Possible Samsung Galaxy S5 Prime stops by the FCC
Earlier today, an unannounced Samsung smartphone passed through the United States of America’s official certification authority — the Federal Communications Commission. Information included in the brief filing documentation reveals that we could potentially be looking at the upcoming Galaxy S5 Prime (SM-G906) — a revamped model of the company’s flagship smartphone of 2014.
The paperwork sadly doesn’t disclose anything about the internals of the device, but we do know that the handset is set to pack a variety of different connectivity options, including support for 4G LTE carrier bands (4,7 and 13), Bluetooth Class 1 (Version 4.0, LE+EDR), 802.11b/802.11g/802.11n Wi-Fi, NFC and GPS.
The Galaxy S5 Prime is expected to sport a 5.2-inch QHD display with a resolution of 1080 x 1920 pixels, a Snapdragon 805 chipset which was unveiled at CES back in January, 3GB of LPDDR3 RAM, a 16-megapixel rear-facing camera, 32GB of internal memory, a 2-megapixel front-facing shooter, hardware buttons and a 2,800 mAh removable Li-Ion battery.
If you wish to see the entire FCC filing — click the source link below.