❤ Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max

 

 

Not just the best iPhone ever, but also the one with the ‘biggest camera update ever’ – that would be this year’s iPhone 13 Pro, which we have here in Max size. Joining those larger and better cameras, we have a high refresh rate display, more battery, the mandatory chipset upgrade – the 13 Pro Max ticks all the boxes for improving everything that’s important. We’re here to see by just how much.

 

 

 

 

 

The advancements in the camera system start with a new primary unit with a bigger sensor and a brighter lens. The ultrawide module also sports a brighter lens, but one that features autofocus – a first for an iPhone ultrawide. Then there’s the telephoto which now offers improved reach up to 3x, albeit with a slightly dimmer lens. On the front, things have remained the same, and no, the 20% reduction in notch size doesn’t count.

Finally giving in to market trends, Apple‘s fitted the 13 Pro and Pro Max with 120Hz displays – or, rather, ProMotion. They’re the adaptive kind, theoretically capable of variable refresh rates to reach all the way down to 10Hz to preserve battery. That’s in addition to an already great screen feature set that includes DolbyVision support, plenty of brightness and excellent color rendition.

 

 

 

 

2021 iPhones all come with increased battery capacity, and in the 13 Pro Max‘ case, that’s an 18% bump – 2.5 hours more than last year’s Pro Max in Apple’s metrics, or ‘longest battery life ever on an iPhone’, and all that.

As usual, a new year means an upgraded chipset, and alongside freshly named CPU cores and higher clock rate, the A15 in the 13 Pros also comes with an extra GPU core on top of the non-Pros. Somewhat related, the 13 Pro Max can be specced with up to a full 1TB of storage – that should be useful for iPhone filmmakers if no one else.

Here’s a few of the other more important specs.

Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max specs at a glance:

NETWORK Technology GSM / CDMA / HSPA / EVDO / LTE / 5G
2G bands GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 – SIM 1 & SIM 2 (dual-SIM)
CDMA 800 / 1900
3G bands HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1700(AWS) / 1900 / 2100
CDMA2000 1xEV-DO
4G bands 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 12, 13, 17, 18, 19, 20, 25, 26, 28, 30, 32, 34, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 46, 48, 66 – A2643, A2644, A2645
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 25, 26, 28, 29, 30, 32, 34, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 46, 48, 66, 71 – A2484, A2641
5G bands 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 12, 20, 25, 28, 30, 38, 40, 41, 48, 66, 77, 78, 79 SA/NSA/Sub6 – A2643, A2644
1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 12, 20, 25, 28, 29, 30, 38, 40, 41, 48, 66, 71, 78, 79, 258, 260, 261 SA/NSA/Sub6/mmWave – A2484
1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 12, 20, 25, 28, 29, 30, 38, 40, 41, 48, 66, 71, 77, 78, 79 SA/NSA/Sub6 – A2641
Speed HSPA, LTE-A, 5G, EV-DO Rev.A 3.1 Mbps
LAUNCH Announced 2021, September 14
Status Available. Released 2021, September 24
BODY Dimensions 160.8 x 78.1 x 7.7 mm (6.33 x 3.07 x 0.30 in)
Weight 240 g (8.47 oz)
Build Glass front (Corning-made glass), glass back (Corning-made glass), stainless steel frame
SIM Nano-SIM and eSIM or Dual SIM (Nano-SIM, dual stand-by)
IP68 dust/water resistant (up to 6m for 30 min)
Apple Pay (Visa, MasterCard, AMEX certified)
DISPLAY Type Super Retina XDR OLED, 120Hz, HDR10, Dolby Vision, 1000 nits (HBM), 1200 nits (peak)
Size 6.7 inches, 109.8 cm2 (~87.4% screen-to-body ratio)
Resolution 1284 x 2778 pixels, 19.5:9 ratio (~458 ppi density)
Protection Ceramic Shield glass
PLATFORM OS iOS 15, upgradable to iOS 17.3
Chipset Apple A15 Bionic (5 nm)
CPU Hexa-core (2×3.23 GHz Avalanche + 4×1.82 GHz Blizzard)
GPU Apple GPU (5-core graphics)
MEMORY Card slot No
Internal 128GB 6GB RAM, 256GB 6GB RAM, 512GB 6GB RAM, 1TB 6GB RAM
NVMe
MAIN CAMERA Triple 12 MP, f/1.5, 26mm (wide), 1/1.7″, 1.9µm, dual pixel PDAF, sensor-shift OIS
12 MP, f/2.8, 77mm (telephoto), PDAF, 1/3.4″, 1.0µm, OIS, 3x optical zoom
12 MP, f/1.8, 13mm, 120˚ (ultrawide), 1/3.4″, 1.0µm, PDAF
TOF 3D LiDAR scanner (depth)
Features Dual-LED dual-tone flash, HDR (photo/panorama)
Video 4K@24/30/60fps, 1080p@30/60/120/240fps, 10-bit HDR, Dolby Vision HDR (up to 60fps), ProRes, Cinematic mode (1080p@30fps), stereo sound rec.
SELFIE CAMERA Single 12 MP, f/2.2, 23mm (wide), 1/3.6″
SL 3D, (depth/biometrics sensor)
Features HDR
Video 4K@24/25/30/60fps, 1080p@30/60/120fps, gyro-EIS
SOUND Loudspeaker Yes, with stereo speakers
3.5mm jack No
COMMS WLAN Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/6, dual-band, hotspot
Bluetooth 5.0, A2DP, LE
Positioning GPS, GLONASS, GALILEO, BDS, QZSS
NFC Yes
Radio No
USB Lightning, USB 2.0
FEATURES Sensors Face ID, accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass, barometer
Ultra Wideband (UWB) support
BATTERY Type Li-Ion 4352 mAh, non-removable (16.75 Wh)
Charging Wired, PD2.0, 50% in 30 min (advertised)
15W wireless (MagSafe)
15W wireless (Qi2) – requires iOS 17.2 update
MISC Colors Graphite, Gold, Silver, Sierra Blue, Alpine Green
Models A2643, A2484, A2641, A2644, A2645, iphone14,3
SAR 1.18 W/kg (head)     1.20 W/kg (body)
SAR EU 0.99 W/kg (head)     0.98 W/kg (body)
Price $ 580.82 / € 714.02 / £ 519.00
TESTS Performance AnTuTu: 801691 (v9)
GeekBench: 4706 (v5.1)
GFXBench: 60fps (ES 3.1 onscreen)
Display Contrast ratio: Infinite (nominal)
Camera Photo / Video
Loudspeaker -24.0 LUFS (Very good)
Battery (old)

Disclaimer. We can not guarantee that the information on this page is 100% correct.

Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max unboxing

This one is easy – there’s not a whole lot to unbox. The slimline packaging introduced in 2020 (with barebones contents too) is now followed up with the removal of the plastic sleeve as this year’s contribution to the environment.

 

 

 

 

Inside, you’ll find the phone, a USB-C to Lightning cable, and a paper sleeve containing documentation, a single Apple sticker and the SIM tray removal pin. All in all, Apple’s standard issue stuff.

Competition

What makes an iPhone competitor? Can Androids be on that list, excellent as they may be? Aren’t the 13 Pro Max‘s rivals made mainly by Apple, whether this year or last? So many questions.

 

 

 

 

The biggest camera update ever on an iPhone might go unnoticed if you don’t take photos of small things from up close and if you don’t go out at night and if 2.5x zoom is the same as 3.0x to you (it probably objectively is). Then there’s the matter of the unified processing that renders hardware differences smaller than they seem. And if you can’t see the difference between 120Hz and 60Hz (or care for it), or if your battery life is good enough – which, let’s face it, it is on your 12 Pro Max, then perhaps don’t upgrade from the 12 to the 13 and wait for the major updates expected on the 14.

On the other hand, if all of the above sounds like actual improvements to you, then you have plenty of reasons to justify your thirst for yearly upgrades in front of less enthusiastic folk. Arguably more so than usual, in fact.

Conveniently, if you’re after a big iPhone now and coming from an older Apple or from outside the orchard entirely, the 12 Pro Max has been discontinued in most parts of the world, so that’s easily settled – 13 Pro Max it is.

 

 

iPhone 13 Pro Max (left) next to iPhone 12 Pro Max

 

 

If the ‘big’ part isn’t as important, the 13 Pro will mostly deliver in the other areas – it has the latest cameras and the 120Hz display. Battery life may not be as earth-shattering on the small one, and that’s the only potential drawback for going small that we can think of.

The 13 non-Pros make less sense in this context since they don’t bring nearly as much to the table as their more advanced stablemates. Then again, there will be those that just want any new iPhone, or the smallest new iPhone, or the very likely last iPhone mini – the 13 and 13 mini will serve those just fine.

 

 

Apple iPhone 12 Pro Max • Apple iPhone 13 Pro • Apple iPhone 13 • Apple iPhone 13 mini

 

 

Things get trickier if you’re open to cross-platform comparisons. The iPhone 13 Pro Max‘s position as the ultimate iPhone means it faces other all-out efforts from the Android side of the divide, and no rival is more apparent than the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra.

Such clashes are hard to evaluate strictly on the merits, and these two are particularly similar, polar opposites as they may be. Industry-leading displays on both, battery life to spare, camera performance that won’t leave you wanting – with minor differences in priorities, of course. It boils down mostly to matters of the heart here – the Galaxy isn’t universally likable in its looks, and neither is the iPhone, and the locked-in iOS vs. do-whatever-you-want Android debate can split people.

This next one is probably not really an option for a huge chunk of prospective iPhone 13 Pro Max buyers, but we can’t help but mention the Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra. Apple’s biggest camera update mandates a comparison against our current cameraphone reference standard, and, purely as an image capture device, the Mi still reigns supreme in our book. It’s a properly good phone altogether as well, with little to complain about on the fundamentals. If anyone is faced with this dilemma, philosophical arguments like OS and design are likely to be the key to its resolution, again.

Other more unorthodox alternatives exist, of course. The vivo X70 Pro+, for example, offers a compelling camera system with wide-ranging capabilities. The Oppo Find X3 Pro’s sexy curves are just the opposite of the iPhone’s flat everything, and it’s got a microscope under its belt. The Galaxy Z Fold3 is two devices in one – a phone and a tablet, always in your pocket (it does need to be a big pocket, though).

 

 

Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G • Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra • vivo X70 Pro+ • Oppo Find X3 Pro • Galaxy Z Fold3 5G

 

 

Verdict

The best iPhone to date isn’t perfect. It’s got recycled looks and an eyesore of a notch, and it weighs as much as a phone and a half. The high refresh rate implementation isn’t great in the early days, the powerhouse that is the A15 chipset tends to throttle a lot, and Apple still has work to do to put any meaning behind ‘fast’ in its ‘fast charging’ claims. Then there’s the matter of iOS, which will forever remain a dealbreaker to some.

 

 

 

 

But it’s still the best iPhone ever, this 13 Pro Max. The display is properly gorgeous, and 120Hz support in apps will eventually pick up. Battery life is the longest we’ve seen on an iPhone and in its present state is among the best on a top-class smartphone. The chipset is plenty powerful to outpace anything even in its throttled state. And then, there’s the cameras – not quite the absolute best in existence, but they all just work and do so all the time, every time.

A new iPhone purchase is hardly ever rooted entirely in reason. But even setting emotion aside as best as we can, it’s hard to argue with what the iPhone 13 Pro Max has to offer.

Pros

  • Outstanding design – sturdy and water-proof.
  • Brightest OLED screen we’ve seen, super accurate, Dolby Vision, sort of 120Hz.
  • Class-leading battery life (with 60Hz caveats).
  • Loud stereo speakers, excellent output.
  • Unmatched performance.
  • Great all-round photo and video quality across all four cameras.

Cons

  • Stale looks, the notch should have been gone by now.
  • An absolute unit of a phone, 240g is a lot and a case doesn’t make it smaller or lighter.
  • 120Hz refresh rate not widely available in third-party apps at launch.
  • The chipset is prone to heavy throttling under max load.
  • The fast charging isn’t very fast.
  • Doesn’t come bundled with a charger.
  • iOS (with its limitations) remains a love it or leave it affair.