Sagem MyC2-3

By Alex Kidman on 04 February 2006

The MyC2-3 is a budget buyer's phone, and as long as you only want a very simple and plain looking handset for call and text purposes, it's a fine choice for the money.

User rating:7.7
  • Good: Inexpensive • Simple to use • Good battery life
  • Bad: Feature-poor • Ugly design • Extruding antenna
  • Specs: Flip • Numerical keypad • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$149.00 • Where to buy? Check price listings

Design
AU$1500 can buy you a lot of things -- a moderate range laptop, or a high end mobile phone, for example. It could also buy you ten Sagem MyC2-3 mobile phones, with change left over for a takeway burger to boot. From that, you could assume that the MyC2-3's something of a cheap and cheerful phone, and for the most part you'd be right.

The exterior of the phone hides the rather plain design reasonably well; it's a small phone with a blue front face for the clamshell; otherwise the colouration is a rather plain metallic finish. Weighing in at 75g and measuring 73mm x 42mm x 21mm, it's an extremely small phone, although the illusion of size is somewhat ruined by the extruding mobile antenna which gives the phone a rather "five years ago" feel to it.

Flip open the clamshell and you'll find a standard array of phone buttons, with a central navigation pad surrounded by four primary selection buttons, including call answer and end. In an age where many phones carry as many additional program buttons as they do dialling numbers (and sometimes more), it's something of a culture shock to come back to a phone that just carries regular phone feature buttons. That culture shock is further enhanced by the MyC2-3's display screen. It's a 101x80 pixel screen -- for the non-technical types, think "small" -- capable of only 4096 colours. While it's on the plain side to look at compared to some of the larger screened mobiles we've examined recently (such as the Nokia N90, for example), the display is bright and reasonably easy to read for basic telephony usage.

Features
Like its design -- and somewhat befitting its price range -- the MyC2-3's feature set is on the basic side. It's a basic GSM phone with WAP and SMS functionality -- including T9 predictive text input -- along with support for polyphonic ring tones. Needless to say, if you're after a major business tool, or figure that a mobile phone no longer counts if it doesn't have an embedded camera, then the MyC2-3 isn't for you.

Performance
Like many smaller mobiles, users with thicker fingers may find the MyC2-3 a touch challenging at first for basic telephony purposes, especially as the tapered button design means that the lower numbers have smaller surface areas than the buttons directly above them. The Sagem MyC2-3's menu structure continues this half-decade-old feeling, as it's a very simple bit of software, both in terms of functionality and presentation. The last time we saw something this visually simple, it was running on Windows 3.11.

Sagem rates the MyC2-3 as being capable of up to 240 hours standby time and three hours talk time. In our testing, we found the battery tended to drop out after roughly six days of moderate usage.

The Sagem MyC2-3 isn't a designer phone, and it omits many of the flashier parts, both in design and features that other modern mobiles offer. Then again, Sagem's priced it accordingly -- in the sub-AU$200 space (excluding plan mobiles and those locked to a specific pre-paid carrier) you can't expect to get every last new feature. If all you want out of a mobile phone is a handset that you can carry around with you, the MyC2-3 will suffice nicely. Those who've owned (or wish to own) more advanced phones will invariably notice all the things it can't do, but for the basic phone user on a tight budget, it's a good option.

Topics: mobile, phone, sagem, myc2-3, budget

Comments (32)

  • jeff gave 9/10 on 03/10/2008 08:58

    • Good: i like that it doesn't have a camera or blue tooth and all the other little gadgets that are a waste of time... it's a phone ?????
    • Bad: i don't have a problem with this phone...

    I don't see what the problem is? its a phone thats all you need... if you wanted something else get that instead... i think it is a great phone... and at great value... i have had it now for 2 or 3 years best thing i ever got

  • dlogo gave 7/10 on 28/03/2008 18:13

    • Good: Good that it has a blue signal light so I know where my pnoe is in darkness.
    • Bad: Some features like the WAP is not working or not set up.Confused

    Its a good phone small enough to fit into my pocket. Effective reception.

  • maniac123 gave 5/10 on 04/02/2008 13:19

    • Good: the moo cow ring tone!!
      small
      cheap
      good for A first phone
    • Bad: no extras such as camera, mp3, bluetooth etc

    its good for your first phone, but when i first got it i had to get it fixed but other than that i have had it for 2 and a healf years and it does what i want it to do. though i am thinking of upgrading!

  • ***Coza*** gave 2/10 on 29/11/2007 17:21

    • Good: txting
      it was cheap
      compact
    • Bad: stupid ringtones
      annoying flashy light
      crappy backgrounds
      ariel
      stupid pin number system ( couldn't work it out and ended up having my sim locked first day i got it)
      freezes

    stupid phone. i know why it was cheap and the back of it keeps falling off, causing me to lose what i've been texting and making the battery go down quicker. SO ANNOYING

    and has anyone noticed that the screen turns a lighter colour after it hasn't been opened for a while????

  • Jack Shit gave 4/10 on 14/10/2007 20:15

    • Good: cheap
      little
      moo cow ringtone!
    • Bad: antenna sticks out
      way too small screen
      only 4096 colour screen!
      the moo cow ringtone is the only good one
      that stupid blue light
      battery life steadily declines over time
      crappy backgrounds
      no camera
      no mp3
      no video support

    not enough features. I can't even receive smileys!

  • PosiePoo gave 5/10 on 15/08/2007 18:12

    • Good: Cheap... Very Very cheap!
      Small... fit into pockets etc..
    • Bad: Bad features
      Annoing Antenna
      Screen too bright
      No Sent mesages box
      Annoing flashing light..
      List to go on?
      I thought not..

    Its alright...
    its not all that bad.. but its more for people who arent botherd about a camera and MP3 player and bluetooth...
    it only lasted me 1 year but thats enough.....

  • roxy_jess gave 3/10 on 30/07/2007 14:08

    • Good: basic
      cheap
    • Bad: doesnt save sent msgs,that flashing blue light,its slow

    this fone is OK.
    buy this fone if you havent had one before because it is really frustrating to use!

  • MT gave 2/10 on 29/07/2007 19:17

    • Good: Nothing at all. This is a terrible phone
    • Bad: Ugly
      Expensive replacement battery
      Crappy
      No good ringtones
      Nothing other than talk and text

    This phone is so bad, it's not worth keeping it. I brought the phone for 59 AUDollars. Now the battery is refusing to charge, and Sagem is telling me to spend another 40AUDollars for a new battery

  • mezz gave 3/10 on 28/07/2007 15:20

    • Good: can use easily
      cheap
    • Bad: cant hear when it rings
      dumb phone

    volume hopeless
    ringtones stupid
    no car charger

  • 11hellboy11 gave 2/10 on 22/07/2007 15:09

    • Good: NUN
    • Bad: EVERYTHING BOUT THIS PHONE

    CRAPPY PHONE
    i bout this phone as my first phone and it cuts out in the middle of calls and it takes my creidit (one day it gos from $30 to like 2 cents)

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