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Emdoor EM-T40

Leading Shenzhen, China, based original equipment designer and manufacturer offers high-quality 4.0-inch rugged Android keypad handheld
By Conrad H. Blickenstorfer; photography by Carol Cotton

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RuggedPCReview.com took a detailed look at Emdoor's EM-T40 rugged Android handheld. The review is a little different from our usual rugged device reviews because the EM-T40, and in fact all of Emdoor Info's computing products, are OEM designs and not branded products that will directly go to end user customers. In other words, in addition to making available products like the rugged EM-T40 handheld that's the subject of this review, Emdoor Info can design and manufacture products per customer specifications. And OEM customers generally benefit from significant savings compared to equivalent established brand name devices. So let's start with a brief introduction to Emdoor Info first.

Emdoor was founded in 2002 as a designer and manufacturer of rugged handhelds, tablets, notebooks, PCs, and vehicle mount computers, as well as a provider of customized hardware and software solutions. Even today, Emdoor doesn't sell products under its own brand name, although that may happen at some point in the future. For now Emdoor is one of the largest and most experienced Chinese providers of rugged computing systems and serves as an ODM or OEM partner to many Tier One companies.

Emdoor Info has its headquarter and a factory in Shenzhen, and also an R&D team of over 300 people. They can produce 15,000 to 30,000 rugged devices a month, and currently have a roster of about 50 rugged mobile products. Emdoor's goal is to provide cost-efficient industrial hardware and sometimes also software solutions for use in warehouse logistics, industrial automation, health care, petroleum exploration, outdoor mapping, automotive inspection, road enforcement, education, border patrol, retail services, self-service terminals, machine vision, smart home, intelligent transportation, and the like.

While in this article we're covering the company's EM-T40 rugged Android handheld specifically, much of the discussion centers not only on this particular tablet product, but on OEM market products in general.

The role of OEMs/ODMs

In the past, most electronics made their own products right in the country where they were located. Some parts may have been outsourced or produced elsewhere, but for the most part, everthing was designed, manufactured and assembled in one place. A prime example of that approach was Henry Ford's giant Rouge factory in Detroit. Iron ore and other raw materials went into the huge complex on one side, and fully assembled cars came out on the other.

Today's marketplace is a global one, and producing everything in one location is generally no longer feasible. There are, of course, exceptions, but for the most part components are procured from all kinds of places and assembled in various locations, all depending on cost, logistics and profitability. This dynamic gave rise to the formation of OEMs — Original Equipment Manufacturers — and ODMs — Original Design Manufactures. OEMs make a product per the exact design and specifications of the company that ultimately sells the product with its name on it. ODMs design and manufacture a product entirely by themselves. and then sell the product to companies who put their name and brand on it.

What roles are OEMs and ODMs playing today? Very important ones. Almost all consumer electronics products today are no longer manufactured by the companies most people think make them. Few who are not industry insiders, for example, have heard of Hon Hai Precision Industry. Better known as Foxconn, Hoi Han had 2020 revenues of US$181 billion. That's way more than the annual revenues of Microsoft, HP, IBM or Dell.

What's the impact of this on the rugged mobile computing market? At this point a large variety of rugged handhelds, tablets, laptops and panel PCs are made by OEMs and ODMs, and then sold under names familiar to end users and local may be structured in many different forms. An OEM may manufacture a product line to very precise specifications for one customer only, and that customer may have an exclusive to the line. Such products are then only available from only one single company, in essence making them a "virtual manufacturer." It is, however, also common that an ODM creates a product and then sells that exact product to several customers. Those customers may then put their label on it and nothing more. Between those two extremes are many shades of gray.

Hoes does all of that apply to Emdoor Info and the EM-T40 rugged Android handheld? Emdoor is both an ODM and an OEM, and one that specializes in making rugged computing products. Emdoor's customers are companies that provide rugged technology to their own end user customers. The rugged computing market is, of course, way smaller than the consumer technology market, and Emdoor is much smaller than Foxconn (which gets about half of its revenue from Apple). But it's basically the same thing.

Who are Emdoor's customers? It is mostly companies catering to their own and often specialized markets. Emdoor's customers sell rugged computing equipment to companies that combine the hardware with their name, history, expertise, software, turn-key solutions, service, and consulting arrangements. Emdoor's customers may be large, well established names in their fields. Such customers may have precise customization requirements, their own color schemes, and their own brand names. But Emdoor's customers might also be resellers, large end users, system integrators, and more.

Emdoor's EM-T40 rugged Android handheld

While many customers like doing business with one of the major rugged hardware and services brands, for others working with an OEM/ODM like Emdoor makes more sense. As an OEM/ODM, companies like Emdoor can offer cost advantaged. OEM/ODM designs are more easily customizable to meet the needs of different customers, including personalizing products with established labels, color schemes, and materials. OEM/ODMs are also more likely to offer a large variety of I/O and they may support different technologies, standards, and performance levels.

So let's look at the EM-T40 and see how the company went about the difficult job of creating a rugged Android keypad handheld that merges the technology of a modern smartphone form factor with the toughness and functionality of a handheld computer for the job. Below you can see the EM-T40 from the front and from all four sides.

In this day and age of touchscreens everywhere, why a numeric keypad? If one is necessary, why not just display it onscreen? True, but onscreen keypads are small and take up valuable display real estate. And sometimes it's just better to have physical buttons that provide reliable, solid tactile feedback. There's a "click" — no need to verify every digit, making sure it's correct.

But aren't physical keypads cumbersome? Yes, they take a bit of getting used to, but remember that not too long ago ALL phones had small physical keypads, and not just for data entry, but also for texting. Today, of course, small handhelds with physical keypads are mostly used for heavy numeric data entry on the job.

While many pf today's keypad handhelds are fairly large, heavy, and industrial-looking, the EM-T40 isn't. Its footprint of 6.25 by about 2-3/4; a bit narrower than a modern smartphones, but pretty much in the same size range. Since the EM-T40 is a rugged device with an integrated industrial grade barcode scanner and a big removable battery, the ET40 is thicker, but still measures only about 3/4 inches. How heavy is it? Just 8.7 ounces with battery and scanner. That's just a smidgen more than the 8.5 ounce Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max.

Since the Emdoor EM-T40 doesn't need a case to handle everyday work and life, all of its buttons and controls are easily accessible. On the left side that's the volume up/down buttons (you can assign other functions to them) and an orange scanner button. On the right side are another orange scanner button and the on/off/sleep button.

When it comes to rugged mobile computers — be they handhelds, tablets or laptops — the inside matters as much or more than the outside. A strong chassis and the absence of components that may come loose are all essential for the durability and ruggedness of a device. The two halves of the EM-T40 are secured together by ten small Phillips screws. Disassembly is easy, but really never should be required.

The EM-T40 is unlike a modern smartphone in one important respect: it has an eternally accessible and removable battery. It is a fairly powerful 17.1 watt-hour Li-Ion design custom-fit for the EM-T40. The battery presses against an o-ring seal embedded in the battery compartment, keeping liquids out. On top of that is a protective battery compartment cover. This means that EM-T40 users can exchange the device battery for a freshly charged one anytime; no need to plug the handheld in for charging.

As is the case with most industrial handhelds, the T40's card slots are inside the battery compartment, underneath the battery. Cards are placed on a small caddy that is then pushed into the device. That little caddy can accommodate a nano-SIM card and a micro-SD card, or two nano-SIMs.

Balancing performance, cost, and battery life

OEM companies like Emdoor must carefully plan the overall performance levels of their mobile computing product offerings. In addition to the usual size/weight/cost tradeoffs and balancing inherent in any mobile design, OEM customers may have widely differing priorities, ranging from lowest possible cost to highest possible performance. That conundrum is relatively easily addressed in Windows tablets or laptops that may be available with a wide range of processors of difference performance levels, that option isn't available with handheld computers. Each model comes with its own chip, and OEMs must choose that one carefully.

Performance Emdoor Info Emdoor Info Emdoor Info
Model (version tested) EM-T40 EM-T50 EM-T60
Year tested 2022 2022 2021
Processor MediaTek MediaTek MediaTek
Processor Model MT6762 MT6762 MT6762
CPU Speed 2.00/1.50 GHz 2.00/1.50 GHz 2.00/1.50 GHz
Cores Octa-core Octa-core Octa-core
AnTuTu 96,711 95,367 95,380
PC Mark Work 3 4,992 4,915 4,971
- PC Mark Browsing 4,483 4,327 5,074
- PC Mark Video Editing 4,487 4,489 4,256
- PC Mark Writing 4,840 4,851 4,310
- PC Mark Photo Editing 8,383 8,285 8,901
- PC Mark Data Manipulation 3,798 3,675 3,664
- PC Mark Battery Life 11:37 hrs 10:32 hrs 11:57 hrs
Geekbench 5 Single Core 149 151 152
Geekbench 5 Multi Core 838 865 934
Geekbench 5 Vulkan 82 85 73

Everyone, of course, loves the kind of effortless responsiveness that makes modern smartphones so easy and pleasant to use, and the performance that won't slow things down even when running demanding apps. All smartphones look pretty much the same, and that's why consumer smartphone makers seek to differentiate themselves from the competition with new and faster chips each year, as well as better cameras, more memory and so on. All that comes at a price that not everyone can pay. And price is definitely a big issue in OEM designs.

The latest top-of-the-line SoCs (System-on-Chips) are way too expensive to be feasible for most OEM devices, and so OEMs will/must select SOCs that are fast enough to get the job done at a low enough cost to be financially feasible for the OEM, the OEM's customers, and the end user.

What Emdoor did with the EM-T40 is use an octa-core SoC from MediaTek. While not as well known as Qualcomm and its SnapDragon chips that are in most high-end Android phones, MediaTek is actually the world's largest smartphone application processor supplier.

The Helio P22 MT6762 Emdoor chose uses eight Cortex A53 cores, four running at up to 2.0GHz and the other four at up to 1.5GHz. The idea here is speed when needed, and economic operation when maximum speed doesn't matter. The SoC includes a 600MHz PowerVR GE8320 and also controls other important system functions. It is a popular chip used in many devices by most leading smartphone makers.

It is, however, not the latest and greatest. The Helio P22 was introduced almost four years ago and it definitely gets the job done. But the emphasis here is in a balance between cost and performance that works for OEMs and OEM customers.

The table above shows the EM-T40's performance in some of the leading Android benchmark test suites. Overall, it performed at the level of SnapDragon SD450-based devices, which is very respectable for an OEM device. Compared to relatively recent popular higher end models based on the SD855 we saw roughly half the PCMark 10 Works 3.0 performance. For comparison we also added the results of Emdoor's EM-T50 and EM-T60, both of which are based on the same SoC.

What kind of battery life can one expect from the Emdoor EM-T40 rugged handheld? Emdoor claims seven hours from a charge of its 3.8 Volt, 4,500mAH, 17.1 watt-hour battery. Battery life, of course, is very relative and depends on how a device is used. The screen captures below show both the results of the EM-T40's performance in PCMark for Android's Work 3.0 performance score as well as how it did in PCMark for Android's Work 3.0 battery life test and rundown.

PCMark for Android's Work 3.0 test consists of running a long list of everyday tasks, the kind of work a user may encounter while using the device for daily work. The battery life test keeps running that suite until the battery is exhausted, without turning the device ever going to sleep (we calibrated the system to operate at PCMark's recommended 200 nits luminance). In that test, the EM-T40 exceeded Emdoor's own seven hour estimate by well over four hours. The EM-T40 ran for 11 hours and 37 minutes, never stopping work. Almost no one uses their handhelds constantly for 12 hours, so real life battery life may well be higher yet. That is excellent.

Vibrant 4.0-inch IPS display

The EM-T40's display measures four inches diagonally. That seems small compared to modern smartphone screens that generally are in the 5 to 6.5 inch range. Remember, though, that the standard screen size of early Windows Mobile-based Pocket PCs — both consumer and industrial — was just 3-1/2 inches, and that's also what the original Apple iPhone was.

Rugged industrial and enterprise handhelds usually have smaller screens than smartphones, mostly due to their larger bezels that provide extra protection.

The Emdoor EM-T40's capacitive multi-touch IPS display has 480 x 800 pixel resolution. That makes for 233 pixels per inch. That is not as sharp as leading smartphones, but still plenty sharp enough and falling into what Apple calls the "retina" category, i.e. it's so sharp that you can't see indvidual pixels. And since this is an IPS screen, there are perfect viewing angles and no color, contrast or brightness shifts when viewing the device from any angle.

Display brightness is very important for easy viewability outdoors. No current display can, of course, match direct sunlight, but display technology has advanced to a level where we can expect good outdoor viewability under most conditions, and the EM-T40 is no exception.

What makes a display appear bright is its luminance, and that is usually measured in "nits." Nits is actually candela per meter squared, or cd/m2, and that, per Google dictionary, is "the luminous intensity, in a given direction, of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 × 1012 Hz and has a radiant intensity in that direction of 1/683 watt per steradian." Whew. No wonder they just call it nits.

Emdoor's spec sheet claims 300 nits for the EM-T40 display. Premium consumer tablets and smartphones can go as high as 500 and 600 nits, so 300 seemed a bit low for a handheld that may well be used outdoors in many applications. In our testing, however, we found the EM-T40 display to actually be a good bit brighter than its specification listing — our test equipment measured 475 nits.

Like almost all smartphone, handheld computer and tablet displays today, the EM-T40 has a "glossy" transmissive screen with optical treatments to offer as much outdoor viewability as possible. Glossy screens "pop" and make for vibrant displays, but outdoors it all depends on angle and reflections. The pictures below show the handheld outdoors on a bright late morning under various viewing conditions. In shaded areas it's bright and very readable. Like in all devices using glossy screens, there will be reflections that dim the screen some.

Overall, the EM-T40 display is very good. It's bright and vibrant indoors, and bright enough for outdoor use. It offers near perfect viewing angles from all directions, without distracting changes in brightness, color, or contrast.

Scanning

Bar codes are everywhere, and they have also pretty much become the glue that binds the storage and movement of goods to the overal global information infrastructure. Even smartphones can read those coses now by using their cameras, but for professional use one needs an industrial-grade scanner, and Emdoor offers a choice of three for the EM-T40. And, as the image below shows, while adding a scanner does add a bit of height, it does so without adding a bulky scanner bump to the unit.

The three available scanners are:

  • The Zebra SE4710 1D/2D imager (see here) — the SE4710 is a higher-end 1D/2D scanner with red aiming LED, a scan range of about 2 to 30 inches, and a combination of onboard software/hardware scanning for faster capture and processing.

  • The Newland EM80, an integrated 1D/2D imager and decoder, comparable with the Honeywell N3680, with red LED precision aiming is designed for allround performance, supporting all common 1D and 2D codes.

  • The Newland EM30, likewise, is an integrated 1D/2D imager and decoder, comparable with the Honeywell N6703, with red LED precision aiming is designed for allround performance, supporting all common 1D and 2D codes.

Camera

Unlike virtually every smartphone and handheld computer that has both a front and a rear camera these days, the EM-T40 only has one in the rear. Some customers will miss a front user-facing camera for video conferencing. The rear camera offers 13 megapixel resolution and f/2.8 aperture.

The included Android Camera app in our review unit could take pictures in three different resolutions — 13M (4096 x 3072 pixels), 5M (2560 x 1920 pixels, and 2M (1440 x 1080 pixels), all in 4:3 aspect ratio. Note that downloaded third party camera apps (we tried Open Camera) may offer many more image formats and sizes). Settings include 15 scene modes, eight white balance modes, self timer (2 and 10 seconds), ISO (auto, 100-1600 manual), and anti-flicker.

In video mode, the there are four resolutions, topping out at 1920 x 1080. 4K video would have been nice; the imager could easily support it. There are 13 scene modes, eight white balance modes, anti-flicker and microphone on/off. Video quality is decent, but some will miss higher resolution modes.

The pictures below were shot with the EM-T40's rear camera in 13mp 4096 x 3072 pixel mode. Click on the image to bring up a full-size version.

Given the incredible imaging quality of today's smartphones, users have come to expect a lot from their mobile device cameras. Higher end models have multiple cameras and lenses. The EM-T40 doesn't and the camera app is quite basic, but picture quality is quite good and actually better than the cameras usually integrated into rugged handhelds and tablets.

Tough and durable

While consumer smartphones are sold on sleek design and the latest technology, OEM/ODM devices like the Emdoor EM-T40 keypad handheld are tools for the job. They are designed to get work done without needing a protective case, and without the need to be handled with the proverbial kid gloves. Any time you're more concerned with not scratching and not breaking a tool than actually using it the way it's supposed to be used, you have the wrong tool. The EM-T40 is not one of those fragile tools. It may no bigger or heavier than a modern smartphone, but it feels MUCH more solid than any of today's fragile smartphones.

Unlike modern smartphones that need a protective case to survive, the EM-T40 doesn't need a case. It can be used day-in, day-out without worries that it might break or get scratched or dented. There is no need from a screen protector because the screen glass is thick and strong enough. There's no gleaming metal or plastic trim that easily scratches or breaks off.

By established ruggedness testing standards, just how tough is this tablet? That's a bit more difficult to determine. The EM-T40 carries IP65 sealing where the "6" means it's completely dustproof, and the "5" that it is protected against low-pressure water jets from all directions. So no full immersion in water, but the ET40 can easily handle rain and worse. As the image above shows, we took that to the test.

The EM-T40 can also handle drops from four feet. That means it can easily survive falling off a desk or a cart. And four feet is also about the distance a tablet falls if it slips out of one's hands while using it in a standing position.

The stated operating temperature range of 14 to 131 degrees Fahrenheit (-10 to 55 degrees Celsius) is wide enough for just about any deployment the device was designed for.

A couple of comments here: unlike the boasting we see in so many promotional materials, Emdoor seems almost too conservative. In our testing the EM-T40 had much longer battery life than the seven hours Emdoor claimed. Likewise, we think the 4-foot drop and IP65 claims are fairly conservative. And, it'd be nice if Emdoor included ALL ruggedness testing results in its specs.

The pictures below show some of the test procedures all Emdoor rugged products must go through. These include, in no particular order, waterproofing and air tightness, high and low temperature, salt spray corrosion, bare metal drop test, roller test, impact resistance, vibration resistance, screen ball drop, protective door testing, friction testing, static testing, color testing, chemicals and rub-down testing, and more.

Emdoor also provides product certification services both for governmental as well as for private technical commissions and software/standards licensing.

Summary: Emdoor EM-T40

With the EM-T40, Emdoor Information offers OEM customers an intriguing rugged keypad handheld that combines the advantages both of modern consumer smartphones and those of more traditional rugged industrial handhelds. The EM-T40 operates and works like a contemporary smartphone, but provides the ruggedness and data collection capabilities of an industrial-grade handheld computer.

The EM-T40 has a footprint of a modern smartphone, and weighs barely more than one. Yet, the EM-T40 is far tougher and more robust than any modern smartphone. It's 4-inch 480 x 800 pixel IPS display is bright enough (475 nits in our testing) and has excellent viewing angles.

The device is available with three different industrial-grade 1D/2D barcode scanner options. It has a very good 13mp rear camera for documentation. The 17 watt-hour externally accessible and replaceable battery can easily make it through even an extended shift.

The unit's octa-core MediaTek MT6762 SoC provides decent performance, but is not at the level of the latest premium consumer smartphones. WiFi, Bluetooth, NFC and GPS are all standard; mobile broadband is optionally available. The device has a card caddy for either a nano-SIM and a micro SD card, or two nano-SIM cards.

Overall, the EM-T40 is an attractive, competent option for OEM customers who seek an attractive keypad handheld that combines the modern smartphone size and polish with industrial handheld ruggedness and features. -- Conrad H. Blickenstorfer, May 2022

Emdoor EM-T40 Specs
Available options
Added/changed Full review 05/2022
Type Rugged OEM Keypad Handheld
Processor Octa-core MediaTek Helio P22 MT6762 (4 x Cortex A53 2.0GHz, 4 x Cortex A53 1.5GHz) NA
Graphics PowerVR GE8320 (600MHz) NA
OS Android 11 Android 11 AOSP
Standard/Max RAM 4GB LPDDR4X NA
Disk/drive 64GB eMMC solid state disk
Display type IPS TFT LCD, 300 nits (475 nits measured)
Display size/resolution 4.0" 480 x 800 pixel (233 pixels per inch)
Digitizer Capacitive 5-point multi-touch, Corning Gorilla Glass NA
Keyboard/keys Power, volume up/down, 2 x scanner key NA
Navigation Touch, keypad NA
Expansion slots 1 x micro SDXC (up to 128GB), 1 x nano SIM OR 2 x nano SIM NA
Housing ABS+PC NA
Housing color Black front and rear
Size 6.4 x 2.9 x 0.75 inches (162 x 73 x 19 mm) NA
Weight 8.7 ounces pounds (247 grams) with battery and scanner NA
Operating temperature -14° to 131°F (-10° to 55°C) NA
Ingress protection IP65 (totally dustproof, can handle low pressure water jets from all directions) NA
Humidity 95% non-condensing NA
Drop 4-foot drops per MIL-STD-810G NA
Vibration Est: MIL-STD-810G, Method 514,6, Procedure I, Category 4 and 20 NA
ESD Est: Connect ±8KV for all metal outside. Air ±15KV for all metal outside and touch panel. NA
Power Interna 3.8V, 4,500mAH, 17.1 watt-hour rechargeable Li-Ion Polymer battery NA
Camera Rear: 13-megapixel AF NA
GPS Integrated GNSS (GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, Galileo NA
Barcode reader None Zebra SE4710, EM03/EM80 hardware decoder
NFC Yes NA
Sensors Ambient light, G-sensor, gyro, e-compass NA
WiFi 802.11a/b/g/n/ac NA
Bluetooth BT 5.0 BLE NA
WWAN 3G/4G none GSM 2/3/5/8
WCDMA 1/2/4/5/8
TDS B34/B39
TDD B38/B39/B40/B41
FDD B1/ B2/ B3/ B4/ B5/ B7/ B8/ B13/ B17/ B19/ B20/ B28A/ B28B
Audio USB Type-C, single speakers NA
Dock Via USB Type-C NA
USB 1 x USB Type-C NA
Price Inquire
Regulatory FCC, IATA, ROHS
Spec sheet Emdoor EM-T40 spec sheet (PDF)
Web page Emdoor EM-T40 web
Contact Emdoor Shenzen Headquarter
3/F, 5th Boulevard, Wonderful Life Wisdom Valley Technology Park No. 83 Daobao Road, Bao'an District
Shenzhen City, China
Tel: +86-(0)755-2372 2880
Cell: +86-18128844520
www.emdoorrugged.com
marketing.info @ emdoor.com