Feature

MOTOROLA RAZR V3x

SPECIFICATION

Size
Length 99mm
Width 55mm
Depth 19.8mm
Weight
125g
Main display
2.2in QVGA
240x320 pixels
262K colours
Camera
2mp, video, flash, 8x digital zoom
Connectivity
3G, tri-band GSM, Bluetooth, USB
Memory
64MB plus Transflash/MicroSD slot
Battery
Standby 250 hours
Talk time 2.4 hours


LOOK AND FEEL:
A bit plasticky – certainly doesn’t have the solidity of the non-3G RAZRs. Surprisingly heavy, a bit tubby too. Creaky battery cover
6/10

EXTERNALS:
96x80 pixel display with 64K colours is ok. Edge buttons for camera, voice-dialling, volume control and video cam are over-sensitive but handy. Only the camera can be used when closed
7/10

KEYBOARD:
The familiar tactile, nickel-engineered V3 keypad, with the addition of cancel and video calling keys – though much improved with an audible click on keypresses
8/10

DISPLAY:
Top-notch 240x320 pixel screen with very good colours, one of the best displays in Motorola’s current line-up
8/10

MEMORY:
64Mb internal plus MicroSD slot. Stores 1000 contacts (20 fields plus photo), 30 call records each for dialed, received, missed calls
8/10

CAMERA:
2mp with 8x zoom and flash (awkward to use though). Colours are good, but pics could be crisper. Auxiliary VGA lens on inside hinge for video calls
6/10

VIDEO:
Colour and sound pickup good, but overall quality is average
7/10

MUSIC:
Playlists, many music formats, loud speaker, surround sound. But no standard 3.5mm jack socket, no equaliser, no shuffle
6/10

IN USE:
Solid menu structure (Motorola has got this right now). Single mini-USB for mains power, headphones and PC connection.
7/10

EXTRAS:
PC sync software, voice commands, SCREEN3
8/10

WE LIKE:
• Single mini-USB connector for mains, headphones, PC
• Big address book includes loads of info per contact
• Surround sound (obviously needs a headset or stereo speakers)

WE DON’T LIKE:
• Awkward access for MicroSD card
• So-so battery life
• Size, styling, materials not up to standards of other RAZRs

OVERALL:
It’s not state of the art, lots of compromises are evident, and it doesn’t have the build quality of the V3i. Camera and other goodies are only average. It’s still a RAZR, though but it has enough going for it to please both the feature and style conscious.

71%