Camera Hardware & Software

Huawei introduced its first dual rear camera setup with the P9 last year. Since then, Huawei has added the feature to several more of its phones, including the Honor 8 and Honor 6X. It’s no surprise then to see Huawei’s flagship Mate 9 sporting dual cameras around back.

Like the P9, the Mate 9’s rear cameras were co-developed with Leica, the well-known German camera manufacturer. The two companies worked together, tweaking lens design and Huawei’s image processing algorithms, to ensure the captured images met Leica’s requirements. The Mate 9’s Camera app also received some input from Leica. While it offers the same features as the camera included with EMUI 4.1 on the Honor 8, it adds three film modes—Standard, Vivid, Smooth—that produce the same effects as those included in Leica’s cameras. The app also uses Leica’s fonts and colors for the UI and even replicates the Leica shutter sound.

The Mate 9’s camera module uses two different sensors. For the color sensor, Huawei uses a 12MP IMX286 Exmor RS, which belongs to Sony’s stacked BSI family. This is the same color sensor used in the P9 and Honor 8. The 20MP monochrome sensor is also made by Sony but was customized for Huawei. We do not know the exact model, but based on my calculations it most likely is one of Sony’s latest sensors with 1.0µm pixels. This black-and-white-only sensor captures significantly more light than the color sensor, because it does not have an RGB Bayer color filter array keeping light from reaching the photodiodes.

By combining the luminance data from the monochrome sensor with the color data from the other sensor, the Mate 9 produces a single image that should have better contrast and less noise than an image taken with only a single color sensor. Using two smaller sensors instead of a single large sensor to capture more light also keeps the phone thinner and avoids a big camera bump; a larger sensor requires a longer focal length, adding to the z-height of the camera module.

Camera Architecture
  Huawei Mate 9 Huawei Mate 8
Front Camera: Resolution 8MP 8MP
Front Camera: Sensor Sony IMX179 Exmor R
(1.4µm, 1/3.2")
Sony IMX179 Exmor R
(1.4µm, 1/3.2")
Front Camera: Focal Length 3.38mm (26mm equivalent) 3.38mm (26mm equivalent)
Front Camera: Aperture f/1.9 f/2.4
Rear Camera: Resolution C: 12MP
M: 20MP
16MP
Rear Camera: Sensor Color:
Sony IMX286 Exmor RS
(1.25µm, 1/2.9")

Monochrome:
Sony ?
Sony IMX298 Exmor RS
(1.12µm, 1/2.8")
Rear Camera: Focal Length C: 3.95mm (27mm equivalent)
M: 3.95mm
4.04mm (27mm equivalent)
Rear Camera: Aperture C: f/2.2
M: f/2.2
f/2.0

Unlike Huawei’s first-generation dual camera in the P9, which used two sensors of the same size to achieve a one-to-one mapping between pixels, the Mate 9’s second-generation dual camera uses different resolution sensors. This implies it must scale the output from one sensor to align with the pixels of the other. To see if this extra scaling impacts image quality, I compared a series of pictures at both 12MP and 20MP. The 20MP images look sharper, like a higher-resolution image should, but otherwise I could not see any significant differences in quality. The Mate 9 still does not appear to use data from the monochrome camera to improve image quality when shooting video, but it does use it when taking HDR photos.

The improved dual-core 14-bit image signal processor (ISP) inside the Mate 9’s Kirin 960 SoC is responsible for merging data from the two sensors. The biggest change here is the integration of a second ISP dedicated to calculating distance and creating depth maps. With Kirin 950/955, this ISP, which was developed with an undisclosed industry partner, was a separate component. Bringing it inside the SoC and onto its 16nm FinFET process should reduce power consumption.

The Mate 9 uses depth sensing for longer-range focusing, part of a hybrid autofocus system that also includes PDAF (fast, works well in good lighting), laser AF (good in low-light conditions at ranges up to 2 meters or 6.5 feet), and traditional contrast AF. Huawei says all four AF methods are used in parallel in order to achieve the fastest AF performance for any condition. Only the color sensor includes PDAF, so when taking black-and-white pictures, only the depth, laser, and contrast AF methods are available. Still, this system is an upgrade over the P9 and Honor 8, whose hybrid AF system did not include PDAF at all. The Mate 9 also includes optical image stabilization (OIS), a feature Huawei’s first-generation dual camera module lacked.

The Mate 9 also uses the depth data captured from its dual cameras for its simulated wide aperture feature. This allows you to change depth of field and the subject in focus either before or even after taking a picture, useful for creating a bokeh effect. The video above shows how this works using the Honor 8 (the Mate 9 works the same way). The focus point (or point of emphasis) is selected by tapping on the desired object in the image. Sliding a finger up or down on the screen adjusts the simulated aperture between f/0.95 to f/16, which determines how much of the image appears out of focus. After applying and saving the changes, the original image and depth map are retained for making additional changes in the future.

This feature works pretty well, but it works best when the subjects of the image are within 2 meters (6.5 feet) of the camera. There are some limitations, however. This feature cannot fix a blurry, unfocused image—you need to take a good picture to start with—and it cannot be used for focus stacking. Also, it’s better at blurring backgrounds than foregrounds, especially for objects farther from the camera.

Display Camera Still Image Quality
Comments Locked

84 Comments

View All Comments

  • name99 - Friday, January 27, 2017 - link

    Didn't they say that about Xiaomi a year ago?...

    I think Huawei as an overall company has more legs that Xiaomi because they take technology more seriously and have fingers in more pies. But that doesn't mean they'll inevitably continue to do well in phones. One needs a longer track record, and more of a feeling of how they do things, than just one or two popular models.
  • Meteor2 - Saturday, January 28, 2017 - link

    Xiaomi is doing well, isn't it?
  • melgross - Tuesday, January 31, 2017 - link

    No. Sales are down over 30%, among other problems.
  • lilmoe - Friday, January 27, 2017 - link

    Thanks for the review.

    About scrolling performance. Would it be possible to log clock speeds from the point you touch the screen, then flick and let go, to the point scrolling stops?
    This smells like a governer issue, if anything.
  • lilmoe - Friday, January 27, 2017 - link

    Pixel and Nexus devices usually ramp the clock up higher than other OEM devices, and the clocks stay higher for a bit longer after you flick. Galaxies usually have the lowest ramp up, which is why they don't feel as smooth. It would be nice to have a comparison of various device/skin clock speed logs, and the impact they have on perceived performance vs on-screen battery life.
  • fanofanand - Friday, January 27, 2017 - link

    Excellent review Matt. I'm still in the "I won't pay more than $400 for a phone" camp, but if I was willing this phone would tempt me greatly. I really don't want bigger than 5 inches, but maybe it's just because I've never had a phone with a screen bigger than 5 inches. My wife's is 5.5 and it feels like a brick compared to my 4.95" phone. Disappointing that they didn't implement MU-MIMO, but otherwise there is a lot to like with this phone. I would have appreciated seeing some mention of the 960 PRO you included in your graph on page 1, I know the Porsche model (lol) was already in a pipeline article but this is the first I've heard of the Pro model. It looks like it just uses more storage? Anyway, great review, I hope this encourages more companies to start implementing the A73's.

    I do have one question though, wouldn't A73 matched with A35 make more sense in BIG.little than A73/A53? A35 is a true low power core and is a more modern design than the A53, seems like that would make for the perfect "little" yet I never see it used.
  • Meteor2 - Friday, January 27, 2017 - link

    Lol, I posted my comment (below) before reading the other comments. Mine is spookily similar to yours! Great minds, of course ;).
  • UtilityMax - Monday, January 30, 2017 - link

    MU-MIMO is useless 99 point 99 percent of time.
  • lopri - Friday, January 27, 2017 - link

    Will Huawei keep the promise of OS update? My Honor 8 runs the same version of Android when I first got it today.
  • Ariknowsbest - Saturday, January 28, 2017 - link

    Android 7 Nougat is already available by OTA, on Honor 8. It started to roll out around a week or two ago.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now