what it is, but it shouldn't be in the photo as far as I know away from human portraits. Let's take a look at portraits of objects. The Hollies version has a greenish tinge to it, whereas the iPhones is once again true to life and sharper, but again the iPhones missed out on edge detection, especially if you look through the chain which the Huawei has captured and again, this could be the depth sensor coming into play. Here's the same photo with a wide-angle mode, turned on where the iPhone really struggles with the chain on the left side, whereas the Huawei has done a phenomenal job.
Let's also test the dedicated wide-angle lenses from both phones. Here's an image at the standard zoom where I notice a lot going on with color profiles with the iPhone, maintaining the natural look with the wide angle lens. Both phones show a change of color profiles, but it is less from the iPhone plus the overall photo looks more natural and true to life from the iPhone compared to the P30 Pro with that covered. Let's talk, selfies, here's a look at the standard ones from both where the color accuracy is with the iPhone to add you get a wide-angle selfie option as well with the iPhone something the Huawei does not have with the portrait modes. Once again, the colors are better from the iPhone, but edge detection is definitely better on the Huawei, judging by the processing going around the hair on the iPhone.
Also, it's worth noting that the iPhone does not support wide-angle portrait selfies, and we're not sure if they'll be added any future software update or not to really test the front-facing camera. We tried taking a selfie with the harsh afternoon Sun as the background. It's actually impressive. Both phones managed this so well. But if you look at the color accuracy It's once again, the iPhone, of course you get a wide-angle mode which, for this picture is quite useful, but when portrait mode is enabled, the hallway seems to be blowing out a few details in the background, whereas the iPhones maintained everything very well.
Next up, we have this indoor sample from both phones, where the warmth of the scene is better captured on the iPhone. If you look at the far side of the room, the detailing from the window is completely blown out on Huawei wear the iPhone retains more of it. We also tested a really close up image from both phones, where Suarez optics are quite impressive. The sharpness and detailing to the picture is more than what the iPhone can offer, but at the expense of a deviation in colors in this sample that is more pronounced with the Huawei artificially saturating all the colors on screen, which to the audience may look good and, quite frankly, people may perceive it to be the better looking image, but it's not the most accurate portrayal of colors and now for some nighttime samples. Here's look at both cameras using the default modes.
Huawei's image is sharper with more pronounced colors, but the color science on the iPhone is more true to life with night mode. The enhancement is definitely there on both phones. From a detail perspective, the Huawei is better, but from a color standpoint the iPhone is in front. Interestingly, the iPhone allows you to toggle the duration. You need to keep the phone steady for night mode and in this next sample, the maximum duration you could choose was bumped up from two seconds in the prior one to four seconds in this one.
Here, the iPhone standard camera actually seems to be performing better than the Huawei's, with the knife mode enabled on both. Once again, the announcements on the iPhone come without sacrificing the realism in colors, and this seems to be the main difference between these two cameras. So far, I thought I'd. Try the cameras out in way more challenging conditions, and here are the results. Both images in terms of detail are quite hard to differentiate, but I'd have to give it to the iPhone once again and in plenty of light, the iPhone is doing a much better job, the.
How is capturing a scary, infrared glow to the Penguins which they did not have in real life and with night mode enabled the effect is even more pronounced on the Huawei, and it even starts to creep up on the iPhone. Lastly, we've got this wide angle lens sample from both these phones. This is a general nighttime sample. Where again, the iPhone has the edge here's. Both samples would be wide-angle lens, where neither is particularly good but wow.
It does have a wide-angle night mode, which makes it look much better than the iPhone sample, because it doesn't support knife mode in wide-angle photos. Switching to selfies I prefer the quarry's because they look much sharper and have less noise, while the iPhone has a wide-angle mode. The Huawei has a dedicated tonight, selfie feature where again, I think that the Huawei is doing a fabulous job. Here's a look at nighttime selfie, portraits where I think it's more down to personal preference, but I still sway towards the Huawei. Taking a look at video now.
Here's some footage at 1080p 30fps, we're detailing is with the iPhone footage, is a lot more stable when walking. But if you switch to a running sample, the stability seems to be about the same with both phones. You can film an ultra-wide which, on the iPhone, looks to be more consistent in terms of colors. Sharpness looks about the same, but if you consider stability to me, the Huawei actually seems to be more stable than the iPhone. In this case, at 4k resolution do hobbies.
Video seems to be cropping in a bit more and looks better in terms of colors, where the iPhone is better is with stability, although, if you start running, both phones have pretty unstable, looking footage just that the jerks in motion on the iPhone are smoother than that of the Huawei, which has a more haphazard movement. Of course, you can use the wide angle lens on both where the iPhone definitely has the better video footage, quality and stability when walking and even when running, although the difference is hard to pinpoint exactly. It's also worth mentioning here that the iPhone can record 4k video at 60fps, something the Huawei P30 Pro cannot do. We also took the phones out for video samples at night, we're at 1080p 30fps using the standard angle. The iPhone is just much better on the Huawei.
You get a lot of light fringing where lights turned purple when they're not supposed to be, even when using the wide angle lens, the iPhone has smoother looking video with fewer jitters, moving to 4k resolution using the standard lens, you do start to see some fringing on the iPhone as well. Although it's much less pronounced on the wide-angle lens to the iPhone, combined with its superior color processing and stability, just comes out looking the better of the two. So that's about it. For this comprehensive look between the iPhone 11 Pro Max and the Huawei P 30 pro's cameras do let us know what you think down in the comments about both of these phones and make sure to subscribe for more comparisons coming up thanks for watching this was Weber, and I'll. See you in the next one adios.
Source : #GNTECH