Smartphones  >  Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1  >  Mobile Test Results
Advanced ?

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1 Camera test: Affordable mid-ranger for the Indian market

48
mobile
This device has been tested in 2018. Please note that the score and contents below refer to an older Camera test protocol.

Indian retail giant Reliance has been busy bringing a series of competitively-priced smartphones to market under their LYF brand. The Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1 is their premium offering, featuring a 1.5Ghz octa-core Snapdragon 615 processor, with 3GB RAM and 32GB of expandable storage.

The Earth 1’s photography proposition offers a dual-cam set up, including a 13Mp primary sensor, combined with a second 2Mp sensor for depth sensing. The depth sensing allows photographers to edit the focus position and depth-of-field effect after snapping a shot, but the second camera doesn’t offer a tele-lens for optical zoom shots. Other features include Full HD 1080p@60fps video, a 5.5-inch AMOLED 1920×1080 resolution display, an Exmor-R CMOS image sensor, and a 6x digital zoom. Let’s see how the Earth 1 holds up in our industry-standard benchmark tests of smartphone image quality.

Key camera specifications:

  • 13Mp Exmor-R CMOS image sensor
  • Secondary 2Mp sensor for depth sensing
  • 1.5Ghz octa-core Snapdragon 615 processor
  • 5.5-inch AMOLED 1920×1080 display
  • Full HD 1080p@60fps video

About DxOMark Mobile tests: For scoring and analysis in our smartphone camera reviews, DxOMark engineers capture and evaluate over 1500 test images and more than 2 hours of video both in controlled lab environments and in natural indoor and outdoor scenes, using the camera’s default settings. This article is designed to highlight the most important results of our testing. For more information about the DxOMark Mobile test protocol, click here. More details on how we score smartphone cameras are available here.

Test summary

Achieving an overall DxOMark Mobile Score of 48 points, breaking down to 47 points for still photos and 52 points for video, the photography capabilities of the Earth 1 are a little limited compared to many smartphones we’ve tested. In certain outdoor conditions, still photos can be reasonably well-exposed with good detail preservation of fine textures, but color casts, exposure and autofocus irregularities, and visible noise all reduce image quality. Noise reduction is implemented better when shooting video, but texture preservation is often low as a result. White balance problems in outdoor videos also persist, and although color is better in low-light videos, a very slow frame rate, autofocus irregularities, and ineffective stabilization all affect the smoothness and watchability of the Earth 1’s movie files.

Bright light

Shooting outdoors, or in bright light, the Earth 1 is capable of some decent exposures in well-balanced lighting conditions, and detail preservation is often fairly good, if not outstanding. Dynamic range is very limited, however, with a significant loss of detail in both the highlight and shadow regions. A significant level of chromatic noise is also visible in the shadow areas in many outdoor pictures, as well as heavy luminance noise in areas of uniform color, such as the sky. White balance tends to be on the magenta side in sunny conditions, but in cloudy conditions, a heavy blue/magenta color cast is very evident. Autofocus is generally accurate in good lighting, but focusing speeds are slow, with the Earth 1 often taking over a second to lock on.

In the best examples from the Earth 1’s natural test scene evaluation, exposures are good, if not amazing, with fairly good detail preservation, but a magenta color cast is evident.

Low light and Flash

Low light can be quite challenging for good image quality on the Earth 1, which tends to suffer from low texture preservation in both static and moving scenes, along with a heavy buildup of luminance noise. Exposures are acceptable indoors down to 20 Lux, but in very low-light conditions of 5 Lux, images are underexposed, and at 1 Lux, they are completely dark. Autofocus performance is also either inaccurate or slow, often taking longer than a second to lock on.

Indoor shots on the Earth 1 are often slightly underexposed, with low texture preservation and a noticeable buildup of luminance noise.

Enabling the Earth 1’s flash in low light can help improve exposure in some cases, although irregularities over consecutive shots can result in some frames being out of focus and/or underexposed. The main problem, however, is the blue white balance color cast that invariably occurs with flash photography, along with very noticeable luminance noise.

In the best examples of flash photography from the Earth 1, exposure is good, but white balance is blue and heavy luminance noise is evident.

Zoom and Bokeh

The Earth 1’s second (rear-facing) camera isn’t used for optical zoom shots. Digital zoom can of course still be used for framing in tighter on distant subjects, but image magnification achieved this way has an impact on image quality. The Earth 1 records its best results at 2x magnification in very bright light, where texture preservation is good and artifacts are limited. At greater magnifications or when using zoom in lower light conditions, fine details start to disappear and problems such as maze, moiré, and aliasing amplify, so try and stick to 2x zoom magnification where possible.

In medium-range zoom shots, aliasing, maze, and moiré effects are often visible in intricate areas.

We don’t consider the effects possible with the Earth 1’s second, lower-resolution, depth sensing sensor as a true bokeh or portrait mode due to the way it’s been implemented. Although a photographer can apply a background blur effect after the initial image has been taken, since it’s not applied automatically as part of the smartphone’s default photography features, we do not include it in our analysis.

Photo scores explained

The Earth 1 achieves a total photo score of 48, which is calculated from its scores in tests that examine different aspects of its performance under different lighting conditions. We’ll take a closer look at these image quality sub-scores in this section.

Exposure and Contrast

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

45

In bright but well-balanced lighting conditions, the Earth 1 is capable of some nice exposures, but even in cloudy conditions outdoors, pictures have a tendency to be slightly underexposed.

In well-balanced outdoor lighting, the Earth 1 is capable of some good exposures.
The Lava Z25 comparison shot is slightly brighter in the shadows compared to the Earth 1.
Apple’s iPhone 8 Plus records a similar exposure but with more neutral white balance.

Dynamic range is very limited, too, which is especially noticeable in high-contrast scenes, where a significant amount of detail is lost in the highlights, as you can see in our under-the-bridge test scene. Even in relatively easy indoor scenes in which the principal exposure is just about acceptable, any bright highlights outside the window are completely overexposed.

The Earth 1’s HDR test scene overexposes large sections of the highlight regions.
The Lava Z25’s HDR test scene displays better detail in the river and skyline.
The Apple iPhone 8 Plus produces the best results, with more details in both the highlights and shadows.

Exposure scores by lighting conditions saw a relatively consistent 58 and 52 for indoor and outdoor lighting, respectively, but a much lower 25 for low light. Exposures at 20 Lux are acceptable; images at 5 Lux are noticeably underexposed but just about exploitable; but images at 1 Lux (candlelight) are almost completely black and unusable.

At 5 Lux, images from the Earth 1 are underexposed but exploitable; at 1 Lux, however, shots are almost completely black.

Color

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

57

An okay overall score for color, with the Earth 1 achieving color category scores of 73 in indoor shots, with lower scores of 52 and 49 for outdoor and low-light color, respectively. Colors are generally vivid and pleasant in outdoor images, with accurate exposure; and although hues can be slightly oversaturated, this is often a look that smartphones users prefer.

Color rendering on the Earth 1 can be vibrant, but a little oversaturated in some cases.
Lava Z25 color saturation comparison.
The Apple iPhone 8 Plus gets the color closer to reality.

You can see in our test scene shots that there’s a particular issue with white balance in cloudy conditions, with a strong magenta and blue color cast prevalent. White balance can be more accurate in sunnier weather, as we’ve seen in some of the best examples from the Earth 1, but white balance instabilities are also evident on consecutive shots, switching between those blue and magenta tones.

A blue/magenta color cast is often visible shooting in cloudy conditions with the Earth 1.
The Lava Z25 comparison shot displays a yellow color cast which is less offensive.
The white balance from the Apple iPhone 8 Plus is more neutral.

Strong color shading also occurs in all lighting conditions, with a heavy pink cast in the center shifting to green at the edges.

Heavy color shading is often visible in both bright and low-light images from the Earth 1, shifting from pink in the center to green at the edges.

Autofocus

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

50

A very low score for autofocus, with inaccuracies and slow performance often occurring with the Earth 1. In our benchmark lab tests in low-light conditions (20 Lux), after waiting a short delay between defocusing the device and requesting focus, autofocus failed for all 30 test shots, with no sharp images recorded. When waiting a longer 2 seconds and requesting focus in the lab, the Earth 1 achieved sharp images, but it took a fairly lengthy half-second for the Earth 1 to lock on. With our objective measurements shooting natural test scenes, it appeared to take even longer, somewhere between 1 and 1.5 seconds, making it difficult to capture the decisive moment on this device.

The Earth 1 failed to record sharp images during our benchmark autofocus tests under 20 Lux lighting in the lab after a short delay between frames. After a long delay, it took sharp images, but it took the device around a half-second to lock on.

In very bright light conditions (1000 Lux) results were better, with sharp images captured in all 30 test shots after a short delay, which is encouraging, but again, autofocus speeds were slow, taking the Earth 1 almost a whole second to lock on. Speeds improved in lower light (300 lux), where again, all the test pictures were sharp and snapped almost instantly. So bright, but not too bright, is the best environment for the Earth 1’s autofocus system.

Texture

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

49

Relatively good detail preservation is possible in static scenes in bright light, with well-defined textures visible in the brickwork of this building. Very fine details such as the intricate metal work on the balconies are clearly more defined by premium competitors such as the iPhone 8 Plus, however.

In bright light good texture preservation is possible with the Earth 1
Lava Z25 comparison shot.
The Apple iPhone 8 Plus resolves better fine detail in the intricate metal work on the balconies.

In lower light conditions, the loss of detail starts to become more obvious, and in lighting conditions of 100 Lux or less, texture preservation deteriorates rapidly, even in static scenes, with sharpness down to around 30% at 5 Lux. Scenes with motion are even more challenging for the Earth 1 in all lighting conditions. Your best bet is shooting in very bright light, but even here sharpness only just exceeds 50% in scenes with some subject motion. Texture preservation is significantly improved using a tripod, however, maintaining around 80% sharpness down to 20 Lux in static scenes, so it’s certainly worth considering some camera support when shooting static scenes with the Earth 1 in low light.

Good texture is possible on the Earth 1 when shooting static scenes in bright light over 100 Lux, but when shooting images handheld or capturing images with some subject motion, good sharpness and texture preservation is difficult to achieve.

You can see from crops of test chart images shot handheld in the lab, that in very bright light (1000 Lux), the detail for the Earth 1 isn’t far behind premium devices such as the iPhone 8 Plus, and marginally better than the Lava Z25. In low light, however (20 Lux), a loss of sharpness and visible artifacts seriously affect image quality.

Crop from Earth1 handheld at 1000 Lux.
Crop from Lava Z25 handheld at 1000 Lux.
Crop from Apple iPhone 8 Plus handheld at 1000 Lux.
Crop from Earth1 handheld at 20 Lux.
Crop from Lava Z25 handheld at 20 Lux.
Crop from Apple iPhone 8 Plus handheld at 20 Lux.

Noise

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

43

A fairly low score for noise and the sample images below indicate why. The crops of handheld images in low light (20 and 5 Lux) show the impact of the heavy noise and artifacts on the Earth 1’s image quality, with results from the Lava Z25 and the Apple iPhone 8 Plus both smoother and sharper for fine detail preservation.

Crop from Earth 1 Plus handheld at 20 Lux.
Crop from Lava Z25 handheld at 20 Lux.
Crop from Apple iPhone 8 Plus handheld at 20 Lux.
Crop from Earth 1 Plus handheld at 5 Lux.
Crop from Lava Z25 handheld at 5 Lux.
Crop from Apple iPhone 8 Plus handheld at 5 Lux.

Artifacts

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

40

Points are deducted for artifacts, or visible errors in images, with the main penalties applied to the Earth 1 for vignetting, ringing, cyan shift, color fringing, a loss of sharpness, and color quantization. Along contrast edges, fringing, ringing and aliasing are often visible on smartphone images when viewed at large scale, but with the Earth 1, these errors are sometimes noticeable even at small scale, particularly the heavy color fringing in some outdoor shots. A visible cyan shift, which can result in some unnatural looking blues in the sky is also very noticeable, as well as color quantization, that results in abrupt changes in color in uniform areas where the gradients could be smoother. Although these problems aren’t uncommon with smartphones, they’re particular noticeable in some of the Earth1’s images and could be improved with better software implementation.

The Earth 1 displays very noticeable color fringing in some outdoor shots.
A cyan shift, or oversaturation of blues, affects the quality of sky rendering in some Earth 1 images.
Color quantization is visible in some images from the Earth 1.

Flash

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

51

The Earth 1 captured some good exposures using flash only and flash mixed with additional artificial light sources. Vignetting, or corner shading, is also well-controlled when mixing flash with additional lighting. Performance and processing could be improved, however, as white balance is always very blue, noise is often visible, including noticeable chromatic noise on flash-only shots, and portraits often suffer from the red-eye effect. Both exposure and autofocus irregularities occurred in consecutive shots in the lab, too.

Earth 1 flash + 5 Lux artificial light, first shot.
Autofocus fails on the Earth 1 flash + 5 Lux artificial light, second shot.
Exposure inconsistencies occur on the Earth 1 flash + 5 Lux artificial light, third shot.

Zoom

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

18

A low score for zoom, with the Earth 1’s digital zoom solution resulting in a low level of detail preservation in all lighting conditions. Its best results are achieved in bright light at 2x magnification, but even in the best examples, a loss of detail is evident and chromatic noise is visible. These flaws are amplified at longer zoom magnifications, with poor resolution and heavy chromatic noise in medium- and long-range zoom shots in all lighting conditions. Some aliasing, maze, and moiré effects, as well as strong color fringing, and irregularities between consecutive zooms shots also negatively impacted the zoom score.

Earth 1 detail preservation at 5x zoom.
Lava Z25 detail preservation at 5x zoom.
Apple iPhone 8 Plus detail preservation at 5x zoom.

Bokeh

Reliance Jio LYF Earth 1

25

The Earth 1 gets the default score of 25 points for bokeh, as it doesn’t feature a portrait mode that automatically applies a background blur effect upon capture. The second sensor does enable an effect that a photographer can apply in post-production, but as this isn’t an automatic mode, it falls outside the scope of our tests.

Video scores explained

The Earth 1 achieves a Video score of 52 points, which is a modest improvement over its performance for still photos. We calculate the overall video score using the video sub-scores to give us some indication of the device’s pros and cons for shooting moving images: Exposure (57), Color (63), Autofocus (20), Texture (44), Noise (70), Artifacts (45), and Stabilization (40).

The best aspect of the Earth 1’s video performance is noise reduction, with fairly clean files shot in both outdoor and indoor lighting conditions. Where noise reduction is effective, however, texture and fine detail preservation is fairly low, and you can expect noticeably more noise when shooting movies in low light.

Another strength for video is color, with good white balance achieved in low-light and indoor videos. White balance accuracy remains elusive when shooting video outdoors, however, with irregularities rendering a range of different color casts depending on the weather conditions. Color rendering is also fairly muted in low light, where videos are underexposed. Some strong color shading is also visible in outdoor videos, as well as color fringing along contrast edges. Color saturation indoors and outdoors is generally good, if not amazing, and when shooting color test charts in the lab, saturation was fairly strong. This doesn’t translate to well-saturated hues in natural scenes, however, which were a little more average.

Exposures can be acceptable in well-balanced lighting outdoors, especially on static scenes, but there are issues with temporal aspects, and exposure irregularities are common. Dynamic range remains very limited in video exposures, too.

Achieving smooth videos is also challenging for the Earth 1 due to a combination of frame rate, stabilization, and autofocus issues. Autofocus jumps around with walking and panning actions, and there’s unnecessary refocusing due to its limited tracking capabilities. The frame rate is also very slow, dropping to 17fps in low light, and stabilization isn’t effective, with frequent jumps in videos.

Conclusion: Watch this space

Reliance can be praised for developing competitively-priced smartphones for the Indian market with many of the higher-end features seen on premium devices. In the case of the Earth 1, however, implementation could be improved, as more effective processing would ensure better results for both stills and video. We look forward to seeing how the brand develops its technologies to achieve image quality on par with its key competitors.

48
mobile
47
photo
52
video

Pros

  • Good detail preservation in bright light
  • Good flash coverage when mixed with additional light sources

Pros

  • Good color rendering in lab test videos
  • Well-controlled noise in outdoor and indoor lighting

Cons

  • Autofocus failures often occur
  • Dynamic range is limited
  • Strong pink white balance cast in all lighting conditions
  • White balance and exposure instabilities
  • Strong luminance noise in low light
  • Heavy color shading in all lighting conditions
  • Strong blue white balance in flash pictures
  • Heavy color fringing and ringing
  • Low resolution and strong chromatic noise in zoom shots

Cons

  • Autofocus irregularities and limited tracking capabilities
  • Stabilization is not effective
  • Very low frame rate in low light
  • Dynamic range is limited
  • Visible exposure and white balance instabilities
  • Strong color shading, especially outdoors
  • Heavy color fringing

DXOMARK encourages its readers to share comments on the articles. To read or post comments, Disqus cookies are required. Change your Cookies Preferences and read more about our Comment Policy.