Nokia E52

By Frank Lewis on 09 September 2009

At first sight the Nokia E52 won't set your heart racing, but its excellent battery life and ease of use make it a smartphone worthy of consideration.

Editor's rating:8.0 User rating:6.8
  • Good: Light, slim design • Easy to use • Good suite of business tools • Long battery life
  • Bad: Numeric keypad isn't best for long emails • 3-megapixel camera is a bit shabby
  • Specs: Candybar • Bluetooth, 802.11b, Wi-Fi, 3G, HSDPA • 60 MB • QWERTY keyboard • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$589.00 • Where to buy? $379 to $479 at 6 stores

Not everyone wants a smartphone with a touchscreen and loads of entertainment features. Many people just want a device with long battery life, great call quality and a few applications to help them read and edit work documents on the move. This is the market that Nokia is aiming for with the traditional-looking E52.

Evolution, not revolution

While Nokia's N-series smartphones are aimed primarily at those looking for a feature-packed but fun handset, the E-series has always been targeted more towards business users. We were quite fond of the original E51, as we liked its ease of use and impressive messaging features, so, with Nokia having nearly two years to work on the follow-up, we had high expectations for the E52.

From the outset, it's clear that this update is more of an evolution than revolution. In terms of design, it doesn't stray all that far from the original E51. It retains the same tall and narrow design, with a large, square direction pad in the centre and tapered sides that frame the keypad at the bottom. The E52 is a good deal slimmer though, measuring a mere 10mm at its thickest point. It's lighter too, tipping the scales at just 98g. There are also some welcome new features, including a 3.5mm headphone jack, so you can use your own headphones, as well as a standard micro-USB port for charging and syncing with a PC.

Big, bold screen

Nokia has also done a good job on the display. Not only is it bright and capable of showing really vivid colours, but it's also much larger than those found on more run-of-the-mill candybar handsets. Measuring 61mm (2.4 inches) across the diagonal, the screen has, for a phone of this size, a relatively high resolution of 320x240 pixels. As a result, it gives you a decent amount of room when you're using the phone's browser to view websites, or watching videos in the movie player and YouTube applications.

The standard mobile phone keypad isn't ideal for typing out emails
(Credit: Nokia)

Connectivity is also good. The E52 is quad-band, so you'll be able to use it in most countries around the world. It also offers speedy web browsing and downloading, as it supports both HSDPA and Wi-Fi. As well as this, there's now also on-board GPS. This works well with the preloaded navigator application. Alternatively, you can download Google Maps for the phone and use the GPS functionality with that. Either way, we found the phone took mere seconds to lock onto enough satellites to pinpoint our location, even from a cold start.

S60 simplicity

The handset runs Nokia's Series 60 operating system, so the menu layout will be instantly familiar to anyone who's used a recent Nokia phone. The applications and settings menus are laid out in a straightforward grid structure, making it easy to find your way around. Plus, there are plenty of useful applications pre-installed, including Quickoffice, for viewing and editing work documents. As Series 60 is well supported by developers, there's a wealth of extra apps available for download too.

On the downside, the standard mobile phone keypad isn't ideal for tapping out emails, and the shots from the basic 3.2-megapixel camera are relatively poor by today's smartphone standards.

Nevertheless, as you'd expect from a Nokia handset, call quality is first-rate. Perhaps the most impressive aspect of the E52, however, is its battery life. This phone has the longest battery life of any handset we've tested for quite some time. Nokia rather conservatively quotes eight hours of talk time and 23 days on standby, but, during our test period, we got around four days' use out of it before it needed recharging.

Conclusion

At first sight the Nokia E52 won't set your heart racing, since its design is rather conservative by today's standards. But, when you actually use the handset for a while, you can't help but grow fond of it. This isn't just because its battery life is exceptional. It's also very straightforward to use, while still managing to pack in all the key features you'll need on a daily basis. If you're after a smartphone that has the look and feel of a more traditional mobile, it's seriously worthy of consideration.

Topics: nokia, mobile phone, e52, e series, email, gps, hsdpa, wifi

Comments (31)

  • sgs12 gave a review on 20/12/2009 21:06

    • Good: everything!!!!!
    • Bad: absolutely nothing!!!

    if youre looking for a simple and easy to use phone, the E52 is the one ur lookin for! it is excellent!! BUY IT NOW!!!!AMAZING!

  • cliffo gave 10/10 on 14/12/2009 11:48

    • Good: yes
    • Bad: none

    excellent phone but as i only use it for call and txt i cant vouch for all the buisness stuff call quality surperb best nokia i have had battery lasted 2 weeks on one charge and was calling txt everyday i would recommend mine was made in finnland dont know if that makes a difference cool phone 10+

  • Alex gave a review on 08/12/2009 08:53

    • Good: Battery Life, Sound quality
    • Bad: Poor GPS reception, Crashes lots,

    I used to be a big Nokia fan as I find their phones easy to use, that is until I got this phone.

    Within a week it started crashing on me within 2 months the phone broke completely. Well these things happen and there are occasionally bad ones in a batch so they say, just take it back to Nokia and they will replace it under warranty i thought.

    I bought my phone from a Nokia store at the Heathrow Airport in the UK. Well apparently if you buy the phone in one country Nokia will not recognise your warranty in the other. Also Nokia in the UK where I bought my phone said they will not address my issues as I do not live in that country.

    Rubbish service and attitude to its customers. In the end the Airport itself has agreed to refund the cost of my phone as part of their worry free shopping promise.

    I have also found that the GPS receiver was pretty poor unless assisted GPS is functioning (AGPS) - so if you are in a poor phone reception area the GPS is all but useless.

  • putik gave a review on 07/12/2009 18:28

    many say the nokia e52 are bad signal and many say THIS phone are good phone! what is the true

  • Zubair gave a review on 07/12/2009 03:44

    • Good: Its a great phone in nokia

    I would say that its good phone comparatively, having better feature as N series.Its sound quality is good, its recording quality is much better. But its camera is not good.

  • Mike gave a review on 28/11/2009 01:53

    • Good: OS; Keypad; Styling
    • Bad: Smallish screen; camera size

    It looks as though the bad review has come from someone who doesn't actually know their way around the OS, and how to get the best out of it. Shame really. The performance and features are very similar to the N95 - one of the worlds most popular mobiles. Perhaps the ability to delete all SMS's easily on the 6267, is not what everybody should appraise a phone for. Afterall, many SMS's contain vital data these days!

    It is a phone worthy of its breed, and in reality, just the screen size and camera let it down only slightly.

  • glen_b gave a review on 27/11/2009 08:27

    • Good: battery life, screen, heft in the hand, voice quality
    • Bad: everything else..PITA to USE...

    Recently my beloved Nokia 6267 got stolen hier in Zürich (seems to be a rash of that of late). I had really gotten used to that unit's ease of use, and anyone who's been through this knows you're suddenly confronted with all these decisions: do I move 'up'? 'Down' (to something simpler..), to an iPhone, or one of its clones?
    Well in order to try to approach the 6267's great combination of biggish screen and large keys (i.e. not designed for a 12 year old girl's fingers), I got an E52.
    I'm astonished.
    This phone is the worst piece of over-engineered, user-hostile piece of junk I ever saw from Nokia. Compared to the 6267 (or the 6131, 6310i. or venerable 6150...!), it's hard to believe it's a Nokia. First off, the most obvious and clear advantages of a folding phone:
    1. you can get a big screen and a big keyboard into a compact package
    2. both screen and keyboard are protected, by default (see below re: 'unlocking')
    3. when open, earpiece and microphone are comfortably near ear & mouth, respectively..
    I should say at the outset that I worked in mobile engineering (GSM & 3G) for 7 years, in engineering, but also that I see a mobile telephone basically as a tool for making calls and texting, it's the mobility that attracts me, not the bells and whistles.
    Most of my gripes with the E52 have to do with texting (SMS).
    A BASIC, OBVIOUS FUNCTION: you can't 'use detail' on an incoming SMS, i.e. someone texts you a telephone number, you have to WRITE IT DOWN, you can't just 'use number' and call it, store it, etc. THIS IS ASTONISHINGLY STUPID. When you receive and sms, the stupid phone asks how you want to reply, instead of just defaulting to sms (the obvious and logical choice). WHY WOULD I WANT TO RESPOND BY EMAIL TO AN SMS? Maybe there's a reason, I don't know it, but the default should be...sms. DUMB. You can't delete all sms in the Inbox, you have to step through menus to mark them and then delete them. DUMB - the 6267 was super easy in that regard. While typing, you want to insert an emoticon (smiley face): THE E52 DOESN'T HAVE THEM. 'Business phone'? well, I send lots of 'business' sms, sometimes a smiley face is useful to tailor a message or adjust the tone. Not to mention private use. Not having them is a needless step backwards. DUMB. Which leads to the next issue: symbols. If I want a smiley face now,
    I have to type it :-) trouble is, the symbol list - sort of a 'symbol cache' - on the E52 is DYNAMIC. So (for a simple example) if I use a divisor sign, equals, ampersand, +, *, @ and a few other symbols, the :-) are pushed off the 'cache list' and I have to - you guessed it - tap more keys to get find them & get them back. DUMB - the symbol function was great on the 6267... You trigger the camera, and there are all these %&+§$ KEYSTROKES to DO THE OBVIOUS: TAKE AND SEND THE PIC
    TO SOMEONE. The reason to have a camera in a mobile phone is to make it EASY to send someone a photo of something RIGHT NOW...I don't want a Windows experience when I try to do that. Or better: a DOS experience (for those old enough to remember..) I could taylor the 6267 'top left button' to list all kinds of functions I use every day (in box, missed calls, alarm, etc) In the highly Advanced Sophisticated E52, I have to step thru stupid complex menus to find this stuff, and there's no means to set up a pre-set list similar to the 6267. And along with all this, it seems like all I do is unlock the g#dd#m keypad - the stupid thing shuts
    off in SECONDS. This was something else that was great with the 6267 - you flip it open and OPEN that sms! Invariably the stupid E52 has reverted to the menu list and to answer an incoming sms, you have to 1) press the upper left-hand key, 2) press the upper right-hand key (to get the keyboard unlocked...), 3) press the sms icon (if you're lucky enough that the phone has reverted to that, else you have to tap around to it) 4) tap down to the Inbox icon... In this time I would have already been answering the sms, or had already sent it, with the 6267! The list goes on and on, but I want to cap it off with one of the most irritating of all: the beloved old
    standard Nokia ring tone has been replaced by a sappy 'mood music' version, a fitting theme indeed. Meanwhile, try to find a used 6267. Talking to people in phone stores confirmed my suspicions: the 6267 was well-liked and sold out immediately after production ceased.
    WAKE UP, NOKIA!

  • Ash27 gave 7/10 on 07/11/2009 15:12

    • Good: Battery life, display, mostly easy to use
    • Bad: Internet and Email

    Nice phone all round but serious emailing problems. Email client randomely connects, particualrly if signal is strong, without being asked and even after being disconnected. Already received messages re sent multiple times and marked as unread, drafts with a receipient already in them will be sent if email connects and send/receive is selected, even accidently through shortcuts. Better to use internet browser for webased accounts and only connecting the browser when needed.

  • God gave 10/10 on 03/11/2009 16:24

    • Good: Everything
    • Bad: Nothing

    Great just Buy it

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