Motorola RAZR V3 (Black)

By Jeremy Roche on 16 November 2005

With substance to back it up, the Motorola V3 is a very stylish phone that will appeal to professionals and those with deep pockets.

User rating:8.2

  • Good: Sophisticated design • Beautiful, large display • External colour display • Remarkably thin
  • Bad: Expensive • Might be too wide for some
  • Specs: Flip • Bluetooth • Numerical keypad • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$969.00
Editor's note: The review of the black RAZR is based upon our review of the original Motorola RAZR V3.

Design
What can we say but wow! Motorola has outdone itself in terms of the V3's design. Even before we got to the handset, the packaging of the V3 -- aka Razr -- screamed sophistication. Giving us a taste of what's to be found inside, the box the V3 comes in is a brushed-metal contoured case featuring a port hole through which we could see the pearl inside.

The Motorola V3 is all about class. From its anodised airplane-grade aluminium case to its chemically-etched keypad, Motorola has spared no expense ensuring this mobile is one smart looking handset. Its most talked about and noticeable feature is its svelte design -- the V3 is only 13.9mm thick.

The front of the phone houses the V3's VGA camera and a 260K-colour display that shows the time on top of a picture of your choice (which can be photos taken with the camera). The external display can also be used as a viewfinder for taking self-portrait shots.

Flipping open the ultra-thin folder reveals the V3's beautiful 2.2-inch TFT display, which is capable of displaying up to 260K colours. The flat keypad is etched out of a single sheet of nickel-plated copper-alloy and its curvy details glow an electro-luminescent blue, which looks akin to the race scenes from sci-fi classic Tron.

Keys on the V3 are sufficiently large and spaced out, even for the big fingered among us. Two softkeys and the menu key sit at the top, and underneath you'll find a flat five-way navigation pad, answer and reject keys, message shortcut, WAP key and of course, the numerical section.

Tipping the scales at 95g and measuring 98 x 53 x 13.9mm, the Motorola may be considered too wide for some. However, we find that these dimensions and weight make this phone one of the most comfortable to hold and use. The slightly large width seems to sit perfectly in your palm and with the V3's internal antenna at the bottom of the handset, the phone is not top heavy like some clamshell mobiles.

Features
The bundled software CD contains Motorola's mobile PhoneTools, an application through which you can establish an Internet connection through your phone, manage e-mail, transfer multimedia files, and synchronise your calendar and contacts.

Being a quad-band phone, users can use the handset practically anywhere there is a GSM network. Bluetooth is onboard so you can talk wirelessly via a Bluetooth headset and transmit data without cables.

Included in the box is the icing on the cake; the stylish Motorola Bluetooth Wireless Headset HS810. Initially, the headset takes about two hours to charge, after which you can press the button on the side of the device and flip down the stub boom mic to pair with the V3. Alternatively, calls can be heard audibly through the hands-free speaker.

Other bundled accessories include a standard hands-free earpiece, a leather pouch and belt clip for the V3, USB cable for PC connectivity, mains power charger, Bluetooth headset power adapter and a Motorola keychain.

Polyphonic ring tones for incoming calls can be set quite loud and we found 48 choices in the V3's memory.

For entering text, the V3 supports the old multi-tap method but for predictive text it deviates from T9 and instead implements a system called iTAP. While it will take T9 aficionados some time to familiarise themselves with the nuances of iTAP, we believe it works just as efficiently. Similar to T9, one keypress equals one letter in iMAP and the handset will look for common words with matching letter combinations. iMAP goes one step further in predicting the word you are typing and ghosting the rest of the word on the screen. Pressing up when a word is ghosted fills in the rest automatically. We like this aspect and how the V3 remembers newly typed words but we found adding punctuation very fiddly (eg. trying to enter a full stop always brings up the number '1' instead with punctuation marks as alternative options).

Performance
Powering the V3 up for the first time prompts you to personalise your phone, taking you to a menu where you can: choose the layout and features for the home screen; alter the menu display (icons or list) and order the items.

Battery life Motorola V3 is good considering the bright screen it powers. We averaged about three days in between charges. Even though the handset uses a mini USB cable for PC connectivity, we could not get the V3 to charge through it and had to rely on the power adapter.

We've given the Motorola V3 an Editors' Choice award as it has a lot of substance to back its great looks. It is a superb handset that goes unnoticed in your pocket but certainly attracts attention when you pull it out in a crowd.

Topics: mobile, motorola, phone, thin, v3, razr, black, razor, handset

Comments (52)

  • hema gave 2/10 on 28/01/2009 02:07 Report abuse

    • Good: slim
    • Bad: no memory
      no software cd

    hey please anybody tell how can i activate this memory card...now the memory lies is 5MB..but they sold it for 1GB internal memory capacity....please anyone tell how can i activate that.....

  • ... gave 6/10 on 05/12/2008 14:41 Report abuse

    • Good: looks good...
    • Bad: very little memory!
      slow bluetooth

    there needs to be mre memory

  • Adam_Legend gave 1/10 on 04/12/2008 18:28 Report abuse

    • Good: Looks good
    • Bad: GLITCHY
      FREEZES
      RESTARTS
      NO HEADSET FOR THE PHONE
      DIDNT COME WITH A CD
      NO CABLE
      TERRIBLE MEMORY
      TERRIBLE CAMERA
      BUTTONS FALL OFF THE KEYPAD
      TERRIBLE SPEAKERS
      SLOW
      VERY SLOW BLUETOOTH
      INTERNET VERY SLOW
      SMALL MESSAGE CAPACITY

    I purchased this Phone and it was horrible from day 1 DO NOT BUY THIS PHONE!

  • bILL gave 9/10 on 10/06/2008 18:11 Report abuse

    • Good: ITS SO SEXY AND SLIM I LOVE IT
    • Bad: THE MEMORY AND THATS PROBALLY ALL

    I HAD ONE THERE THE BEST BUT MEMERY IS A BIT BAD I RECOMED IT BUT DONT DROP IT

  • nokia 7260 gave 8/10 on 13/05/2008 17:27 Report abuse

    • Good: Large LCD.
      Camera is better than many.
    • Bad: Nothing.

    Best for see movies in its large LCD. Slim and sleek body with flawless colors. Good camera result.

  • court gave 9/10 on 21/01/2008 16:54 Report abuse

    • Good: -have dropped it hundreds of times and its still working
      -reliable
      -battery life is pretty standard, i got an extra battery with my pack so thats helpful
    • Bad: -not enough memory
      -silver rubbed off my keypad
      -camera screen cracked (although after many drops)
      -charger screwed up after 6months

    i have had this phone for a year. Personally i havent had any real dramas, however my bro bought one at exactly the same time and had endless problems.

  • Sooty74 gave 4/10 on 14/01/2008 13:55 Report abuse

    • Good: Stylish - D&G model is HOT!
      Keypad good
    • Bad: Screen freezes
      txting too slow
      battery runs out too quickly

    I wouldn't buy another one. I bought the D7G model which I love (I am such a labels **** But the battery charge doesn't seem to last long (I have a standard black one as well and it holds the charge longer). My screen keeps freezing and is getting worse and now sometimes when I talk there is like a loud electronic buzz in my ear....like to phone is freezing up again. Ggggrrrrr......

  • yomama:):):):) gave 2/10 on 10/01/2008 06:51 Report abuse

    • Good: Slim
      Looks pretty funky
    • Bad: Not enough memory
      Rubbish camera
      Bluetooth is pretty crap
      Breaks easilyy
      Cant keep up with fast texts.
      Rubbish Videos

      Tbh, worst phone i've had

    i hate this phoneeeee!!!
    Its so rubbish
    Argghh!

  • anonyuser222 gave 2/10 on 26/09/2007 16:59 Report abuse

    • Good: Looks cool
    • Bad: Poor call quality
      Rubbish camera
      Horrible sluggish menus
      Sometimes doesn't ring when receiving calls

    Rubbish, should have bought the nokia 6085 which has more features and is cheaper.

  • boof gave 3/10 on 21/08/2007 20:27 Report abuse

    • Good: decent pone to have... sorta
    • Bad: it lags if your a fast texter (like me) which is INCREDIBLY bad.
      pretty average phone
      screws up a lot
      freezes
      really bad memory
      bad mp3

    too many cons. not enough pro's. don't buy this phone if you text a lot

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