The LG V30 is an Android phone manufactured by LG Electronics as part of the LG V series. Unveiled on 31 August 2017 as the successor to the LG V20, the V30 forgoes the V20's secondary display for a "floating bar" which has nearly the same functions as the second display. It still features quad DACs for improved audio.[2][3]

LG V30
LG V30+
BrandLG Electronics
ManufacturerLG Electronics
TypeSmartphone
SloganFind Your Frame
SeriesV series
First releasedSeptember 21, 2017; 7 years ago (2017-09-21)
Availability by region
21 September 2017
12 October 2017
1 November 2017
1 December 2017
2 December 2017
22 December 2017
25 January 2018
  • Japan (L-01K)
23 March 2018
  • Japan (L-02K, 10,000 units only)
Discontinued2021
PredecessorLG V20
LG V20 Pro (L-01K)
LG isai Beat (LGV35)
SuccessorLG V35, LG V40 ThinQ
LG V60 ThinQ 5G (Japan)
RelatedLG G6
Compatible networksGSM, HSPA, LTE
Form factorSlate
Dimensions151.7 mm (5.97 in) H
75.4 mm (2.97 in) W
7.3 mm (0.29 in) D
Weight158 g (5.6 oz)
Operating systemOriginal: Android 7.1"Nougat"
Current: Android 9 "Pie"
Unofficial alternative: Android 12.1, Android 13, Android 14
System-on-chipQualcomm Snapdragon 835
CPUOcta-core (4x2.45 GHz & 4x1.9 GHz) Kryo
GPUAdreno 540
Memory4 GB RAM
StorageV30: 64 GB
V30+: 128 GB
Removable storagemicroSD, up to 256 GB
Battery3,300 mAh, not user-replaceable
Rear cameraDual 16 MP Sony Exmor IMX351 (f/1.6, OIS, 3-axis, laser & phase detection AF) + 13 MP wide-angle (f/1.9), Video at 4K at 30fps, 1080p at 60fps, 720p at 120fps
Front camera5 MP (f/2.2), facial recognition
Display6 in (150 mm) 2880×1440 1440p 2:1 aspect ratio (537 ppi) P-OLED
Dolby Vision
HDR10
SoundQuad ESS DAC
ModelH930 (Europe); H930DS (Hong Kong); H933 (Canada); H931 (АТ&Т); H932 (T-Mobile); VS996 (Verizon); US998 (US Cellular); LS998U (Sprint); V300 (South Korea)[1]
Japan:
L-01K (V30+ for NTT Docomo); L-02K (sold as the JOJO for NTT Docomo, limited model collaborated with JoJo's Bizarre Adventure series); LGV35 (sold as the isai V30+ for au)
Websitehttp://lg.com/au/smartphones/lg-LGH930DS-v30-smartphone

History

edit

The phone was teased on 3 August 2017 in a press release from LG showing the bottom half of the FullVision display.[4] On 7 August press invitations were sent out featuring the words "Lights. Camera. Action."[5] Video teasers were later released, advertising the phone's display, audio and camera capabilities.[6][7][8]

Specifications

edit

Hardware

edit
 
Always on display
 
Camera, fingerprint and B & O logo
Front and back of a black LG V30.

The V30 has a Gorilla Glass 5 front and rear plate sandwiching an aluminum body and a 6.0-inch P-OLED FullVision Display, with a 2:1 aspect ratio (marketed as 18:9), manufactured by LG Display. Its processor is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 SoC with an Adreno 540 GPU, coupled with 4 GB RAM. The V30 has 64 GB of internal storage, while the V30+ has 128 GB, which is expandable via microSD card.[1] This is also the first LG smartphone to feature an OLED display.

The LG V30 uses a dual-lens camera setup with a 16-megapixel main sensor with a 71° field of view, and a 13-megapixel wide angle sensor with a 120° field of view.[2] However, the main camera also features a f/1.6 aperture, the lowest in a smartphone at the time of release,[2] and a 10-bit HDR sensor. The 10-bit HDR image sensor is capable of capturing nearly 1,070,000,000 different colors, which is about 211% more colors[9] than an 8-bit image sensor. The main sensor has optical image stabilization, which corrects for the motion blur caused by shakey hands in photos and videos, but there is no OIS on the wide angle lens.

The V30 supports up to 1 Gbps download speed on 4G. The H932 model of the V30, for T-Mobile, is the first smartphone to support 4G's LTE Band 71, with a frequency of 600 MHz.[10][1]

Software

edit

The V30 ships with Android 7.1.2 "Nougat" (upgradeable to 9.0 but without Treble support[11]) with LG's custom skin, LG UX 6.0+.[2] It comes with Android's Always on Display feature.[1]

Reception

edit

The V30 has received praise for having one of the most mature dual-camera systems available[12] and for its audio quality, retaining the headphone jack as other premium smartphones stopped providing it,[13] and including multiple audio sensors for input and a 32-bit Quad-DAC (Digital Analog Converter) for output.[10][14]

The phone has been criticized for excessive bloatware on carrier-branded devices[12] and its screen quality has been criticized for its relative lack of color saturation and flaws, as with the Google Pixel 2 XL — which features a display also made by LG.[15]

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c d "LG V30 - Full phone specifications". gsmarena. 4 January 2018. Archived from the original on 4 January 2018. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d Conway, Adam (31 August 2017). "LG V30 Announced at IFA 2017 – Snapdragon 835, 6.0 inch 2:1 QHD Display, 3,300mAh Battery and More!". XDA Developers. Retrieved 31 August 2017.
  3. ^ Phones, Compare (31 August 2017). "LG V40 THINQ REVIEW – THE MOST POWERFUL DEVELOPMENT". Compare Phones. Archived from the original on 5 August 2021. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  4. ^ "NEXT MAJOR SMARTPHONE FROM LG TO FEATURE FIRST-EVER OLED FULLVISION DISPLAY". LG Newsroom. 3 August 2017. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  5. ^ Maring, Joe (8 August 2017). "LG V30: Latest press invite is all about the phone's camera system". 9to5Google. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  6. ^ LG Mobile Global (22 August 2017). "The next V: Full & colorful view". YouTube. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  7. ^ LG Mobile Global (24 August 2017). "The next V: Immersive sound". YouTube. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
  8. ^ LG Mobile Global (27 August 2017). "The next V: Special moments". YouTube. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  9. ^ "LG V30 Camera & Video: Cinema Quality w/ the LG V30 Camera". www.lg.com. Retrieved 8 December 2017.
  10. ^ a b Miller, Matthew (19 October 2017). "LG V30 review: Stunning hardware optimized for media creators and audio lovers". ZDNet.
  11. ^ Oreo beta begins rolling out to LG V30 and V30+ in South Korea, doesn't include Treble support
  12. ^ a b Savov, Vlad (16 October 2017). "LG V30 review: groundbreaking phone with a deal-breaking flaw". The Verge.
  13. ^ Wang, Jules (23 October 2017). "Pixel 2 Real Audio Review: Let's talk about dongles". Pocketnow.
  14. ^ Parker, Max (31 January 2018). "LG V30 review". Trusted Reviews.
  15. ^ Amadeo, Ron (15 November 2017). "LG V30 review: Good hardware design marred by bad camera, software". Ars Technica.

Further information

edit