Skip to main content

Qualcomm's iPhone X Still Outpaces Intel's


Exclusive: Qualcomm's iPhone X Still Outpaces Intel's

With exclusive lab testing from Cellular Insights, PCMag found that the Qualcomm-powered iPhone X has better LTE performance than Intel models, although the gap is narrowing.
iPhone X
Qualcomm-powered iPhone Xmodels get consistently better LTE speeds than Intel's on America's most common LTE band, according to new test results from Cellular Insights.

While Apple's iPhone 4s through 6s units all used modems from Qualcomm, last year the company decided to split its business between Qualcomm and Intel, resulting in two iPhone 7 units with very different LTE performance. Since then, Apple has become Intel's largest smartphone modem customer by far. This year, Apple doubled down, continuing the Qualcomm-Intel split.

There are three iPhone X models sold globally. Using lab equipment, Cellular Insights tested two of them: the Qualcomm-powered A1865, sold by Sprint, Verizon, and U.S. Cellular and in Australia, China, and India; and the Intel-powered A1901, sold by most other global carriers including AT&T and T-Mobile. (The third model, A1902, is only sold in Japan.) Here in the US, we anticipate that the SIM-free model sold directly by Apple will be the A1865, as that's the model that supports all four US carriers.
For this test, Cellular Insights looked at performance on LTE Band 4, which is used by every major US carrier except Sprint, as well as in Canada and parts of Latin America.
iPhone X speed chart

Cellular Insights attenuated an LTE signal from a strong -85dBm until the modems showed no performance. While both modems started out with 195Mbps of download throughput on a 20MHz carrier, the Qualcomm difference appeared quickly, as the Intel modem dropped to 169Mbps at -87dBm. The Qualcomm modem took an additional -6dBm of attenuation to get to that speed.
Most consumers will feel the difference in very weak signal conditions, where every dBm of signal matters, so we zoomed in on that in the chart below. At very weak signal strength, below -120dBm, the Qualcomm modem got speeds on average 67 percent faster than the Intel modem. The Intel modem finally died at -129dBm and the Qualcomm modem died at -130dBm, so we didn't find a lot of difference in when the modems finally gave out.

Comments

POPULAR

This is Why Experts Think All People Should Have a Universal Basic Income

Pluto Reclassification