Tag: smartphone thickness debate

  • Sony Xperia 1 VIII: not as thin as advertised

    Sony Xperia 1 VIII: not as thin as advertised

    Key Takeaway

    – Manufacturer specs can underestimate real device thickness due to protruding glass and cameras.
    – Thinnest-point measurements differ from thickest-point measurements, complicating true thickness comparisons.
    – Always check how thickness is measured (frame height vs. overall depth) and note potential color/variant differences.

    It happens quite often that smartphones and laptops aren’t as slim as the spec sheets promise, and this tale about measurements is no exception. The newest offender in the rumor mill is the Sony Xperia 1 VIII. According to Sony’s data, this flagship should be 8.3 millimetres thick, yet a leak from @OnLeaks suggests a real thickness of 8.59 millimetres. The gap isn’t huge, but it is noticeable and raises questions about how these numbers are reported.

    Different ways to measure reveal different truths

    In this situation, the device ends up being 2.59 millimetres thicker than the official claim, which translates to about 3.5 percent more bulk. The leaked photo from @OnLeaks seems to imply the reason: the glass on both sides sticks out slightly beyond the metal frame of the Xperia 1 VIII. That protrusion isn’t dramatic by eye, yet when you tally up the total thickness, those fractions matter. Sony’s spec sheet should ideally show the frame’s minimum height, the level at the thinnest part, but real world builds differ from polished numbers.

    Practical implications and the broader pattern

    Practically, a mere 0.29 millimetres can slip from attention, but this incident underscores a familiar pattern: manufacturer specs should be taken with a pinch of caution. Notably, many makers still won’t state how far the camera module protrudes, masking how thick a device is at its bulkiest point. Even comparisons of which phone is thinner depend heavily on the measurement method used, and some models show color variants with different thicknesses. The truth is often muddier than glossy claims, and users end up guessing what matters most to them.

    Sources