Smartphone Audio Testing - HTC One M8 and Samsung Galaxy S5
by Chris Heinonen on June 2, 2014 8:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Smartphones
- Mobile
- Testing
- Audio Precision
Samsung Galaxy S5 Audio Testing
Compared to the HTC One M8, the Samsung Galaxy S5 has a worse audio system. It only puts out around 20% of the wattage of the HTC One M8, making it less likely to be able to drive every headphone to a reasonable level. The THD+N on the 15 Ohm load is lower with the Samsung, but it is putting out half the power and under a quarter of the watts of the HTC One M8. If you drop the HTC One M8 down a single volume level it will still be far more powerful but likely have lower THD+N.
Dynamic Range is almost identical between the two phones, and close enough that you will not hear a difference. Crosstalk is a major difference as the Samsung is -20 dB worse here than the HTC One M8. You are likely to hear sound from one channel in the other ear. This can reduce the size of the stereo image and present the music as being more unfocused.
The relative level is better on the Samsung but I don’t think anyone will be able to hear the difference between the two.
15 Ohm | 33 Ohm | 150 Ohm | 330 Ohm | |
Dynamic Range | 91.877 dB | 91.921 dB | 92.113 dB | 91.985 dB |
THD+N | 0.1457% | 0.0505% | 0.0102% | 0.0103% |
Crosstalk (L) | -38.347 dB | -44.767 dB | -57.666 dB | -64.503 dB |
Crosstalk (R) | -38.329 dB | -44.804 dB | -57.704 dB | -64.485 dB |
Output Power | 22.31 mW | 10.63 mW | 2.602 mW | 1.194 mW |
Output Voltage | 577.3 mVrms | 592.4 mVrms | 624.7 mVrms | 627.8 mVrms |
Relative Level (20Hz - 20kHz) | ±0.081 dB | ±0.081 dB | ±0.082 dB | ±0.082 dB |
Compared to the HTC, the THD+N on the S5 is much higher. Whereas the HTC only passes 0.2% around 20kHz, the S5 is past 0.25% for the entire time on the stepped frequency sweep. The Right channel shows higher THD+N values than the left channel, while the HTC is identical in both channels. I checked the graph for every impedance load and they all look identical to this so it isn’t an error in measurement.
Unlike the HTC, the frequency response of the Galaxy S 5 is flat out to 20kHz. It has the same meaningless drop at 20Hz as well. Again I don’t think anyone will hear the difference, but the Samsung is better.
This chart shows that the S5 favors odd-order distortion over even-order distortion. The 2nd and 4th harmonics are below -90dB and -100dB respectively, while the 3rd and 5th order harmonics are each over 20dB higher. Most people find odd-order distortion harsher than even-order distortion.
Conclusions
Unlike the HTC One M8, there are no sound modes to play around with in the Galaxy S 5. With these two flagship phones for 2014, the HTC One M8 is packing the superior audio system. Is has a more powerful amplifier at all levels, lower crosstalk, and lower THD+N. The relative frequency response is worse but not by an audible amount.
The HTC One M8 will be more versatile by supporting a wider selection of headphones at more listening levels. There will be headphones that the Samsung is not able to drive to reasonable listening levels that the HTC One M8 will have no issues with.
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NeatOman - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
Now I'm going to sit here waiting for the iPhone and Nexus 5/LG G2 audio test :)NeatOman - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
Sorry!!!! I looked back and it seems to have been in the initial test (LG G2 and Nexus 5).cheinonen - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
Since i updated this a bit I will retest my iPhone 5 soon.erikiksaz - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
Any hopes of the Moto X being tested?Lazy_Geek - Wednesday, June 18, 2014 - link
gsmarena.com has some numbers for your interesttigmd99 - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
Test iphone 5S please!!!bcg27 - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
Really good to see some more results using the Audio Precision. Any chance of seeing some tests of independent amplifiers or D/A converters?cheinonen - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
If the opportunity comes up then sure, but I don't know what the demand for that is. I'd be interested to see how well they compare to full on desktop DACs and Amps. I've been measuring a few of those recently.msackman - Tuesday, June 3, 2014 - link
I've just received a CEntrance HiFi-M8 and can easily drive it from my Sony Z1 Compact. I would love to see a comparison. Obviously one expects that dropping that much on a external DAC and headphone amp would make a massive improvement to these figures, but it would be worth seeing that measured, as much as possible.MadMan007 - Monday, June 2, 2014 - link
It's quite sad how bad the audio system in phones is, especially as they have largely replaced dedicated media players. I have no doubt that there have been lots of mp3 players or PMPs with much better audio systems over the years, so why can't phone manufacturers make something decent?