On the afternoon of December 21, the target audience obviously favored the domestic foreign camera evaluation agency DxOMark, and updated the camera score of Huawei Mate40 Pro+, with a total score of 139, 144 for photography, 98 for zoom, and 115 for video. The record of 136 for Mate40 Pro was successfully pushed up by 3 points. For comparison, the total score of Xiaomi 10 Ultra is 133, that of iPhone 12 Pro Max is 130, and that of Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra (Exynos version) is 126.
Above is Mate40 Pro
Let's review the complicated camera configuration of Mate40 series. The main camera is IMX700, but only Mate40 Pro+and Mate 40 RS Porsche Design have optical anti shake:
Mate40 is an ordinary 16 million pixel ultra wide angle (17mm focal length, small viewing angle) with 8 million pixel triple telephoto
Mate40 Pro has 1.6 of 20 megapixels μ M ultra wide angle (equivalent focal length 18mm, smaller field of view) with 12 million pixels ultra long focal length
The Mate40 Pro+exclusive ultra wide-angle camera with free-form lens (not available in Porsche Design Edition) is also 20 million pixels 1.6 μ m. But this time, we finally increased the focus to 14mm (free-form surface can eliminate distortion, but the aperture is only F2.4), and the long focus is 3 times 12 million pixels+10 times 8 million pixels.
DxOMark rated Huawei Mate 40 Pro+photos as "the king of cameras". They rated Huawei Mate 40 Pro+photos as having a wide dynamic range. The exposure of some indoor scenes was unstable, which refreshed the score of night scene projects. There was also a wide dynamic range under extremely weak light. The texture and noise were well balanced. The zoom score is second only to Xiaomi 10 Ultra, and the focus of the telephoto part is slow. "Mate 40 Pro+has the best ultra wide-angle camera we have measured" (but this score is still 1 point lower than Xiaomi 10 Ultra's 128 degree ultra wide-angle camera).
To sum up, the main camera has more optical anti shake Mate40 Pro+than the Mate40 Pro, mainly improving the focus and night scene. Although its exclusive freeform film camera performs well, the test of DxOMark is more focused on the lens with a wider perspective, and the Mate40 Pro+ultra wide angle is only F2.4 aperture, so the actual score failed to reach the top.
In addition, it is puzzling that the video score of Mate40 Pro+is one point lower than that of Mate40 Pro with the highest score in the active video (optical anti shake is also a help?). But on second thought, DxOMark didn't say which camera was used to shoot the video. When Mate40 Pro shot the video, it used an ultra wide-angle lens by default, so
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