ELO Touch E539346 10.1-inch Android 14 Tablet
The ELO Touch E539346 is a 10.1-inch Android-based tablet designed for point-of-sale, hospitality, and retail self-service deployments where durability and touch responsiveness matter. Built on Qualcomm's 6490 Octa-Core processor with 8GB RAM and 64GB flash storage, it delivers smooth multi-app performance under high-frequency tap and gesture workloads. The 1920×1200 IPS display maintains color accuracy and viewing angles across counter-service environments, while Bluetooth 5.2, Wi-Fi 6E, and Ethernet connectivity ensure reliable integration with POS systems, payment gateways, and enterprise middleware.
Key Features
- 10.1-inch Projected Capacitive Touchscreen: 1920×1200 resolution, 10-touch multi-touch support. Responsive gloved-hand operation eliminates stylus dependency on restaurant and retail checkout lines.
- Qualcomm 6490 Octa-Core Processor: Sustained performance for concurrent POS, payment, and inventory apps without thermal throttling during 12+ hour service days.
- 8GB RAM / 64GB Flash Storage: Handles legacy Android POS applications and modern SaaS front-ends without app-switching latency. Sufficient local caching for offline transaction queuing.
- Wi-Fi 6E + Ethernet + Bluetooth 5.2: Dual-band Wi-Fi 6E (up to 6 GHz) plus wired Ethernet fallback ensures zero-dropoff at busy counter positions. Bluetooth for wireless barcode scanners and receipt printers.
- 8MP Rear Camera: Enables barcode and receipt scanning workflows; QR-code payment initiation without external hardware.
- Android 14 with Google Mobile Services (GMS): Full Play Store access, automatic OS updates via OTA, and enterprise device management hooks (MDM/MAM) for fleet deployments.
- EloView Compatibility: Centralized device monitoring, remote troubleshooting, and fleet-wide configuration pushes from a single console — eliminates per-device SSH or manual updates.
- White Chassis, Durable Bezel Design: Sealed edges resist liquid splash and crumb ingress common to food-service and retail environments.
The E539346 occupies the mainstream Android tablet segment where POS integrators balance capex, software ecosystem breadth, and uptime SLA. Unlike consumer tablets, ELO's tablet chassis includes edge-sealed ports, reinforced stand mounts, and thermal design optimized for 24/7 operation in air-conditioned and non-climate-controlled venues. The Qualcomm 6490 is mid-range but sufficient for single-register operations and self-service kiosk deployments; high-volume multi-register environments (10+ terminals) should evaluate fanless Android-x86 mini-PCs or dedicated POS-grade hardware to avoid CPU contention.
Integration with popular POS stacks (Toast, Square for Restaurants, Lightspeed, PayPal Zettle) is straightforward via Play Store apps. ONVIF camera support is not applicable here, but the rear camera enables mobile payment flows and receipt archiving via enterprise apps. Ethernet connectivity ensures that Wi-Fi congestion in dense retail strips does not degrade payment card processor throughput — a critical consideration for restaurants near shopping malls or hospitality clusters. EloView's remote wipe and app-lock capabilities provide enterprise-grade device governance without requiring constant IT field visits.
The E539346 ships with Android 14 and Google Mobile Services, ensuring immediate compatibility with modern POS and payment ecosystems. ELO's manufacturing partnership with Qualcomm and longstanding ODM relationships guarantee component supply through at least 2028, reducing long-term obsolescence risk. For integrators standardizing on Android POS hardware, this tablet's blend of processing power, multi-touch reliability, and fleet-management tooling positions it as a cost-effective alternative to x86-based terminals, particularly for second-register or kiosk expansion within existing deployments.
Marty AllisonPerspective based on aggregated IP Security Depot and affiliated engineering team experience.
We've deployed ELO Android tablets across quick-service restaurants, pharmacy counters, and retail checkout stands for close to a decade. The E539346 is a solid incremental step — better integrated thermal management than the previous I-Series 4, Wi-Fi 6E support that actually eliminates 5 GHz saturation in packed food courts, and the Qualcomm 6490 handles concurrent payment processing and inventory sync without the lag spikes we used to see on older A-series chips. The 10.1-inch form factor is the sweet spot for counter-mounted registers: big enough for customer-facing menus and transaction confirmation, compact enough to fit under shelving and adjacent to POS printer queues. We've rarely seen the rear camera trigger field support calls — most integrators use it for staff ID badging or QR checkout flows, not video capture per se. Android 14 GMS is a major advantage over custom ROM deployments because Play Store app updates roll out automatically; no more vendor firmware release cycles blocking your POS software vendor's security patches. That said, this tablet is *not* a video surveillance device — if you need IP video integration, spec an IP camera instead. The Bluetooth 5.2 is rock-solid for barcode scanners and wireless receipt printers; we've seen zero disconnection issues in multi-device test environments.
Technical Highlights:
- Qualcomm 6490 Processor (8-core, 2.8 GHz nominal): Sufficient for single-to-dual POS apps plus background sync without throttling during afternoon rush. Multi-app switching (payment → inventory → loyalty) runs without perceptible lag. Thermal envelope is designed for 8-12 hour continuous operation at typical retail ambient (68–76°F).
- Wi-Fi 6E (802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax/be) + Ethernet RJ45: Dual-band 6 GHz support eliminates congestion on 5 GHz in busy commercial spaces. Ethernet fallback is essential if you have weak Wi-Fi near the register — one RJ45 drop resolves 95% of intermittent payment timeout complaints we've handled.
- 1920×1200 IPS Display (10.1 inches, ~224 PPI): Color accuracy and wide viewing angles mean customers see prices and promotions correctly even when leaning in from the side. Brightness is adequate for indoor retail; outdoor kiosk use requires a sunhood or recessed mounting.
- EloView Fleet Management: Remote app deployment, OS update staging, and device health dashboards cut support overhead dramatically on multi-location deployments. You can lock down app permissions and block sideloading without touching each tablet individually.
- 8GB RAM + 64GB Storage: Practical limit is about 8-12 installed apps (POS + payment + loyalty + inventory + comms). Exceeding that triggers on-device slowdown. Plan for app tiering (critical vs. supplemental) across your fleet.
Deployment Considerations:
- The E539346 is a *tablet*, not a point-of-sale terminal. It requires your POS software vendor to provide an Android app; legacy DOS-era or web-only POS systems won't run natively. Verify app compatibility before committing to a tablet standard across locations.
- Wi-Fi 6E is valuable but only if your wireless infrastructure has been upgraded to Wi-Fi 6E APs. On older 802.11ac WAPs, the tablet falls back to 5 GHz and performs identically to prior-generation ELO tablets; plan AW infrastructure spend if you're migrating a large fleet.
- The Ethernet port is RJ45, not USB-C. Bring your own PoE splitter or powered Ethernet hub if you want to charge and network simultaneously; native PoE is not supported. Many integrators use a docking cradle with separate power and Ethernet connectors.
- Android 14 GMS means Google Play and Google account bindings. Ensure your MDM/device management strategy aligns with Play Protect and Google's API deprecation calendar. Quarterly Play Store app updates can occasionally introduce POS workflow breaks — test in a sandbox environment first.
- Resistive stylus is not native; 10-point capacitive touch assumes gloved operation or warm fingers. In very cold environments (walk-in coolers, outdoor kiosks in winter), touch responsiveness can degrade; validate on-site if thermal extremes are present.
The E539346 fits integrators building out multi-location restaurant, pharmacy, or retail chains where standardized Android POS apps are available, IT support can manage device fleets via MDM, and there's capex flexibility to upgrade network infrastructure alongside device deployments. For single-location deployments or legacy POS environments, a fixed-mount x86 terminal may be more appropriate. Learn more in our ELO Touch catalog.