The past few days have been interesting in the way of Nexus 5 (or Nexus 4 2013) rumors. After a few grumblings that seemed to confirm that LG would once again be responsible for the smartphone Nexus slot, there was silence, an FCC approval disclosure and then retraction, and then purported spotting of the Nexus 5 in Google's KitKat announcement video.

Today the FCC re-posted the approval documentation for ZNFD820, or the LG-D820 model, a device which is steadily gaining traction as potential candidate for the Nexus 5. Although as usual LG has requested confidentiality on the internal, external, and test setup photos, what's particularly interesting is that the wireless charging disclosure includes some shots of the device's battery cover and its inductive charging and NFC coils. In addition the back is not designed to be user replaceable, and there's no microSD card slot. The backside appearance seems to line up with the visual appearance of the Nexus device from the video as well, with similar shape and oddly oversized cover glass for the camera aperture. Keep in mind the photo is of the inside of the battery cover. 


Video appearance of purported Nexus device (above), LG-D820 rear cover rotated and scaled (below)

What's interesting about the LG-D820 approval is that it includes almost all of the bands you'd want for a North American SKU that covers LTE, CDMA, and HSPA+ for AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint. There's no Verizon LTE (Band 13) in this band coverage. Non inclusion of Verizon LTE banding in an upcoming Nexus isn't much of a surprise after relationship issues following Galaxy Nexus (CDMA/LTE), inclusion of Sprint is a bit of one, but not as much (Google Voice, Google Wallet).

The breakdown is LTE on bands: 2, 4, 5, 17, 25, 26, 41 (1 and 7 are probable as well, FCC only lists what's relevant inside the USA), WCDMA on bands: 2, 4, 5, and CDMA2000 1x/EVDO on band classes 0, 1, and 10 (800, 1900, 900 MHz). There's also 802.11a/b/g/n/ac (the screenshot above doesn't call out 802.11ac but it is explicitly mentioned and tested in the appropriate sections of the test reports) as well as BT 4.0 LE (Bluetooth smart ready). Inclusion of CDMA2000 1x/EVDO in and of itself is surprising, and the device includes the necessary LTE banding for Sprint, of course CDMA2000 is also relevant in a few other markets in combination with LTE. 

Update: Another thing that caught my eye was inclusion of mention that the LG-D820 uses variable antenna matching (antenna tuning) which would be necessary if it's going to accommodate a lot of different bands on just one transmit antenna. This could end up being a Qualcomm tunable frontend part. Display diagonal is also listed as 126.0mm which works out to 4.96-inches diagonal for display, enough to warrant a Nexus 5 name, and a length and width of 131.9 mm x 68.2 mm. 

Update: Brad Molen from Engadget caught a reference to MSM8974, aosp_hammerhead and KyeLimePie[sic] inside the disclosure as well. There are two references to MSM8974 (Snapdragon 800) which would to validate that as being the SoC platform and this as a Nexus device running 4.4 which was codenamed Key Lime Pie up until its recent rebranding to KitKat.

It's too early to know for sure if this is the real deal or not, but both rumblings that I've heard and external factors are starting to point in this direction, and inclusion of both AOSP, MSM8974, and Key Lime Pie (now KitKat) references make it hard to refute. S4GRU (Sprint 4G Rollout Updates) was one of the sites tracking LG-D820 on its forums for some time, I've been paying close attention to that situation as well since I heard about that device model and saw the band combinations onboard. Recent attention just intensifies suspicions. The inclusion of LTE in the next Nexus smartphone is an obvious and welcome upgrade, and Google has been indeed pushing for more impressive banding in its devices, which we saw through the Nexus 7 (3G/4G LTE) band combination. 

Source: S4GRU, Engadget

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  • ruzveh - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    LG might be good but they are very slow in Distribution
  • ilkhan - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    Damnit. I'll have to purchase my...(GNexus, N4, N7, N7 (2013)) 5th Nexus device in 18 months.
    How sad.
    :D
  • rd_nest - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    Another Nexus phone full of compromises and pathetic batterylife. Did nexus manage to get 0.1% marketshare?
  • UpSpin - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    You have to make compromises at this price point.
    For people like you, who don't like compromises, get a normal priced flagship smartphone (HTC One, Samsung Galaxy S4, LG G2, Sony Xperia Z1), but please don't expect a price similar to the Nexus.
  • hughlle - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    all we've seen is a potential photo and some pages form the FCC and people are already complaining about battery life. what kind of usage are you seeing atm? Oh that's right, noone knows. Why not wait till it is released before making such statements. You never know, it could even be the case that LG have tested their hardware and deemed that this battery is suitable.
  • tipoo - Thursday, September 19, 2013 - link

    If it's still 300 bucks, I'll take some compromises. I can't even find used 4Ss below that locally.
  • Impulses - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    Having a Nexus on Sprint again would belovely!
  • djc208 - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    I find it interesting that while Sprint supports Google Voice (one of the reasons I stuck with their service) and Google Wallet, and the fact that the current Nexus 4 is based off the LG Optimus G, the Optimus G itself doesn't support Google Wallet?
  • st_7 - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    Brian, I would like you to reply to this, why is TDD LTE(with 63%, don't know what that percentage indicates) is been shown in 'Duty Cycles' part in the image of "7.2 Wireless Technologies", does it mean that this phone has or capable of TDD LTE also?. And can you elaborate Antenna Tuning or switching thing(referred as tuning elements)? does that mean all the bands(frequencies) are supported in every phone and phone automatically switches to the frequence CDMA/GSM/LTE? or is it simply some frequencies are hard blocked as usual?
  • djw39 - Friday, September 6, 2013 - link

    Sprint will have FDD-LTE on 1900 PCS/800 SMR, and also TDD-LTE on 2500, this phone will support all three bands

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