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Poco F5 Pro
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POCO F5 Pro Audio test

OTHER AVAILABLE TESTS FOR THIS DEVICE

We put the POCO F5 Pro through our rigorous DXOMARK Audio test suite to measure its performance both at recording sound using its built-in microphones, and at playing audio back through its speakers.
In this review, we will break down how it fared in a variety of tests and several common use cases.

Overview

Key audio specifications include:

  • Two speakers (Top left, bottom right)
  • No Jack audio output
  • Dolby Atmos technology

Scoring

Sub-scores and attributes included in the calculations of the global score.

Poco F5 Pro
POCO F5 Pro
119
audio
115
Playback
108

158

117

149

134

162

105

162

82

157

129
Recording
109

147

126

146

129

159

100

170

132

145

130

166

Playback

Pros

Cons

  • Strong lack of bass, aggressive timbre at high volume
  • Underwhelming volume performance
  • Unrealistic stereo rendition

Recording

Pros

Cons

  • Insufficient treble
  • Underwhelming performance at high sound pressure levels
  • Low midrange resonance


In the DXOMARK Audio tests, the Poco F5 Pro delivered a performance that that did not manage to set it apart in its class of devices. The Poco did better for Recording than Playback, thanks to overall pleasant audio recordings with a nice timbre. Recorded audio came with a natural tonal balance and very few unwanted artifacts but overall quality somewhat suffered at higher sound pressure levels. Overall Recording results were best with the front camera app and slightly lower for memo use and with the main camera.

In Playback our experts noticed a strong lack of bass with the built-in speakers and an aggressive sound at higher volume settings. In Playback the Poco performed best when playing games and scored slightly lower when watching movies or listening to music.

Test summary

About DXOMARK Audio tests: For scoring and analysis in our smartphone audio reviews, DXOMARK engineers perform a variety of objective tests and undertake more than 20 hours of perceptual evaluation under controlled lab conditions.
(For more details about our Playback protocol, click here; for more details about our Recording protocol, click here.)

The following section gathers key elements of our exhaustive tests and analyses performed in DXOMARK laboratories. Detailed performance evaluations under the form of reports are available upon request. Do not hesitate to contact us.

Playback

115

POCO F5 Pro

163

Black Shark 5 Pro
How Audio Playback score is composed

DXOMARK engineers test playback through the smartphone speakers, whose performance is evaluated in our labs and in real-life conditions, using default apps and settings.

Playback performance was not among the best in class. In our tests, the Poco F5 Pro delivered only average results for Timbre, due to an overall midrange-centric tonal balance, with fairly unpleasant treble and a lack of low midrange and bass. In terms of Dynamics, the Poco offered quite sharp and precise attack and satisfying punch. However, bass precision was impaired by the lack of low-end extension. The built-in speakers managed to create fairly good wideness but the stereo spread sounded slightly uneven, resulting in an unrealistic sound scene with some dead zones around the center of the stereo image. This also impacted on the localizability of individual sound sources which was blurry around the center, or with a narrow sounding spread towards the sides of the stereo image. The sound scene also lacked depth but our experts found distance rendition to be realistic.

Volume performance was underwhelming, with average loudness at maximum volume at best. At the lowest volume the device was far far too quiet and volume step distribution was inconsistent. In addition, our experts observed a number of unwanted audio artifacts, including a slight fade-in or fade-out when pressing play/pause in the music app, some compression at maximum volume and harsh distortion when playing games. When gaming, our testers also found the bottom speaker to be easily occluded which impaired tonal balance.

Listen to the tested smartphone’s playback performance in this comparison with some of its competitors:

POCO F5 Pro
Samsung Galaxy A54 5G
Oppo Reno 8 5G
Recordings of the smartphones playing some of our music tracks at 60 LAeq in an anechoic environment by 2 microphones in A-B configuration, at 30 cm
Here is how the POCO F5 Pro performs in playback use cases compared to its competitors:
Playback use-cases scores

Timbre

108

POCO F5 Pro

158

Black Shark 5 Pro

The Timbre score represents how well a phone reproduces sound across the audible tonal range and takes into account bass, midrange, treble, tonal balance, and volume dependency. It is the most important attribute for playback.

Music playback frequency response
A 1/12 octave frequency response graph, which measures the volume of each frequency emitted by the smartphone when playing a pure-sine wave in an anechoic environment.

Dynamics

117

POCO F5 Pro

149

Black Shark 5 Pro

The Dynamics score measures the accuracy of changes in the energy level of sound sources, for example how precisely a bass note is reproduced or the impact sound from drums.


Spatial

134

POCO F5 Pro

162

Black Shark 5 Pro

The sub-attributes for spatial tests include pinpointing a specific sound's location, its positional balance, distance, and wideness.


Volume

105

POCO F5 Pro

162

Black Shark 5 Pro

The Volume score represents the overall loudness of a smartphone and how smoothly volume increases and decreases based on user input.

Here are a few sound pressure levels (SPL) measured when playing our sample recordings of hip-hop and classical music at maximum volume:
Hip-Hop Classical
POCO F5 Pro 73.7 dBA 68.9 dBA
Samsung Galaxy A54 5G 75 dBA 71.3 dBA
Oppo Reno8 5G 70.4 dBA 72 dBA
The following graph shows the gradual changes in volume going from minimum to maximum. We expect these changes to be consistent across the range, so that all volume steps correspond to users’ expectations:
Music volume consistency
This line graph shows the relative loudness of playback relative to the user selected volume step, measured at different volume steps with a correlated pink noise in an anechoic box recorded in axis at 0.20 meter.

Artifacts

82

POCO F5 Pro

157

Asus ROG Phone 5

The Artifacts score measures the extent to which the sound is affected by various types of distortion. The higher the score, the less the disturbances in the sound are noticeable. Distortion can occur because of sound processing in the device and because of the quality of the speakers.

Playback Total Harmonic Distortion (Maximum Volume)
This graph shows the Total Harmonic Distortion and Noise over the hearable frequency range.
It represents the distortion and noise of the device playing our test signal (0 dB Fs, Sweep Sine in an anechoic box at 40 cm) at the device's maximum volume.

Recording

129

POCO F5 Pro

160

Honor Magic6 Pro
How Audio Recording score is composed

DXOMARK engineers test recording by evaluating the recorded files on reference audio equipment. Those recordings are done in our labs and in real-life conditions, using default apps and settings.

The Poco did better as a Recording device, with a decent performance in the Timbre category. Recordings sounded slightly unclear, or even muffled on occasion, but the tonal balance was quite natural, with a nice amount of upper bass and low midrange body. In terms of Dynamics, the device delivered a decent envelope rendition and average signal-to-noise ratio, with some background noise noticeable. When recording in landscape orientation, for example with the main camera app, the Poco captured a wide sound scene. However, localizability of individual sound sources could have been better and was a little blurry. Both wideness and localizability were less realistic when recording selfie video in portrait orientation but our testers liked the great distance rendition.

Recording loudness was slightly underwhelming across all use cases but improved slightly at higher sound pressure levels, for example when recording concerts. In these challenging conditions recordings were pretty much free of distortion but our testers observed some compression. In our tests, the device was not particularly prone to occlusions of the microphone, but finger noises in the recordings could be an issue. Tonal balance of the background was natural.

Here is how the POCO F5 Pro performs in recording use cases compared to its competitors:

Recording use-cases scores

Timbre

109

POCO F5 Pro

147

Honor Magic3 Pro+

The Timbre score represents how well a phone captures sounds across the audible tonal range and takes into account bass, midrange, treble, and tonal balance. It is the most important attribute for recording.

Life video frequency response
A 1/12 octave frequency response graph, which measures the volume of each frequency captured by the smartphone when recording a pure-sine wave in an anechoic environment.

Dynamics

126

POCO F5 Pro

146

Black Shark 5 Pro

The Dynamics score measures the accuracy of changes in the energy level of sound sources, for example how precisely a voice's plosives (the p's, t's and k's, for example) are reproduced. The score also considers the Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), for example how loud the main voice is compared to the background noise.


Spatial

129

POCO F5 Pro

159

Vivo X Fold

The sub-attributes for spatial tests include pinpointing a specific sound's location, its positional balance, distance, and wideness on the recorded audio files.

Recording directivity
Directivity graph of the smartphone when recording test signals using the camera app, with the main camera. It represents the acoustic energy (in dB) over the angle of incidence of the sound source. (Normalized to the angle 0°, in front of the device.)

Volume

100

POCO F5 Pro

170

Black Shark 5 Pro

The Volume score represents how loud audio is normalized on the recorded files and the how the device handles loud environments, such as electronic concerts, when recording.

Here are the sound levels recorded in the audio and video files, measured in LUFS (Loudness Unit Full Scale); as a reference, we expect loudness levels to be above -24 LUFS for recorded content:
Meeting Life Video Selfie Video Memo
POCO F5 Pro -30.1 LUFS -23.5 LUFS -21.5 LUFS -25 LUFS
Samsung Galaxy A54 5G -25.8 LUFS -22.2 LUFS -20.9 LUFS -21.1 LUFS
Oppo Reno8 5G -23.4 LUFS -21.3 LUFS -19.8 LUFS -17.8 LUFS

Artifacts

132

POCO F5 Pro

145

Black Shark 5 Pro

The Artifacts score measures the extent to which the recorded sounds are affected by various types of distortions. The higher the score, the less the disturbances in the sound are noticeable. Distortions can occur because of sound processing in the device and the quality of the microphones, as well as user handling, such as how the phone is held.

In this audio comparison, you can listen to the way this smartphone handles wind noise relative to its competitors:

Recordings of a voice sample with light background noise, facing a turbulent wind of 5 m/s

Background

130

POCO F5 Pro

166

Black Shark 5 Pro

Background evaluates how natural the various sounds around a voice blend into the video recording file. For example, when recording a speech at an event, the background should not interfere with the main voice, yet it should provide some context of the surroundings.

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