

Click to Enlarge Onda V18 Pro CPU-Z + Antutu 7.0.4
ALLWINNER TABLET MODELS MANUALS
There are also a few other accessories in the box include a 5V/2A power adapter and its USB to DC jack cable, user’s manuals in English and Chine, a certificate of quality, and a “Useful Reminder” card. The bottom is designed to be connected to the magnetic docking keyboard also used for the older Onda V10 Pro tablet. The left side comes with what appears to be the sole speaker, a 3.5mm audio jack, and a micro SD card slot. The right side includes a micro USB port for external device, a round DC jack, and the reset/recovery pinhole. An icon also shows the location of the microphone (top left on photo below). The back of the tablet comes with a 8MP rear camera, and a large transparent sticker showing the location of the ports.

The display does appear to be quite sharp, and we can also notice the (2MP) front camera, and power + volume buttons on the top.

It worked as it still had a good amount of charge. I opened the package, got the tablet, and turned it on. They just differentiate between models with a sticker, in my case reading “Dark Grey 3GB RAM + 32G”, no mention of the actual model number, or maybe it’s coded inside the barcode… The tablet comes is a white “V-series” box, Onda likely uses for all their VXX tablets. I’ll do a two part review, starting with unboxing, and first boot where I’ll run CPU-Z and Antutu, before publishing the rest of the review in a few weeks once I got to use it more and performed more tests. I was interested in checking it out, and GearBest sent me a sample of the 32GB flash version. One of the first tablet to feature the SoC is Onda V18 Pro with a 10.1″ 2560×1600 high resolution display, 3GB RAM, 32 or 64GB internal storage, and the capability to play 4K H.265/H.264/VP9 videos (obviously downscale to the display resolution). Announced last June, Allwinner A63 is the latest tablet SoC from the company, with a quad core Cortex A53 processor and a Mali-T760MP2 GPU capable of driving 2K displays.
