Motorola edge 60 pro review: Last year’s Motorola Edge 50 Pro (Review) was one of the most popular entry in its price bracket and dominated our camera phone list for a long time. The phone is known for your camera performance, in this you will get to see the design as well as very amazing features. This year, you are getting many meaningful upgrade, including the new MediaTek Dimsation 8350 Extreme Chipset, a better 50MP ultra-wide camera, IP69 rating, a strong 6,000mAh battery and fast RAM and storage. Motorola seems to have prepared a perfect formula for the segment leader.
Design and display
The design of the Motorola Edge 60 Pro has been largely sam compared to its previous Series Edge 50 Pro. You still get a curved screen design with ingredients like nylon at the back. It seems that Motorola is going to do something similar with his age series phone. In addition to a rear panels such as nylon, Edge 60 Pro has a plastic frame unlike the aluminum side of the previous year, which controls weight. It is still certified MIL-STD-810H and provides better elemental protection with IP68 and IP69. Moto has continued to leave the additional security case with its latest age 60 series.
Camera
In the case of camera hardware, this year a notable upgrade has taken place. The ultra-wide camera now uses a 50MP sensor, which is more than the 13MP unit on the previous model. It supports autofocus and also works as a macro shooter. The main camera is the same 50MP Sony Lytia 700C sensor with OIS, but the size of the aperture has come down from f/1.4 to f/1.8. It also has a 10MP 3x telephoto lens, which now supports up to 50x digital zoom. Motorola has also added a 3-in-1 light sensor for better exposure control, white balance adjustment and flicker reduction. In terms of image quality, shots taken from Edge 60 Pro Crisp and Detaild come.
Battery and charging
This year is a remarkable upgrade 6,000mAh silicone carbide battery, which exceeds 4,500mAh cell in the previous model. The battery life was a clear lack in the previous edition, but it is noted here. The benchmark score is not particularly high, yet I managed an average screen-on time of about 7 hours, despite being enabled 5G throughout the day. With Wi-Fi, you can easily expect more than the entire day battery. The total battery drop for 2 hours of heavy use in our lab test was only 19 percent, which is better than the segment average 23 percent.