Samsung Galaxy A51 Review


The company says awesome is available for us all.
With the smartphone mid-range devices more saturated than ever, I decided now is a good time to look at a handset that is selling in massive numbers over the globe, Samsung’s Galaxy A51. With a restrained but good looking design, Samsung's A51 has quadruple rear camera setup, an AMOLED display with a centrally mounted punch-hole selfie snapper, and a glass-tastic like back.
The Samsung A51 has been selling in Europe since February while it went on sale in the US during April 2020 and also sells for $399.99/£329.

Tested The Galaxy A51's Speed


The brilliant screen is great as we would expect from Galaxy phones}, the colors show as very much vibrant and bright and the handset's viewing angles are quite very good. And with not a lot to quibble about and yet the folks always find something, apart from it is a little dim (but very readable) in sunlight and circumstances are not ideal for viewing content on, even if you have the contrast turned up to 100%.
And this's where reviewing flagship smartphones like Oppo's Find X2 Pro and the OnePlus range is hurtful in achieving a sense of what a mid-range handset like this little beast.
The handset's Exynos processor will not match Snapdragon's 865 CPU in any way, and going from flagship Exynos to the Snapdragon chips is a shock to the system until you eventually understand that the Galaxy A51 is simply a middle of the range smartphone and that allowances must be given.
No mistaking that, the A51 can be laggy sometimes yet we were not sure if it had indeed sensed the tap when attempting to open any app or to use the device.
This is an amount of unresponsiveness that I haven’t seen in some time, such as with entry level phones like Honor's 10 Lite that costs just 100 pounds.
As for the A51's fingerprint sensor, suffice to say that Samsung should have rather put it in the rear panel because we achieved a success ratio of about half when trying to unlock the phone then having to end up typing the pin code in.





Galaxy A51 Design


Owing to its galssticky rear panel, the Galaxy A51 does not look or feel like it is a mid-range phone, the plastic construction appears more forgiving in your grasp because there are no sharp edges like you can sometimes get on handsets with rear panels made from glass.
The design element with the back panel is good and gives some class to the device. We see the branding on budget phones has been just a touch over the top sometimes, the Samsung brand has been discretely used.
You'll have a peek at this web-site see a selfie camera that, for some reason, is made even noteworthy by what looks like a metal ring that draws attention.
Serious audio fans are sure to rejoice that there's an audio connector placed on the bottom edge, with a Type-C charging port as well as the speaker.
On the top of the phone there's a microphone and on the right-hand side there is a power button and sound rocker with a SIM card tray place on the reverse edge of the device.
It's a neat yet, inoffensive handset that fits nicely into a normal-sized pants pocket with no fuss.

Battery Life



Considering a typical day's worth of duty, the 2020 A51 get through the load and have some ten percent left in the tank at the end of the day, although I noted some instances where the device required a quick charge during evening after heavier usage.
And with its handset's 15W Fast Charging means that the A51 to get fully charged over a 2 hour time frame, and a quick charger will take the phone up to one third full, and this is just adaquate yet not exciting at this segment.

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