When it comes to buying a Smartphone no matter what your goal is, you always try to buy a phone which is least in price and high in facilities. Most buyers are budget people and can't afford flagship companies like Apple, Samsung, and even OnePlus. So basically they buy budget-friendly companies' phones which are in most cases 'Chinese' phones. 7 out of every 10 phones sold is a Chinese company phone like Oppo, Vivo, Xiaomi, Redmi, iQOO. Because Chinese companies offer high-quality smartphones on a budget and users always prefer them due to their high-speed tasking and awesome cameras.
Do you know that most Chinese companies' phones throw a huge amount of radiation, which is not a good thing for your overall health? If you spend a big amount of time in a traditional environment, which is above than danger limit, you're not smart, because you're putting your health at risk.
Other than Radiation, SAR (Specific Absorption Rate) is a particular fact that represents how much radio frequency you absorb via a smartphone.
But do you know, at what cost you're buying these phones? I'm not talking about money. I'm talking about the thing higher than money, which is your 'Health'.
These limits are given in terms of a unit referred to as the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR), which measures the amount of radio frequency energy absorbed by the body when using a mobile phone.
So the question is, 'what is the maximum range of SAR, humans can tolerate without any problem?', and the answer is 1.6 W/kg.
If we talk about India itself, so India has adopted the most stringent international norms for mobile phones. All the newly designed mobile phone handsets should comply with the SAR values of 1.6 W/kg averaged over 1 gram of human tissue (Announced by World Economic Forum on 1st September 2012)
So, If you're planning to buy a budget phone with all the features that a flagship premium expensive phone carries, then you must know the information in this article. Not every Chinese budget phone throws a lot of radiation, above normal, but many budget smartphone other than Chinese also throws the same amount of radiation which is harmful to health if used prolonged.
So in this article, I'm giving you a list of smartphones that are the hub of SAR and Radiation.
Smartphones with Least radiation levels:-
1. LG Quantum (AT&T)
Emits 0.35 watts per kilogram
2. Casio EXILIM (Verizon Wireless)
Emits 0.53 W/kg
3. Pantech Breeze II (AT&T, AT&T GoPhone)
Emits 0.55 W/kg
4. Sanyo Katana II (Kajeet)
Emits 0.55 W/kg
5. Samsung Fascinate (Verizon Wireless)
Emits 0.57 W/kg
6. Samsung Mesmerize (CellularONE, U.S. Cellular)
Emits 0.57 W/kg
7. Samsung SGH-a197 (AT&T GoPhone): 0.59 W/kg
8. Samsung Contour (MetroPCS)
Emits 0.60 W/kg
9. Samsung Gravity T (T-Mobile)
Emits 0.62 W/kg
10. (tie) Motorola i890 (Sprint); Samsung SGH-T249 (T-Mobile)
Emits 0.63 W/kg
Smartphones with the Highest radiation levels:-
1. Motorola Bravo (AT&T)
Emits 1.59 W/kg
2. Motorola Droid 2 (Verizon Wireless)
Emits 1.58 W/kg
3. Palm Pixi (Sprint)
Emits 1.56 W/kg
4. Motorola Boost (Boost Mobile)
Emits 1.55 W/kg
5. Blackberry Bold (AT&T, T-Mobile)
Emits 1.55 W/kg
6. Motorola i335 (Sprint)
Emits 1.55 W/kg
7. HTC Magic (T-Mobile)
Emits 1.55 W/kg
8. Motorola W385 (Boost Mobile, U.S. Cellular, Verizon Wireless)
Emits 1.54 W/kg
9. Motorola Boost i290 (Boost Mobile)
Emits 1.54 W/kg
10. (tie) Motorola DEFY (T-Mobile); Motorola Quantico (U.S. Cellular, MetroPCS); Motorola Charm (T-Mobile)
Emits 1.53 W/kg
The above list proves that Samsung phones have the least radiation levels and Motorola phones have the highest radiation levels. Not all Motorola phones are like this but most are, and not all Samsung phones are like this, Samsung can offer safety to you but Samsung is not a complete budget smartphone option because Samsung comes in Flagship companies.
This article doesn't contain each and every smartphone's SAR value, but the necessary thing is, before buying any budget phone online or offline, you must check the SAR level of that particular phone because it can not only save your pocket but your health too.
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