front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

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front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

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front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

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front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

LeEco (pronounced La-eco) did a big bash for the Indian launch of their 2016 top-of-the-line and budget offering, Le Max 2 and Le 2 respectively. While the Le Max 2 will have lesser buyers as compared to the masses that will hunt for Le 2, the competition is not less for the Le 2 itself. The pricing too is pitched right there with Xiaomi’s Redmi Note 3’s 32GB variant at Rs. 11,999. We went on to use the Le 2 for over two weeks now in various conditions and here are our findings with the phone.

Le 2 is an all-metal unibody phone and the one we have is the rose gold variant. It also comes in silver-ish gray color. Here, there is nothing fancy but the plain old boxy design with curved corners that is typical of any Chinese phone you will get to see out there. But at that price, there is nothing much to complain about as it’s a solid metal build with chamfered edges. Power and volume rockers are on one side and a Dual SIM tray on the other, the top has an IR blaster while the bottom has the duo of mono speaker and microphone with symmetrical design language. Also present is the USB Type-C port that will be used for charging the phone as well as plugging in earphones.

On the front is a 5.5″ FHD display that has decent viewing angles but is highly reflective. There are a few display modes you can use but still, this cannot beat the Redmi Note 3’s sunlight display. The touch sensitivity of the phone is also good and we have no complaints on that front. The back of the phone is quite slippery just like the back of the Redmi Note 3. The camera bump does poke your hand as it has sharp edges and we feel it is not well finished. There is also a rounded edges square fingerprint scanner, and it shines like a mirror similar to the one we saw on the Le 1s.

With a 5.5″ FHD screen, one would want to use it for multimedia and gaming. Though it doesn’t match up to flagship displays it doesn’t disappoint you either. Colors are more natural and pleasing to the eyes. The phone does have a considerable amount of bezel and has a thick black border around the frame. This is irritating to some but after a while, you will stop noticing it. As indicated before, the display is highly reflective and reading gets hard to even at the highest brightness under direct sunlight. There are some contrast modes in settings but still, we miss something like the sunlight display on the Redmi Note 3.

There are 3 capacitive buttons that light up when touched and they are well lit as well when compared to the very dim ones to be found on the Redmi Note 3. They are also bigger in size but it’s impossible to spot them when they aren’t lit. The buttons are not customizable and there is no option to turn them off and have on-screen buttons.

There have been reports and complaints about the display making some noise when pressed in some areas. We did try it out and yes it creaks when the middle portion of the screen is pressed hard but we believe no one will press it that hard as it is never needed. In a day to day usage, there was no touch issue found.

EUI 5.6 is what is found on the Le2 and is built off Android Marshmallow. The latest update to the 5.8 version has also arrived that brings in a native Fingerprint lock for Apps and various fixes. This is a heavily customized version of Android that resembles iOS all around the place. Similar to many Chinese phones you won’t find an app drawer here. There is no toggle menu available on swipe down but a mix of options with audio player and task manager available via the recent apps button. Overall the OS is very smooth, thanks to the Snapdragon 652 processor and 3GB of RAM. At any point, if you clear all the apps, 1.6GB of free RAM is available. Out of 32GB storage, 29.1GB of space is available for the user.

Colorful – the EUI is colorful all over and we like the choice of images, transitions, and translucent backgrounds used. Of course, it resembles iOS but we never felt it was very heavy like MIUI

Themes – there are 3 standard themes and close to 9 themes that can be downloaded. Most of these themes resemble what is found in the MIUI store but all work well

Online Media Content / Ecosystem: This has to be the one differentiator that will stand out from the competitors Le 2 has. With Le 2 one will get a year’s worth of subscription for free and here are the services that one stands to gain and we believe that this will be the trump card as it can get users very used to the online content as they are really very convenient:

LeView:This is the left-most home screen view and is similar to the ones we find on OnePlus’s Oxygen or HTC’s Blinkfeed that has many options and widgets that have been selected and put in place. Here, LeEco gives you a list of interests of your choice and with that, they pick content from the internet and display videos, news, and such things. We found it to be a little slower in terms of performance as it is scanning the “www” maybe. Also, some Chinese content too showed up and hopefully, LeEco will improve this over a period of time

Live: This is LeEco’s Live TV and in India, they’ve tied up with Yupp TV to bring in all the regional channels which include several popular news channels too. Most popular North Indian and South Indian channels are found here in many languages such as Hindi, English, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, Punjabi, Marathi, Bengali, and a few others. The live broadcast works really well without any hiccups provided you have a decent Internet connection. The access to this is the place where you’d usually find the app drawer icon and you cannot move it around.

Levidi:This is where one can find lots of movie content and LeEco has tied up with EROS Bros to bring in this content. There are tons of regional options as well and we found many popular selections in the list from categories like music, trailers, comedy, entertainment, education, gaming, etc. The playback is pretty smooth and the overall content is good in quality.

Settings Menu: Like most of the Chinese custom UI, the EUI’s settings menu is also colorful and has tons of options that are neatly laid out. One of the things we loved is the battery stats that displays more details as compared to other phones. The menu also has a dedicated ‘App Settings’ tab that lets you customize specific settings for system apps.

The overall performance of the phone was good and satisfactory. To make it easy for you, let’s divide the results across various aspects about the phone’s usage and how it performed:

RAM Management: With all the apps closed, 1.6GB of RAM is free and as we loaded more and more apps such as 20 apps the RAM came down to 300-400MB. But these are just numbers and the Le 2 never struggled in its performance. Most of the apps were still in the memory but there were high-end games that were removed from the memory when other high-end games were loaded and this is expected if there is no more space left. Compared to the Redmi Note 3, Le 2 is much better as Xiaomi has always struggled in this department

Fingerprint Scanner: EUI allows up to 5 fingerprints to be added and this works very well almost all the time, including different angles. The latest 5.8 OTA update adds the ability to password-protect specific apps and unlocks them using fingerprint and you can now take photos by tapping the fingerprint module. We noticed that the time taken to unlock the screen is a little slower than other phones but the accuracy is really high.

Audio: Audio output via the loudspeaker is much higher than most of the phones in this segment but at the highest levels it does have some noise. When it comes to the output thru the CDLA technology-driven earphones we do notice some quality improvement in bass levels. We will bring in more details on this when we get a chance to try it via some high-end earphones that will allow us to identify the exact difference. But at the moment, though there is an improvement much of the crowd may not notice it if they do not care much for the finer details.

Signal Strength and Call Clarity: Call quality was very good but certainly cannot compare with phones like Moto G4 Plus which always have good quality. Signal reception was better than most of the phones in the segment and even when 2 SIMs are used, one should not have an issue. There were cases when 4G SIM was used for VoLTE and the phone got a little warm but not too much

Gaming: The Snapdragon 652 with Adreno 510 GPU and 3GB of RAM will play all kinds of games that you want to play on the Le 2 without many hassles. We played Nova 3, Asphalt 8, Mortal Combat, and Dead Trigger and had no issues at all. The best part is that the phone never overheated as LeEco is keeping things in check. Long duration playing also caused no issues to occur. But the loudspeaker can get blocked when you are holding the device which is the only issue.

Other Connectivity: IR blaster, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth – all these worked very well and there were no issues. IR blaster worked with OGeneral AC and Samsung, Sony, LG televisions and should work with most of the compatible devices out there.

Le 2 has a3000mAh battery and we are coming to this phone after being used to phones with bigger batteries such as Redmi Note 3, Zenfone Max that have long battery life. But nothing to worry about here as the Le 2 delivered a good and satisfactory battery life.

In our 1st test, the battery lasted for 11.5hrs with a screen-on time of 5.5hrs whereas, in the 2nd test, it lasted for 13hrs with a screen-on time of 6hrs. Both these battery tests don’t include standby time during the overnight. In the 3rd test, the phone stayed powered on for over 30hrs with a SOT of 6.5hrs. These tests were performed under moderate usage whereas during heavy and intensive usage it managed to give 4 hours of SOT.

On the basis of the above tests, we strongly believe that most of the users should be able to get a day’s worth of battery life out of this phone. There are some power-saving options such as Ultra-long standby during sleep and Battery assistant to extend the battery life. Le 2 also supports Quick charging and takes around 90 minutes to fully charge. The phone and charger also get a little hot but that’s just normal.

The front camera is a 16MP lens with f/2.0 aperture, PDAF, and dual led flash. The camera app is a typical EUI one with standard options and shooting modes. Easy to use and the overall image processing is very fast. To make it easy for you we have divided the camera performance into various aspects:

Daylight: Pictures captured in daylight come good. Color reproduction is mostly accurate and there are no saturation gimmicks done like in Xiaomi Redmi Note 3. The dynamic range needs to be improved but overall the photos taken were of good quality with an ample amount of details. However, the camera struggles when it comes to focusing while taking close-up shots and on windy days it’s almost impossible for the phone to lock focus. Images are sharper too.

Indoor: Picture quality is a little inconsistent at times and we had to use the HDR mode to make some adjustments. But it is better than most of the phones in the segment with the Moto G4 Plus being the exception

Video: The phone supports 4K video but it is very shabby output. It is as if someone took separate clips and put them together. Hopefully, a software update should be able to fix this issue. Otherwise, the videos are decent with a good amount of audio also recorded.

Front camera: Wide-angle does a good job here and we were impressed with the selfies taken. The selfies were good in quality with the right color saturation and decent details even when taken in indoor and low-light situations.

TheLe 2 packs a punch when it comes to the specifications and build quality. It is also a very good all-around performer. When compared to the other phones in the segment, the camera performance with the exception of Moto G4 Plus is better in many departments. The LeEco ecosystem offering a free 1-year subscription is a real deal that will attract many and this feature really stands out. At 11,999 INR, Le 2 is a very good choice and as long as you are not too much behind crazy duration of battery life like Redmi Note 3 and Zenfone Max. Considering LeEco flash sales are better than others, it is a very good choice and you will get more for the money you pay. We highly recommend the Le 2 but it does not come without shortcomings. There is no expandable memory, no 3.5mm audio jack and you’re stuck with a single port for charging as well as earphones. The display under sunlight is rather tricky at times but all of these issues can be lived with and they are not show stoppers. The phone does have LED notification, USB OTG support and the IR blaster too is a nice addition.

front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

The screen belongs to sensitive and fragile objects, please do not use excessive force and be careful during installation, in case the product is broken. If you are not good at installation, it is recommended to ask professionals to install it

front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

LeEco, formerly Letv, is a fairly new entrant in the smartphone market, but the company has made a name for itself in China and India thanks to their blitzkrieg marketing. In India, the company recently launched its budget handset, the LeEo Le 2, to take on the massively popular Redmi Note 3 from Xiaomi.

Like with almost every other phone in the sub-15k price range in India, the Le 2 also features a unibody aluminium build. However, compared to the Redmi Note 3 and the Moto G4 Plus, I like the design of the Le 2 the most. The handset’s top-notch build quality perfectly complements its design, which might not be unique, but is at least not as chubby as the Redmi Note 3.

The overly large camera cutout at the rear sits right above the relatively smaller fingerprint scanner sensor, with the two-tone LED flash located at the right. The top and bottom of the rear also sport the usual antenna lines. At the front, the 5.5-inch Full HD display sits between the top and bottom bezels that are almost equal in size. The bottom bezel also houses the capacitive navigation buttons that can be customised to a certain extent in EUI. The top of the handset houses an IR blaster, while the bottom houses a USB Type-C port and a mono speaker (don’t be fooled by the two speaker grilles). The volume and power buttons are located on the right, while the SIM card tray is on the left.

The 5.5-inch Full HD display on the Le 2 is one of the handset’s strong point. It offers great viewing angles, contrast levels and gets decently bright as well. However, there are three issues that plague the display: first, the black bezels surrounding it; second, the display flexes when pressed; and third, the sunlight eligibility is not up the mark as the display is barely visible in direct sunlight.

The first issue is very common on many other Chinese phones, and it helps in giving a wrong impression of the amount of bezel space surrounding the display. As for the second issue, it is not a huge deal as it does not affect the build quality or usability of the phone in any way. LeEco has already issued a statement on the matter and says that the display flexes because of a protective layer that they have installed below it.

Unlike the Redmi Note 3 and almost every other phone in this range, the Le 2 does not feature a microSD card slot. Instead, it only comes with 32GB of internal storage out of which around 23GB is available to the end user.

The Le 2 runs on Android 6.0 Marshmallow out of the box, though it is completely overshadowed by LeEco’s EUI skin. The skin does not look like iOS, but some features definitely seem to be influenced by it. For example, there is a Control Centre in the OS that offers one access to commonly used system settings. This Control Centre replaces the Quick Settings panel of Android completely, and instead of being found in the notification shade, it sits inside the Recent Apps view. I am not particularly fond of this change and wish LeEco at least offered an option in EUI to put system toggles in the notification panel.

Like with other Chinese OEMs, EUI is a very heavy skin. If not for the Google Play Store and other Google apps, it would be tough for anyone to figure out if the handset even runs on Android. This is not particularly a bad thing since EUI offers plenty of customization options that power users will appreciate. On the flip side, many first time users can feel a bit overwhelmed with so many features, especially when they open the Settings menu.

Under the hood, the Le 2 is powered by an octa-core Snapdragon 652 chipset clocked at 1.8GHz and 3GB RAM. On paper, the Le 2 is the fastest phone available in India inside the Rs. 20,000 ($300) range. It is even faster than the Redmi Note 3 that sports the hexa-core Snapdragon 650 chipset. The raw horsepower of the chipset definitely shows its grunt as the Le 2 despite running the heavy EUI skin runs smoothly even while running heavy games and applications. However, the UI does tend to stutter every once in a while, which clearly shows some optimisation issues with it.

Unlike the Moto G4 Plus, the Le 2 does not heat up when pushed hard like when playing games like Asphalt 8 or when using the camera app for an extended period of time.

With a 3000mAh battery and the efficient Snapdragon 652 chipset, the Le 2 easily lasts a day of heavy usage.The handset does not last as long as the Redmi Note 3 on a single charge, but you can easily extend the battery life to almost two days using the various power saving features included in EUI. On an average, I managed to squeeze around 1.5 days of usage from the phone on a single charge, with the device easily lasting two days during weekends and on particularly light days.

The Le 2 comes with a 16MP F/2.0 shooter at its rear with Phase Detection AF. The camera setup is similar to the one found on the Redmi Note 3, but their is quite a bit of performance difference between the two. In daylight, photos taken from the Le 2 come out looking slightly bland and neutral, and they lack any kind of punch. As the amount of available light reduces, the Le 2’s 16MP shooter struggles to take decent photos. In extreme low light, the photos from the phone are hardly of any use.

Disappointingly, the Le 2 despite the presence of a powerful Snapdragon 652 chipset lacks an Auto HDR mode. Thankfully, it does have the option to record videos in 4K resolution, though the videos are completely ruined by the heavy compression artifacts.

The Le 2 offers almost the same or slightly lower imaging performance than the Redmi Note 3, and its camera setup is considerably behind the excellent 16MP shooter of the Moto G4 Plus.

For its price, the Le 2 is a great phone. You will be hard-pressed to find a better phone within Rs. 11,000 in India. The phone does have some niggling build quality issues, and the lack of a 3.5mm audio jack is going to cause a lot of inconvenience to its potential buyers. Then there is also the lack of a microSD card slot on the handset — a feature that is a commonplace in handsets of this range. If you can get over them, the Le 2 is a great buy.

When compared to Xiaomi’s Redmi Note 3 though, things are a bit different. The Redmi Note 3 has turned out to be incredibly popular in India selling in excess of 1 million units within a few months of its launch. At Rs. 12,000, the Redmi Note 3 is just a grand costlier than Le 2 and offers a better camera, battery life, and system performance. Until and unless you cannot justify spending that extra grand, the Redmi Note 3 should be your first choice between the two handsets. LeEco still has to prove their worth in terms of providing regular software updates to their devices and there are plenty of horror stories related to their after sales service as well.

front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

The manufacturer LeTV, now called LeEco, shows with the LeTV 2 that the latest technology and hardware does not have to cost a lot. The design was again kept simple and elegant. The slightly rounded corners makes the phone look very elegant.

You look at the LeEco Le2 on a 5.5 inch display with FullHD resolution, so you can continue to enjoy your videos and pictures in high quality. The phone is powered with a 64-bit processor by MediaTek (Helio X20 Turbo MT6797) with ten cores and a clock speed of 2.3GHz. The processor works together with strong 3GB of RAM and the Mali-T880 GPU. Thus, it is taken care of for enough power. The internal memory of the new LeEco 2 is 32GB and is not expandable using an microSD card. Nevertheless, for your games, videos and music should be enough space on the smartphone.

The main camera triggers images with 16.0 mega pixels. Also the front camera is a great camera and it takes selfies with 8.0 mega pixels and wide-angle lens. Video recordings are even done with 4K. All the great functions can be used in full swing thank to 3000mAh battery. You can recharge quickly using the Quick Charge function too.

An absolute novelty is the USB Type-C 3.0 charging port of the LeEco Le2. The manufacturer has dispensed the phones headphone jack connection and earphones are now directly connected through the USB Type-C ports. This is all thanks to LeTV"s Continuous Digital Lossless Audio Technology.

Furthermore, a fingerprint scanner is on the back, which can help protect you and your phone more against outside influences. The smartphone runs on eUI 5.6 operating system which is based on Android 6. Therefore you are on the cutting edge of things. As usual, you also have the dual Sim function, Bluetooth 4.2, dual-band WiFi, GPS / A-GPS, Glonass and much more on board.

front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

The Chinese company, LeEco (formerly LeTV) launched their two smartphones in India, Le 1S as a budget oriented and Le Max as a flagship. The Le 1S has a surprising hardware featuring a fingerprint sensor at the back, a very large 32 GB storage, a high-performance octa-core processor and a full HD screen with a sleek metallic design targeted in the sub-10k price bracket. While the specifications win our heart, let’s see how it performs in our LeEco Le 1s review.

The full metallic unibody design with chamfered edges on the Le 1S look prominent and seems like it’s a high priced premium device. Very well made, a good finishing of the handset makes it you don’t want to let it go off your hands. 169 grams is a quite light weight for a 5.5-inch device having a metallic body because metals are heavier than plastics materials.

The added stuff that caught our attention is the fingerprint scanner and the USB Type-C which most of the phone in this segment do not offer. Another important thing to note is it comes with a 32 GB storage which is again a plus one.

The front looks astonishing, having thin bezels, very impressive on the first look and feels highly comfortable to hold in the hands with just 7.5 mm thin. Sometimes it can slip from your hands due to the sleek design and smooth glass on the display.

The top area has a 5 MP front camera and a couple of sensors. When you move to the bottom area, you will see there are no buttons, but wait, are they backlit? Yes, there are buttons located at the bottom that can’t be seen unless you touch them. Finally, a budget smartphone with backlit keys, the Le 1S supports backlit touch buttons.

Interestingly, there is a mirror-finish fingerprint sensor at the back and a 13 MP primary camera with an LED flash. Alongside is a small microphone located. The battery capacity is 3000 mAh and it cannot be removed due to the unibody design.

Moving to the top, you have an IR blaster and a 3.5 mm audio jack. The bottom sports a new USB Type-C port and two speaker grills. The speaker grill may fool you as they aren’t featuring dual speakers. The left one is actually the microphone.

The LeEco Le 1S has a 5.5-inch full HD IPS display having a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels. The display is crisp and sharp. The sleek glass on the display is buttery smooth and hence, you will enjoy the touchscreen to interact with.

The viewing angles are great, images and text can be seen from a wider angle clearly. The color reproduction is good, however, the display brightness isn’t too bright but on the dimmer side and hence, you will see images slightly darker.

There are color modes to choose such as Letv (default), Vivid, Natural, and Soft if you want to tweak the colors on the display. It can be configured under Settings -> Display.

The LeEco offers Android 5.0.2 Lollipop on the software side. We would love to see a marshmallow update on the handset. The company told us that the Le 1S will get a marshmallow update somewhere in April 2016. It has a customized EUI skin on top of Android Lollipop which makes it different from a regular Android interface.

We noticed that the touch response is very fast and the software experience was very smooth and intuitive. There aren’t any preinstalled apps that come with Le 1S thus, it is free from any bloatware.

The user interface doesn’t offer an app drawer and a much simpler UI with everything’s on the homescreen. What I liked the most is the recent button menu. When you press the recent button, you will be presented with a plethora of shortcuts and options other than just recent apps. Usually, the recent menu on a regular smartphone consists of the apps that you have opened it and used it recently, but in this case, the LeEco did something innovative that no one did. They added all the shortcuts that a user wants on a single button, that means, no one will have to swipe the notifications bar as well as to go inside the settings.

Another major thing that I most like in the Le 1s is the data control. When you are on a mobile data, you are on low data and want to save it, then the EUI allows you to control the data usage of the apps by simply tapping the slider which directly disconnects the internet for the selected app. Such features are found in Apple iPhones.

We have seen many smartphones with fingerprint sensors and very fewer phones come with extraordinary features. The LeEco Le 1S boasts a fingerprint scanner at the back. The fingerprint scanner is fast and effective. The moment you place the finger on the fingerprint scanner, it unlocks in no time. It isn’t as fast as the Honor 7’s fingerprint scanner but it is a log better than the iPhone 6 and the Galaxy S6. Do note the that this is a budget smartphone.

You can add a maximum of 5 different fingerprints and each fingerprint can be used to unlock the phone. Setting the fingerprint needs 10 taps to add a fingerprint. It doesn’t require the power button to press before, it unlocks right away just by placing your finger.

The Le 1S is powered by a MediaTek Helio X10 Turbo (MT6795) SoC that has 8 cores clocked at 2.2 GHz coupled with 3 GB of RAM and a PowerVR 6200 GPU. The processor is quite powerful and can handle multitasking with ease.

We ran several apps to check the performance of the hardware and it turns out that we didn’t notice any single lag while performing basic operations. Apps such as Facebook, Messenger, WhatsApp, Soundcloud, Flipkart, Shareit and few others were installed that includes games. We also did not face any crash reports from our tested apps. The performance highly fluid. The 3 GB RAM can hold as many apps for multi-tasking. The performance was mind blowing in our case.

The Geekbench scored 974 points on single-core performance and a massive 4886 points on multi-core performance. The multi-core performance score of the Geekbench was even better than the Samsung Galaxy S6 and the Sony Xperia Z5. It states that the smartphone can be used heavily on multitasking.

To check the gaming performance on the Le 1S, we ran a few graphics hungry games on the LeEco Le 1S. It also does not heat while gaming. The games run fine, they did not show any lags, the performance is better for a mainstream level gaming but certainly not best for high-end gaming because the Adreno 430 is any day better for graphics intensive gaming. Although the processor is powerful, the GPU may suffer by the bottlenecking issues. The performance of PowerVR 6200 is equivalent to Adreno 405 and Geforce Tegra 4.

The 3 GB RAM, to what I know, must have on all the Android phones since the demand of the apps is increasing and people are now installing so many apps on their phones. The RAM usage is fair because it doesn’t eat the RAM like Samsung phones that takes a way lot of RAM itself. In our case, the system took 778 MB RAM and but the user still gets 1.7 GB free.

The LeEco Le 1s comes with a 13 MP shooter at the back having f/2.0 aperture along with an LED flash. The front has a 5 MP camera with wide angle lens.

The camera on the Le 1S captures images rapidly. When you tap on the camera button, in no time, the image will be saved to the gallery. The interface looks a lot like the iPhone’s camera interface.

While checking the performance of the camera, the daylight images were fair and acceptable. In certain conditions, they appear to be better. The camera is good focusing the objects but sometimes it takes a long time. The indoor images tend to fade the details and colors. You can clearly see noise in the night shots. The night mode isn’t that great either. The camera performance is good in the daylight conditions, but not in low lights.

The main camera can capture 4k videos at 30 FPS and slow motion videos at 120 FPS, however, the slow video will limit to 720p. The slow motion was very smooth and much better than rest of the smartphones in this category.

Having a big 32 GB internal storage is what best I find, the Le 1S sports a 32 GB onboard storage with no options to expand it. Yes, unfortunately, it does not support Micro SD expansion. The user gets around 29 GB to use which is pretty good.

Talking about the connectivity, it features a dual-band Wi-Fi, a Bluetooth, GPS, as well as USB Host i.e. support for USB OTG. But no NFC support is added.

Due to the powerful processor, the 3000 mAh battery can be drain easily. We found that the battery life is iffy, it sometimes gives you good results and sometimes bad results. It may happen that there can be an issue at the software end. We recently got an EUI software update and we are yet to check the battery life on the new software version. For a regular usage, it can last a day. The regular usage includes checking a few notifications, messaging and social, a few minutes of gaming and some camera shots. If the usage increases, the phone cannot go for the second day.

For a regular usage, it can last a day. The regular usage includes checking a few notifications, messaging and social, a few minutes of gaming and some camera shots. If the usage increases, the phone cannot enter the second day. However, in similar conditions, the phone also lasted one and a half day. In some cases, we got 3 days battery backup as well on mix usage. On using it frequently will drain the battery.

We also tested the standby time, we got some nice results. The battery dropped to 4% in 14 hours. The smartphone survived the 7 and a half day of standby with 5% of battery left in it. Initially, we used it a bit for receiving calls and SMS keeping the Wi-Fi and mobile data off.

The battery assistant can be helpful if you want to extend the battery life. More battery juice can be achieved when using the Ultra Long standby time. The battery assistant automatically turns on by itself when you select the auto-enable option.

In 25 minutes, the battery charged to 30%. However, the charging fastens overtime and you can expect it to charge it in an hour from 0% to 100%. The Le 1S comes with a fast battery charger.

Smartphones are getting cheaper nowadays but offering features and specifications like a flagship. The same is the case with LeEco Le 1s which offers a powerful hardware loaded with extraordinary features like a fingerprint scanner and impressive design and not forgetting about the LeEco’s ecosystem which can change the way people enjoys content on the smartphone. So far, it isn’t developed yet completely.

At the price of ₹10,999, a 32 GB storage and a fingerprint scanner are an added bonus. And no doubt, the Le 1s is an excellent buy if you have a budget of ₹10,000 to ₹15,000 price bracket. We would definitely recommend it.

front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

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front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

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Rising up fast and strong, LeEco erstwhile known as LeTV is quickly becoming a brand to reckon with. Well known in their home market of China for being a huge player in the content industry, the company has been pretty successful with their phones so far. With the 2nd generation of devices, we’re seeing LeEco trying to emulate its content first model in India as well. Moreover the company is pushing the envelope forward with some very interesting design choices. Want to read more about the Le 2? Carry on for the full review.

Like the Le 1 and its myriad variants, the Le 2 is quite generic to look at. That’s not to say that it is an ugly phone but the Le 2 could pass off for almost any other phone in the market.

Over on the front is a 5.5 inch screen with small bezels on either side. Above is a front facing camera as well as a proximity sensor. Below the screen, you’ll notice that there are no capacitive buttons. Instead, the phone  opts for on-screen controls. The Le 2’s software stack is very heavily customized and makes important use of these onscreen controls.

The right side of the phone has the volume rocker as usual. The tactile feedback isn’t quite amazing but does the trick. We felt that the buttons were a bit mushy which might not cope up all that well after a couple of months of use. The left side is where the Dual Nano SIM card slots lie. The phone lacks a micro SD card slot so you’ll have to make do with the built in 32GB of storage. The phone also lacks a 3.5mm audio jack, something we’ll talk about shortly, so the USB Type C connector placed at the bottom becomes even more important.

Flip the phone over and you see a familiar design. Antenna lines cut across the top and bottom half of the phone with a camera module up at the top and an LED flash placed next to it. The module protrudes out from the body so is definitely vulnerable to scratches. A glossy fingerprint module sits under the camera that could almost pass off as mirror for shooting selfies. The LeEco brand logo is displayed at the bottom giving it a minor design flourish.

Overall the LeEco Le 2 isn’t a device that will turn heads but its not a bad looking device by any means either. The phone measures a slim 7.5mm and weighs 153 grams making the device very pocketable indeed. The curved edges of the phone further helps in this regard and makes it comfortable to hold in the hand and it simply slips into any pocket.

Running what the company calls as EUI, The LeEco or LeTV Le 2 is a very heavily customized device. It is a complete departure from stock Android and there is a fair bit of learning curve here for non-savvy users. For a large part, the interface has been designed to promote LeEco’s services which isn’t all that surprising given their software and content provider legacy.

While the lockscreen is pretty generic, the homescreen is where the differences lie. Yes, the phone follows the iOS style single level hierarchy. All the apps lie on the homescreen itself and are divided into pages.

A button proclaiming LIVE sits in the center of the shortcuts tray at the bottom. The button lets you jump into LeEco’s live TV viewing offering. Partnering with Yupp TV, LeEco is offering a vast variety of regional channels for streaming over the internet. This software package comes free for the first year so avid content consumers will be quite happy.

Another modification is the Blinkfeed like display that sits as the leftmost panel on the homescreen. This is where you get recommended content pieces that are being promoted by the company. You can filter these to specific interest areas.

There are other apps that have been bundled in LeEco that add all sorts of basic functionality including an app to control the build in iR blaster. The bloated interface does take a toll on free RAM as just about 1.3GB of the 3GB RAM onboard is available to users. We tested out the phone on EUI version 5.6.012S with the May 1st Android security patch. This is based on Android 6.0.1.

The Le 2 is powered by a 1.8Ghz Snapdragon 652 processor which offers an excellent balance between performance and frugality. A slightly better variant of the much lauded Snapdragon 650, the performance punches above its weight. There’s 3GB of RAM onboard and while we’re starting to see phones packing 4GB of RAM even in this category, the amount of RAM certainly isn’t detrimental to the multitasking performance. The heavily customized skin does take bite out of the onboard RAM but for the most part you’ll never face a problem even when doing heavy multitasking on the Le 2. We’ve added some synthetic benchmarks below to get a better idea of comparative performance against its contemporaries.

In the 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited benchmark, the phone manages 11938 points. Overall synthetic benchmarks only give an idea of performance and this may not correlate to real world usage. From a usability perspective though, the LeTV Le 2 performs admirably well leaving nothing to complain about.

The display on the LeEco Le 2 is a 5.5 inch 1080p panel. Commoditization of hardware has worked wonders for the smartphone industry and this is certainly true in the display department as well. The screen shows good contrast levels and the viewing angles fall just short of AMOLED level. Further, it is possible to tweak the saturation and warmth of the display so there is some leeway here towards making the screen perfect for you.

The backlighting goes up to 500nits which is sufficient to enable outdoor visibility but the reflective nature of the screen counteracts this. All in all, the screen is visible outdoors but we wish that the brightness levels could go a notch higher.

The Le 2 has a 16MP rear camera with a f/2.0 aperture. The phone is also equipped with Phase Detection Auto Focus (PDAF) for faster focus locks. In practice, this works well enough and unless the lighting conditions were particularly inclement, the phone managed to lock onto the subject very quickly.

That’s only one part of the story though.  The camera has the potential to take some great shots but proves to be quiet inconsistent. Striking the right white balance in particular is something that the phone often struggles with. More often than not, the photos end up with a much cooler color profile than what it actually is. Noise levels are fairly in control but here too, the phone struggles once the light levels dip down low. Another issue we faced occasionally was that while the phone would appear to have captured the image, it really hadn’t. This resulted in a slight blur on a couple of shots when reviewing later. We can’t really call the camera on the Le 2 bad but you’ll have to be fairly patient and might need a couple of tries before getting the perfect shot out of it.

Much has been said about the missing the 3.5mm audio jack on the Le 2. Yes, this is a very forward looking move but then again it is a move towards a future that nobody asked for. The audio jack is a standard for a reason, it works universally across any kind of headphone or earphone irrespective of brand or price band. Keeping that in mind, the lack of the adapter becomes an annoyance more than just a curious omission.

With audio over USB Type C, the aim is to take the DAC out of the phone. The DAC ie the Digital to Analog Converter is the part of the phone that converts your audio from the bits and bytes stored on the device to analog audio that plays back on your earphones or headphones. There’s not much that you can do here as the audio tuning is usually a part of the phone’s firmware but you can usually tweak it marginally using an equalizer. Moving the DAC from the phone to the headphone means that your headphone manufacturer can create a sound profile that is perfect for your headphone and will work universally across phones. Since the earphones or headphones now interface over the USB standard, they talk to the phone digitally. This also means that there is no loss of signal, something that does happen over a 3.5mm jack. The bigger question though is that does this make a difference at all?

Technically, it is quite similar to using an external DAC which can potentially improve audio multi-fold. With the DAC build into headphones, you lose a bit of control but technically should get better audio quality but you’ve also got to factor in the intrinsic quality of the earphone itself. A highend headphone is simply better than a lower end headphone and USB audio with a budget headphone isn’t going to solve that problem. There’s also the fact that LeEco’s Type C earphones are pretty much the only ones readily available at the moment so that is an additional 2000 rupee expenditure tacked on. The phone does come with a Type C to 3.5mm audio adaptor in the box. Using the Le 2 as source, the CDLA earphones sold by LeEco sound pretty good, perhaps even better than entry level earbuds bundled with phones. Compare them with quality headphones or earphones from the same price category though and the difference isn’t all that stark.

In terms of connectivity, the phone is capable of 4G LTE and has VoLTE support. There’s WiFi 802.11 ac/a/b/g/n (2.4/5 GHz),Bluetooth 4.2, GPS and USB Type C onboard as well.

The battery is rated for 3000 mAh and supports fast charging which is good to have because the phone isn’t the most frugal with battery life. The Le2 lasts about a work day if you are careful with it but extensive usage rapidly drains the battery and you’ll be searching for a charger by evening. The likes of the Redmi Note 3 perform much better on that front by delivering full day autonomy.

The LeEco Le2 is an interesting device that is trying to take the first mover advantage by being the first to adopt audio over USB Type C exclusively. As a full package too, the phone has all the makings of a good competitor to devices like the Redmi Note 3 or the Yu Yunicorn. The phone is priced at Rs. 11,999 and is definitely worth a consideration if you are looking an experience that is slightly different from that offered by the now conventional Xiaomi, Coolpad or Micromax devices.

front lcd touch screen glass lens for leeco le 2 made in china

Today’s lifestyle is incomplete without cell phones and we just cannot manage without our handsets even for a day. LetV LeEco Le 2 is an amazing phone which stands up to your expectation having some wonderful features. You might have to face untimely problems which may disrupt the working of your mobile creating a problem to use the mobile. If you are worried of your Smartphone’s touch screen glass being broken, cracked or scratched, but working perfectly and you are looking for the replacement of touch screen glass then we can provide you touch screen glass for LetV LeEco Le 2 mobile which is a high quality product and that perfectly fits your device which makes the device look like the initial one. It is 100% tested and quality checked by our technical team before shipping. This replacment glasscomes with manufacturing defect warranty, highly secure and safe packing and shipping.

Kindly note that touch screen and the touch glass are two different items. Touch screen is the combination of circuit flex of touch effect fixed on a thin plastic or thin glass layer and the another thin glass whereas touch glass is the thin glass attached with circuit flex of touch effect on a thin plastic or thin glass layer.

Touch glass is the upper glass placed on the mobile hence make sure that the LCD of your mobile and the touch is perfectly working and both items can be separated from the broken touch glass in order to get it replaced.

Please do not remove the transparent lamination layer from both sides of touch glass before you are fully satisfied that product is perfectly working.