• 8849 Tank Pad Ultra review: Possibly the best projector on a rugg

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Sunday, June 07, 2026 07:30:25
    8849 Tank Pad Ultra review: Possibly the best projector on a rugged tablet, but the price is what really caught my eye

    Date:
    Sun, 07 Jun 2026 06:15:00 +0000

    Description:
    The 8849 Tank Pad Ultra is a rugged tablet design with a powerful SoC, plenty of memory and storage, along with a DLP projector.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================8849 TANK Pad Ultra: 2-minute review The 8849 Tank Pad Ultra arrives as the company's most ambitious device to date. It builds on the original Tank Pad's projector concept and refines it considerably. Where the first Tank Pad offered a dim 100-lumen DLP unit running at sub-HD resolution, the Ultra
    steps up to 260 lumens and native 1920x1080 output. That is a 2.6x
    improvement in brightness in one generation, and it matters enormously in practice.

    The hardware underneath is a MediaTek Dimensity 8200 paired with 16GB of LPDDR5 RAM and 512GB of storage. This is not the fastest platform available
    in 2026, but it is more than sufficient for field work, document management, and media playback. Android 15 ships out of the box, which is a refreshing improvement over the Android 14 found on many rivals. The camera cluster is genuinely impressive for a rugged device. A Sony IMX766 50MP main sensor sits alongside a 64MP night-vision camera using an OmniVision OV64B sensor backed by four infrared LEDs. The 32MP front camera uses a Sony IMX616. This is a meaningful step beyond the dual-camera arrangements on most competing rugged tablets.

    Battery capacity is the headline stat: 23,400mAh. 8849 claims this is 11% larger than its predecessor. Charging speed is 66W, which is serviceable but falls well short of the 120W found on the recently launched Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra. At that battery capacity, 66W takes over two hours to fully
    recharge.

    The body measures 268.3 x 170.3 x 24mm and weighs 1.345kg. It is a heavy device, though it sits below the Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra's 1.6kg. The integrated handle doubles as a kickstand and is the most practical design element here for outdoor projection use.

    IP68 and IP69K certification allows for both submersion and high-pressure water jets. That is the expected baseline for a device at this price and positioning. A 4-metre laser rangefinder and an 800-lumen camping light round out the utility toolkit.

    In the annals of tablets that came with a projector, this is clearly one of the best rugged tablets so far. Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed! Contact me with news
    and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: price and availability How much does it cost? $690/524/605 When is it out? Available now Where can you get it? You
    can get it directly from 8849 . The Tank Pad Ultra is available in a range of territories and regions via the official 8849tech website here .

    At $689.99, this rugged tablet is priced way below the Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra, which commands closer to $799. It sits significantly above the
    original Tank Pad's sub-$400 positioning. The price increase reflects genuine hardware improvements rather than marketing inflation, particularly in the projector and camera departments.

    UK pricing is 525.84 and in the EU its 604.79. There is a summer sale for US, EU, UK and CA customers with a further $20 reduction until the 12th of June.

    Currently, this machine isn't on Amazon.com, but given that everything else 8849-branded is, it's probably only a matter of time before it is. The hardware is also sold by AliExpress, but it was more expensive than buying it directly for whatever reason.

    Given the specification, even if the TANK Pad Ultra isn't exactly cheap, it offers the best value for a tablet with a projector. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Value score: 4/5 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: Specs Swipe to scroll horizontally

    Item

    Spec

    CPU:

    MediaTek Dimensity 8200

    GPU:

    ARM Mali-G610 MC6

    NPU:

    MediaTek APU 580

    RAM:

    16GB LPDDR5

    Storage:

    512GB UFS 3.1 + dedicated microSD slot (up to 2TB)

    Screen:

    10.95-inch IPS LCD

    Resolution:

    1200 x 1920 (FHD+) pixels

    SIM:

    2x Nano SIM + TF (SD-XC)

    Weight:

    1345 g

    Dimensions:

    268.3 170.3 23.6 mm

    Rugged Spec:

    IP68 & IP69K rugged (water/dust/shock resistant)

    Rear cameras:

    50MP Sony IMX766 (primary) + 64MP OmniVision OV64B (night vision, 4x IR LEDs)

    Front camera:

    32 MP (Sony IMX616, fixed focus)

    Networking:

    5G NR, dual-band Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.3, NFC, FM radio, USB-C (OTG), 3.5mm headphone jack

    Projector:

    DLP, 260 lumens, 1920x1080, autofocus, 0.5-4m

    Torch/Lamp:

    800-lumen camping light, dual warning lights (red/blue) with sound simulation

    OS:

    Android 15

    Biometrics:

    Side-mounted fingerprint sensor

    Battery:

    23400 mAh (66W wired, 10W reverse charge)

    Colours:

    Black 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: design Heavy duty Kickstand issues Idiosyncratic layout On paper, the Tank Pad Ultra follows the established formula for
    rugged tablets. The body is thick and reinforced, with corner bumpers and rubberised edges. At 24mm deep it is not a device that slips into a jacket pocket unless youre a friendly giant. The intention is clear: this is
    business equipment, not a lifestyle accessory.

    The integrated handle on the rear is a practical touch. It locks flat against the body for carrying and swings out to serve as a kickstand for projection
    or media use. For a device this heavy, the handle is not an option, it is a functional necessity.

    Which is why I was annoyed when I couldnt get the one that came with my
    tablet to fit correctly. The stand is metal and is pinned to the TANK Pad Ultra by a single large bolt that has a straight slot that a 8849 coin is provided to tighten. On mine, it would never tighten enough to fully engage the stand, making it loose.

    Initially, I thought this was because of an excessive amount of blue thread-locker on the bolt, but after Id scraped that off and realised it
    didnt fix the problem, I concluded the thread in the tablet was poorly manufactured.

    I didnt have the thread cutter to fix this handy, so I filed the bolt down a little to make it extend less, and it fitted much better. Not sure why 8849 quality assurance didnt notice this, but they need to make sure that they do in the future. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) One oddity about the stand is that it has a square profile that engages, allowing for four possible ways to attach it. Except that only one direction works properly, because the others interfere either with the camera cluster or the camping light. Perhaps a polariser is needed to help users put it on correctly?

    The top edge houses the volume keys and two PPT buttons in roughly the middle of that side, with the projector mounted to the left. The power button with
    an integrated fingerprint scanner is on the left side, where I kept accidentally hitting it while trying to take photos.

    I tried to set that button up with fingerprint unlock and failed miserably. When you enter the fingerprint training mode, it tells you to firmly press
    the button, and when you do, the tablet turns off. Thankfully, the face
    unlock works much better, so its hardly a deal breaker.

    The SIM tray is on the lower edge, and the USB-C and audio jack ports are under a rubber plug on the right side.

    Whats missing here is any pogo pin pads or extra USB port that could be used to connect the tablet to a vehicle cradle. Which, when you have a tablet
    thats 1345 g, you would reasonably expect to exist. There isnt one, which explains why the designers never considered supporting that functionality.

    Overall, the layout of this tablet isnt the best Ive seen, but most people could probably adapt to it. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Design score: 3.5/5 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: hardware MediaTek Dimensity 8200 5G 260 Lumen Projector 23,400 mAh battery The Dimensity 8200 is a solid midrange to upper-midrange platform. Built on a 4nm process, it delivers capable performance for multitasking, Android gaming, and field software use. It is not the Dimensity 9000 series or a Snapdragon 8 Gen equivalent, and buyers with heavy sustained workloads should note the distinction. For the use cases this device targets, it is more than adequate and a step up from the
    Dimensity 7400X that Ulefone used in its most recent design.

    For no logical reason, rugged tablet makers seem to think decent processors
    or camera sensors arent required, when theyre as critical as they are in phones.

    Sixteen gigabytes of LPDDR5 RAM is generous. Combined with the expandable storage via microSD, the Tank Pad Ultra avoids the storage cliff that
    afflicts cheaper rugged tablets.

    But it's the DLP projector that is the engineering centrepiece in this
    design. At 260 lumens, it is 2.6 times brighter than the original Tank Pad's 100-lumen unit. Auto-focus handles throw distances between 0.5 and 4 metres.
    A micro-ranging laser assists the focus calibration for precise image sharpness. The native output resolution of 1920x1080 is a substantial step up from the 854x480 of the original device, and better than the 960 x 540 projector on the Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra.

    My only issue with the projector is that 8849 didnt implement a low-throw solution where the tablet could be flat on a desk and still project an image on the wall. With this design, you need to use the stand or a pile of books
    to elevate the tablet to a height where the projection will work. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) The 23,400mAh battery is enormous, even if some rugged tablets have even more. Runtime estimates in the field will depend heavily on whether the projector, camping light, and 5G radio are active simultaneously. With the projector running, expect significantly reduced endurance versus a typical standby or browsing scenario.

    One last special feature of this tablet is the GPS solution. It uses dual frequencies L1+L5 GPS for more precise positioning, in theory. I've not seen this in a rugged tablet before, and it could be genuinely useful for those flying drones or doing surveys. In my testing, it did seem marginally more accurate than the GPS in a typical phone. Hardware score: 4.5/5 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: cameras 50MP, 64MP on the rear 32MP on the front Three cameras in
    total (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) The 8849 Tank Pad Ultra has three cameras:

    Rear cameras: 50MP Sony IMX766 , 64MP Omnivision OV64B1B Sensor (Night Vision) Front camera: 32MP Sony IMX616 The camera configuration is one of the Tank Pad Ultra's stronger arguments over rivals. Most rugged tablets treat imaging as an afterthought. 8849 has invested meaningfully here.

    The main camera uses a Sony IMX766 sensor at 50MP. This is the same sensor found in numerous premium Android smartphones, so expectations for image quality are reasonably well established. The large 1/1.56-inch format and all-pixel autofocus should deliver solid results in good light.

    The night-vision camera is the headline differentiator. The 64MP OmniVision OV64B sensor is backed by four infrared LEDs and a dual-tone LED flash
    capable of 1.5A output. 8849 claims usable images in near-total darkness.
    This is genuinely useful for inspection work, security documentation, or
    field work in unlit environments.

    The 32MP Sony IMX616 front camera is well specified for video calls and document scanning. For remote workers filing from a site office, the quality here matters more than it might for a consumer device.

    Looking through my examples, the rear camera on this tablet produces some excellent results. The colour is accurate and not oversaturated, the edges of objects are crisp, and even the sky avoids being blown out. Using editing tools, its easy to get extra detail out of shadows and crop without making images appear blocky.

    And, the 64MP Omnivision OV64B1B is one of the best choices for a night
    vision sensor, currently.

    There are limited special photo modes, but you do get timelapse, super resolution, and QR codes, and there is a PRO mode. Video capture has scene modes and a full spectrum of resolutions from VGA up to 4K.

    The only way this could get much better is if the optics had a proper zoom
    and not a digital one, but relatively few phones or tablets have that
    feature.

    The only blot here is that 8849 wouldnt pay for Widevine L1 encryption, so
    the best resolution you can stream from major providers is 480P, even if the screen would handle 1080p easily. Unfortunate, but a predictable limitation.

    That point aside, this is one of the best camera solutions on a rugged tablet Ive encountered, and for those doing surveys or wanting to capture property
    or vehicle damage, the provided tools are more than most will realistically need. (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) 8849 TANK Pad Ultra Camera samples
    Image 1 of 14 (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image
    credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image
    credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) Camera score: 4/5 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: Performance Modern SoC
    Good battery life Swipe to scroll horizontally

    Tablet Row 0 - Cell 1

    8849 Tank Pad Ultra

    UleFone Armor Pad 5 Ultra

    SoC Row 1 - Cell 1

    MediaTek Dimensity 8200

    MediaTek Dimensity 7400X

    GPU Row 2 - Cell 1

    ARM Mali-G610 MC6

    ARM Mali-G615 MC2

    Mem Row 3 - Cell 1

    16GB/512GB

    12GB/512GB

    Weight Row 4 - Cell 1

    1345 g

    1,600g

    Battery Capacity

    mAh

    23,400

    24,200

    Geekbench

    Single

    1254

    1047 Row 7 - Cell 0

    Multi

    3885

    2900 Row 8 - Cell 0

    OpenCL

    4094

    3022 Row 9 - Cell 0

    Vulkan

    4632

    3046

    PCMark

    3.0 Score

    15276

    12199 Row 11 - Cell 0

    Battery

    30h 43m

    28h 27 min

    Charge 30

    %

    25%

    27%

    Passmark

    Score

    16894

    13661 Row 14 - Cell 0

    CPU

    8413

    6788

    3DMark

    Slingshot OGL

    7711

    6578 Row 16 - Cell 0

    Slingshot Ex. OGL

    Maxed

    5477 Row 17 - Cell 0

    Slingshot Ex. Vulkan

    Maxed

    5156 Row 18 - Cell 0

    Wildlife

    6280

    3555 The Dimensity 8200 platform performs comfortably in daily use. Android
    15 runs without the stuttering or lag that can affect less powerful rugged tablets. Multitasking between field apps, maps, and documents is smooth.

    Gaming performance is functional rather than flagship. The Mali-G610 MC6 GPU handles lighter titles well. Sustained gaming or graphics-intensive applications will cause throttling, as is typical for this class of chip
    under prolonged load.

    The projector introduces a notable power draw. Thermal management under combined projector and processing load is an area worth monitoring in
    extended field scenarios. The device body will warm noticeably during sustained projection.

    If we compare the 8200 with the 7400X that the Ulefone tablet uses, this SoC is roughly 25% quicker across the board, and better than that in graphics performance.

    However, with great performance comes even greater power consumption. And, while the battery life of the machine looks good at 30 hours and 43 minutes, there is a caveat that the Ulefone device still had 27% of its battery unused when the benchmark aborted. Where the 8849 machine only had 5%, therefore the win should go to the Ulefone.

    That said, this is more than enough capacity for most uses, and if curated, a running time of more than five days is easily within reach. Performance
    score: 4.5/5 (Image credit: Mark Pickavance) 8849 TANK Pad Ultra: Final verdict For field engineers, survey teams, and outdoor professionals who project content regularly and need the clearest image possible from an integrated device, the Tank Pad Ultra earns a confident recommendation. For everyone else, the 8849 Tank Pad Ultra is the current high-water mark for built-in pico projection in a rugged tablet.

    The leap from 100 lumens and 854x480 to 260 lumens and native 1080p is a generational step, not an incremental one. Add a Sony sensor main camera, a 64MP night-vision unit, a laser rangefinder, and a 23,400mAh battery at $690, and the value proposition is difficult to argue against.

    The shortcomings are real but predictable. Sixty-six watts of charging is
    slow for a battery this large, even if it can manage a complete cycle in two hours. The device is heavy and thick by any standard other than the rugged-tablet category it occupies. The Dimensity 8200, while capable, is not a premium 2026 platform, even if its the exception to the rule that rugged tablets are typically underpowered.

    Against the Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra, its most direct rival, the Tank Pad Ultra wins on projector brightness, projector resolution, SoC power, weight and price. It loses on charging speed and the dual-floodlight provision.
    Which device wins depends entirely on which compromises suit your workflow, and how tight your budget is. Should I buy a 8849 TANK Pad Ultra? Swipe to scroll horizontally 8849 TANK Pad Ultra Score Card

    Attributes

    Notes

    Rating

    Value

    Reasonable cost for an exceptional feature set

    4/5

    Design

    Heavy and thick, with an awkward stand

    3.5/5

    Hardware

    Modern SoC, lots of RAM and storage, and a bright projector

    4.5/5

    Camera

    Decent sensor delivers good results

    4/5

    Performance

    Powerful, power efficient and excellent battery life

    4.5/5

    Overall

    Not cheap or light, but excellent value

    4.5/5 Buy it if... You need a projector on a tablet At 260 lumens with native 1080p output, nothing else in this class comes close. You work in low light
    or complete darkness If night-vision imaging is part of your workflow, then the 64MP infrared camera is a genuine professional tool for inspections, security, and low-light documentation. Don't buy it if... Weight and portability are priorities At 1.345kg and 24mm thick, this is field equipment rather than a general-purpose tablet. Charging speed is critical The 66W
    limit is slow for a battery this size. The opposition's 120W system is a substantial real-world advantage if you need to charge and go. Also Consider Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra A 200-lumen DLP projector, 120W charging, heavier
    at 1.6kg, but with dual 1000-lumen floodlights and auto-keystone correction. The issue here is that this tablet is more expensive, while in other respects having a lower specification than the 8849 TANK Pad Ultra.

    Read my full review of the Ulefone Armor Pad 5 Ultra here . For more ruggedized devices, we've reviewed the best rugged phones , the best rugged laptops and the best rugged hard drives 8849 Tank Pad Ultra: Price Comparison No price information Check Amazon We check over 250 million products every
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