ZDNET’s key takeaways
- The Ulefone Armor 25T Pro is available from Amazon for $420.
- Packed with features that engineers and outdoor enthusiasts will enjoy, yet not as bulky as your average ruggedized smartphone.
- Battery life is not the best, and RAM can get bogged down under heavy workloads.
While I can’t see myself replacing the iPhone as my daily driver — I’m so deep in the Apple ecosystem now that there’s no hope for me anymore — that doesn’t mean I don’t have secondary Android handsets. And my favorite Android smartphones are those aimed at engineers. You know, handsets with thermal cameras and night vision built in.
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Recently I’ve been using the Ulefone Armor 25T Pro–>, a 5G, Android 14-powered smartphone, and this has proven to be a fantastic and versatile handset packed with features that iPhone users can only dream of enjoying!
Ulefone Armor 25T Pro tech specs
- Octa-core MediaTek Dimensity 6300 6-nanometer SoC (2×2.4 GHz Cortex-A76 & 6×2.0 GHz Cortex-A55) and Arm Mali-G57 MC2 GPU
- 6.78-inch, 1080 x 2460 resolution, 120Hz refresh rate display, ~396 pixels-per-inch density, with Corning Gorilla Victus glass
- 12GB memory (6GB RAM + 6GB virtual RAM) with 256GB internal storage (expandable up to 2TB using microSD/TF card)
- 50-megapixel wide-angle rear camera, f/1.65 aperture and 1/1.31-inch ultra large sensor with 1.2um pixel size
- 64-megapixel f/1.8 aperture night vision camera with two infrared LEDs illuminators
- ThermoVue thermal imaging sensor, up to 160 x 120 high resolution, up to 25Hz refresh rate, up to 1000m measuring range, -20C to 550℃ range
- 6,500mAh battery (478 hours standby, 48 hours call time, 16 hours video playback)
- 33W fast charging
- Reverse wireless charging
- Built-in infrared and NFC
- IP68/IP69K, MIL-STD-810H rated for water- and dust-resistance
- 177.4 x 81.4 x 12.5 mm
- 326 grams
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There are two parts to the Armor 25T Pro; first, let’s consider the smartphone side of things.
Looking at the spec sheet for the processor, the display, the battery, and the camera, it’s fair to categorize this as a mainstream handset, and you can feel where some compromises have been made. For example, while the processor, GPU, and RAM are enough to keep the handset moving smoothly most of the time, there are rare occasions when things start to feel a little bogged down. I suspect this is mostly down to the 6GB RAM and 6GB virtual RAM configuration, sometimes not being enough.