Samsung Galaxy E7 review: Easy touch

Easy touch

Valentin Ganchev, 24 April, 2015.

Snapdragon 410 is fine for a daily driver

The Samsung Galaxy E7 is powered by the 64-bit Snapdragon 410 chipset. Inside it ticks a quad-core Cortex-A53 processor, clocked at 1.2GHz. The chip is manufactured using a 28nm process, so it's not exactly state-of-the-art. It occupies the lower midrange in Qualcomm's current lineup.

More importantly, 2GB of RAM are on board, which should provide enough headroom for split-screen multitasking on that large display.

Samsung Galaxy E7

As usual, we kick off our benchmark battery with the CPU-centric GeekBench 3.0 test. The Galaxy E7 posted similar results as the HTC Desire 816 with the older Snapdragon 400 inside. Another S400 device, the Sony Xperia C3 lags behind. Explanation can be found in the higher-clocked processor within the Desire 816, 1.6GHz quad-core Cortex-A7 as opposed to the more modest 1.2GHz clock rate in the Xperia C3. Understandably, the Meizu m1 note aces this one with its true octa-core silicon, ticking at 1.7GHz.

GeekBench 3

Higher is better

  • Meizu m1 note
    3988
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    2880
  • OnePlus One
    2663
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    2435
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    2423
  • LG G2
    2243
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    2172
  • HTC Desire 816
    1510
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    1468
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    1181
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    1159

The Antutu 5 benchmark measures compound system performance, including RAM and storage. The Galaxy E7 doesn't fare too well here either and posts a modest score in the lower twenty-thousands. It's still ahead of what's shaping up to be its archrival, the Xperia C3.

AnTuTu 5

Higher is better

  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    42301
  • Meizu m1 note
    39224
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    32487
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    31436
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    21562
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    18466

This brings us to another compound benchmark, BaseMark OS II. The Galaxy E7 manages to beat the Xperia C3 yet again, but also bests the HTC Desire 816. Still, it's no match for its more capable sibling the Galaxy A7.

Basemark OS II

Higher is better

  • OnePlus One
    1196
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    1094
  • LG G2
    848
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    786
  • Meizu m1 note
    715
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    600
  • HTC Desire 816
    520
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    466
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    452
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    275

The CPU centric parts of the benchmark also are no place to shine for the Galaxy E7. The Xperia C3 is behind again, as is the Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML, but that one uses an Intel chipset which doesn't do particularly well in CPU benchmarks.

Basemark OS II (single-core)

Higher is better

  • OnePlus One
    2213
  • Meizu m1 note
    1754
  • HTC Desire 816
    1739
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    1701
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    1572
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    1514
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    1462
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    1203

Basemark OS II (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • Meizu m1 note
    12848
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    12771
  • OnePlus One
    10234
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    9284
  • HTC Desire 816
    7071
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    6172
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    5600
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    5234

The GPU inside the Snapdragon 410 is the Adreno 306, a minor upgrade over the Adreno 305 found in Snapdragon 400 chips. It's not adequate for demanding 3D use, as the scores in the GFXBench test routines clearly indicate.

The off-screen 1080p tests yield rather poor results, but in the E7's case they're mostly irrelevant, as the GPU only needs to output 720p resolution as opposed to the standardized 1080p in the off-screen tests. Still, the numbers aren't overly inspiring with less than 10fps in the T-Rex test and just shy of 4fps in the more intense Manhattan benchmark.

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • OnePlus One
    28.3
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    27
  • LG G2
    22
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    15
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    15
  • Meizu m1 note
    15
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    9.8
  • HTC Desire 816
    5.9
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    5.8
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    5.8
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    5.3

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    13
  • OnePlus One
    12.1
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    5.8
  • Meizu m1 note
    5.8
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    3.7
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    1.9
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    1.8
  • HTC Desire 816
    1.7

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • OnePlus One
    30
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    27
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    25
  • LG G2
    23.1
  • Meizu m1 note
    16
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    15
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    13.3
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    11
  • HTC Desire 816
    11
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    10.6
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    9.6

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    13
  • OnePlus One
    12.9
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    5.8
  • Meizu m1 note
    5.7
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    4.7
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    4
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    4
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    3.9
  • HTC Desire 816
    3.9

Basemark X further confirms that the Galaxy E7 isn't meant for demanding graphics applications. A similarly priced Asus Zenfone 2 posts a six times higher score. That said the Galaxy E7 still manages to leave the Desire 816 behind by a margin.

Basemark X

Higher is better

  • OnePlus One
    13129
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    12565
  • LG G2
    11101
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    4802
  • Meizu m1 note
    4617
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    2974
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    1915
  • HTC Desire 816
    1437

Browser performance turns out a bit more encouraging. The JavaScript intense Kraken 1.1 benchmark puts the E7 in the middle of the crop, only about 10% behind the Galaxy A7. Desire 816 is left behind again as is the Xperia C3.

Even better performance is shown in the BrowserMark 2.1 test, where even the S801-powered OnePlus One is no match for the Galaxy E7. The Chinese competition remains miles behind.

Kraken 1.1

Lower is better

  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    6360
  • OnePlus One
    7008
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    12266
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    12416
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    13462
  • HTC Desire 816
    13564
  • Meizu m1 note
    15055
  • Sony Xperia C3 Dual
    15737

BrowserMark 2.1

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (S615)
    1655
  • Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML
    1486
  • Samsung Galaxy E7
    1344
  • OnePlus One
    1339
  • HTC Desire 816
    774
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    588
  • Meizu m1 note
    536

So all in all, the Samsung Galaxy E7 is no powerhouse by any stretch of the imagination. You're better off looking elsewhere for raw performance or 3D gaming. That said, in real-life use the Galaxy E7 doesn't lag or stutter and handles multi-window browsing and video playing with ease. If your smartphone use is dominated by such lighter tasks, the Galaxy E7 will deliver.

Reader comments

  • Tarun
  • 20 Apr 2023
  • Dkp

4g lte not working

  • Ahi
  • 09 May 2021
  • Kxa

Same

  • Anonymous
  • 11 Mar 2021
  • 7j{

I have Samsung e7 mobile but not get 4g lte