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Microsoft Lumia 435 Dual-SIM Review

With the recent announcement of the local price of Microsoft Lumia 435 and touted as the most affordable Lumia in the Philippines, we take a look at what this Windows 8.1-powered phone can offer while carrying a budget-friendly price tag.

Design and Construction

Yugatech 728x90 Reno7 Series

With this device belonging to the Lumia series, we see very similar elements in terms of aesthetics — starting from its single-colored back with a lot of hues to choose from and three capacitive buttons up front, the Lumia faithfully retained this look as well the rear camera positioning at the middle of the back cover.

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The Lumia 435 carries a 4-inch display with your normal bezels on both sides. At the top is the Microsoft branding right beside the front camera.

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The three capacitive buttons down below don’t light up. It’s easily understandable considering it being an entry level handset.

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The entire device is protected using a plastic cover that encases the handset, sealing its surroundings and only exposing the display. The back panel is non-glossy and feels sturdy enough to not easily crack.

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As mentioned earlier the Lumia 435 still retained the rear camera being right smack in the middle of the back cover, right above another branding of the company engraved into the plastic. Up top is where the 3.5mm audio jack is located, aligning itself with the camera.

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At the bottom is where the microUSB port is tucked neatly for charging the device and transferring files.

Display and Multimedia

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The Lumia 435 sports a 4-inch WVGA LCD display with a resolution of 800 x 480. You don’t get HD images with this one but its 4-inch screen fits a 480p image well.

In order to watch a video, the device needs to convert the file to a lower resolution (1280 x 532) before it becomes playable. After which we played it and picture quality was generally satisfactory. It was sharp enough, has good brightness to it, and surprisingly has a loud speaker.

We usually don’t encounter handset speakers that could be heard from afar but this one does and we’re confident that you wouldn’t need a pair of headphones just to understand the dialogues.

Viewing angle is also generally good but when viewing from the left side of the screen (on landscape) visibility is really poor. Other than that, we had no complaints in this section.

OS, UI, and Apps

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The device runs on Windows 8.1 OS with Denim update which is the latest firmware available for all Lumia phones. With it navigation was smooth enough and its UI was reacting responsively with each swipe.

The device comes with a free global HERE Maps and HERE Drive+ as well as a free HERE Transit available in the Store as part of their HERE location services so you’re pretty much covered in terms of navigation.

Camera

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Carrying a 2MP Lumia rear sensor, its camera produces images that are usually showing digital noises. It’s understandable though, as we don’t really expect jaw-dropping details and clarity on an entry-level device. Still, its camera takes decent shots and will suffice for day-to-day usage.

Hera are more sample photos:

[fancygallery id=”194″ album=”236″]

Performance and Benchmark

Its dual-cored Snapdragon 200 processor clocked at 1.2GHz proved sufficient to make sure things are going smooth for the user.

We’ve mentioned earlier that navigation through apps was responsive and it was able to maintain that composure during our entire time with it. We used it for common tasks on a daily basis like checking social media sites, watching videos both online and offline, and playing games once in a while.

We’ve just had some sort of a speed bump while we were trying to sign in to our Microsoft account so we could download apps. On the sign in page, we carefully keyed in the email address we registered previously and entered the password as well. It wouldn’t let us log in and would just refresh the sign in page with no advise whether what we typed was incorrect or not. Attempt after attempt we tried but we couldn’t log in. What was weird was we were able to successfully sign in using a computer — but it wouldn’t work on the phone.

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Finally we ended up just creating a totally different account just to get through. It this is a bug of some sort, Microsoft needs to do something about it.

Running the benchmarking app AnTuTu, we were able to score 7,271.

Connectivity and Call Quality

We popped out its back cover and removed the battery to reveal its dual-SIM slots along with a microSD slot. After placing the SIM we tried testing how its signal reception delivers and it fared pretty well — we were able to hear the other line clearly and it seemed like the background noise got toned down for a bit.

Its 3G capabilities became useful for me when my iPhone’s battery dies and I’m still out of the house. I just flicked the data connection on and I was back online with no experiences of randomly disconnecting.

Battery Life

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We ran our usual battery test with the following parameters: Airplane mode, 50% brightness, 50% volume, and the result is almost 6 hours of continuous playback. This is not bad considering its 1,560mAh battery wasn’t aided with the battery-saving feature this phone has.

Conclusion

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With an asking price with just a little over Php4K, the Lumia 435 Dual-SIM is a good phone to keep in mind if you find yourself having affinity for Windows phones and at the same time are tight on budget. We had some trouble with our Microsoft account but it carried everyday tasks smoothly. The need to convert high-res videos into lower resolution is cumbersome, but on the bright side the speakers are powerful which is not common for entry-level phones.

Microsoft Lumia 435 Dual-SIM specs:
4-inch WVGA LCD display @ 800 x 480 resolution
1.2GHz Snapdragon 200 dual-core processor
1GB RAM
8GB internal storage + 30GB free storage on OneDrive
Expandable to 128GB via microSD
2MP rear Lumia camera
480p video recording at 30fps
VGA front camera
3G
A-GPS, GLONASS
Dual-SIM
131.9 grams (weight)
1,560mAh battery
Windows 8.1 with Lumia Denim update
Colors: Bright green, bright orange, white, and black
Price: Php4,290

What we liked about it:

  • Latest Lumia firmware installed
  • Decent performance
  • Expandable memory to 128GB
  • Display was satisfactory and speaker was loud for movie-watching

What we didn’t like:

  • Photos are most of the time grainy
  • Needs to convert high-res videos to lower resolution

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Avatar for Kevin Bruce Francisco

Kevin Bruce Francisco is the Senior Editor and Video Producer for YugaTech. He's a Digital Filmmaking graduate who's always either daydreaming of traveling or actually going places on his bike. Follow him on Twitter for more tech updates @kevincofrancis.

6 Responses

  1. Avatar for TorLing Walls TorLing Walls says:

    Which one is better? This one or the nokia lumia 630?thanks..

  2. Avatar for FrancisG FrancisG says:

    Hi Yugatech,

    Would like to ask if this phone, Microsoft Lumia 435 is capable of external USB Storage?
    Thanks!

  3. Avatar for Patrick C Patrick C says:

    Sir Kevin / Abe, sorry medio OT.

    I was looking for the same dock that you used in your picture for some time na to no avail. Can you share where did you purchase yung ganyang dock.

    Looking forward for your reply.

  4. Avatar for Easy E Easy E says:

    So there’s no touch issues here? Do you recommend the 2-year old 1320 at this time? is it still on sale?

    • Avatar for kore kore says:

      I have this phone and it’s awesome. Trust me. I actually find it more stable than Galaxy Grand Prime(not comparing OS). It doesn’t lag at all. Very good speaker. Very smooth and responsive touch screen. Decent at gaming.

    • Avatar for tomas tomas says:

      i agree with the comment above. very underrated phone. i’m loving it so far.

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