Radical New LG G5 Smartphone Has Swap-In Modules

How great would it be if a state-of-art smartphone you love today could be easily upgraded to keep up with the advances of tomorrow? That’s sort of the the idea behind the new LG G5, which has an ammo-clip-style removable bottom that allows you to swap in new audio or camera hardware in just a few seconds. This isn’t as dramatic as the modular phone proposed by Google's Project Ara, whose every part can exchanged like Lego blocks. But it does offer an intriguing portal in which LG and third-party accessory makers can introduce significant, hardware-based upgrades that go beyond the traditional battery replacements and wireless charging options.

This modular design is just one of the compelling new features on LG’s latest update to the flagship G series announced at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.

Here are the details on the new LG G5.

A new look and feel. The G5, which trades in the mildly elastic, plastic-backed design of its G-series predecessors for a sleeker, unibody glass-and-aluminum body, has a dual-lens camera for handling zoom shots with greater clarity.

The LG G5 is equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor that promises 64-bit performance and has an integrated X12 modem that supports LTE download speeds of up to 600 megabits per second (Mbps). That’s lots of oomph, but it's a bit wasted on many customers, because in the United States the LTE download speeds of the major carriers are only about 10Mbps.

The G5 is virtually the same size as the G4, measuring 5.9 inches x 2.9 x 0.3 inches, but it has a smaller display (5.3 inches vs. 5.5 inches). Its quad HD resolution is the same (2560x1440 pixels) as the previous phone's, which means it presents photos, videos, and web pages with more than 500 pixels per inch of detail.

Easy and elegant accessory upgrades. Unlike the clunky aftermarket accessories that can make your phone look like a failing science project, the swappable modules on the LG G5 look like they're a natural part of the phone, as if that's how the phone came from the factory. And they might as well be factory components because they plug directly into the phone's core systems. What's more, they open the door to new speakers, data ports, physical controls and other improvements that would otherwise require the purchase of a new phone.

Case in point is the LG Cam Plus camera module option that will launch with the new LG G5. It comes with dedicated buttons for operating the shutter, flash, and zoom functions as well as an 1,100mAh battery that the phone will use first, before accessing the primary 2,800mAh battery.