Telstra F850

By Alex Kidman on 29 December 2006

The Telstra F850 offers a relatively inexpensive way to jump aboard the carrier's Next G platform, as long as you don't mind travelling in the slow lane.

Editor's rating:5.0 User rating:4
  • Good: Inexpensive way to sample Next G • Good battery life
  • Bad: Custom power connector • Poor screen quality • Ordinary battery life • No HSDPA coverage
  • Specs: Flip • Next G, 3G, HSDPA • 1-megapixel • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$409.00

Design
Ever heard of ZTE Corporation? The answer -- unless you happen to have ties of one sort or another to China -- is probably no, as locally they're hardly the equivalent of a Nokia or a Motorola, although they do have an Australian office. According to the ZTE Web site, they're "China's largest listed telecommunications equipment provider specializing in offering customized network solutions for telecom carriers worldwide." A big sentence to essentially say that they make, amongst other things, mobile phones, and in this case, the Telstra F850. We're not sure if it'll be the case with the final retail units, but our review sample of the Telstra F850 still had plenty of ZTE branding upon it; given Telstra's liking of total rebrands this strikes us as a little unusual. In terms of where it sits in the Next G product offerings, this is the entry level model, with a price point and feature set to match.

The F850 itself is a fliptop mobile phone in black plastic, measuring in at 98 by 49 by 18.6mm and weighing in at 125 grams. That practically defines "average" in terms of fliptop phones, and given the market's swing towards making fliptops that are, in one way or another clones of the Motorola RAZR design, it's even arguably a little large. The specifications for the display are rather hard to come by, save for the fact that it's a 262K colour display -- the pixel size would suggest that it's 320x240, but neither the product manual or Telstra's Web site for the phone reveals such details. The one upside to the slightly larger holding size is that the dialling buttons, and especially the selection pads at the top of the phone are slightly larger than normal, which may suit some users very well indeed. A small camera sits in a rotating socket in the middle of the top hinge, just below the screen itself. The power socket sits beneath a rubber flap on the right hand side, and it's irritatingly a custom design; we'd much prefer a mini-USB socket in every phone, if only because it doesn't leave you high and dry if your charger dies. Given the paucity of other ZTE phones on the market, that's a particularly relevant point in the F850's case.

Features
The F850 is a tri-band GSM (900/1800/1900MHz) and WCDMA 850MHz mobile phone, making it suitable for use both on the existing slower GSM network and Telstra's much-hyped Next G network. There's a catch here, however, as while it'll connect to Next G services, it's actually only a 3G-capable data phone. There's no HSDPA data service built into the phone -- and it took us a call to Telstra to confirm this, as both Telstra and ZTE's local sites are a little coy about this particular detail.

Given its budget price point, it's not surprising to see that the feature set of the F850 is rather meagre. It runs on a 146MHz processor with 64MB of internal memory, which can be expanded via microSD memory card. The inbuilt camera is a 1.3-megapixel model with two -- count them! -- additional scene modes, B&W and Sepia. It supports MP3 playback and polyphonic ringtones, and as a Next G branded phone, it's also possible to access Next G services such as Foxtel Digital, video calling and the raft of Telsta add-on services such as email and mobile blogging.

Performance
Telstra (and presumably ZTE) rates the F850 as having up to 200 hours of standby time and 3 hours of talk time from a full charge. In our testing we found the talk time to be reasonably accurate, but the standby time much less so; we tended to have to recharge every two to three days even on very moderate usage patterns.

As you'd expect with a 3G phone, our data rates were decent but hardly on the spectacular side when compared to true HSDPA phones. We're not terribly impressed with the way the phone is promoted by Telstra -- whose site for the phone merely lists it as having "Next G Network Coverage", which is technically correct but potentially a little misleading, especially as they say exactly the same thing for their other HSDPA-enabled phones.

The F850's screen specifications also remained a mystery to us, and that's possibly a deliberate omission because it's not a very good display. This is most evident when firing up the camera, where there's a noticeable motion blur -- not to mention a system slowdown -- but it's also evident when viewing your own photos or watching video clips, where the screen blurs to a level we found distracting. For regular telephony it's perfectly suitable, but if you're a multimedia maven, look elsewhere.

The F850 doesn't pretend to be the top of the line in Next G phones -- for that, you'd need to look at the JASJAM, although there you'd strangely still need to omit mobile Foxtel. Perhaps that's a blessing in disguise. Anyway, the F850 is an inexpensive way to ease into the Next G world, with an outright asking price of $409, some $250 cheaper than the Samsung A701. As such, we've rated it highly based on value alone, but prospective purchasers should be aware of its rather severe shortcomings.

Topics: 850, budget, telstra, zte, next g, f850, phone

Comments (68)

  • Lew gave a review on 01/06/2009 14:34 Report abuse

    • Good: none
    • Bad: cant download to vista so the bloody thing is useless.Plus all the other problems listed before me.And a word of advice dont buy samsung either ,same problem with download non capabillity?

    less than 1 out of 1000

  • wolf3188 gave 8/10 on 24/02/2009 15:42 Report abuse

    • Good: Battery life was once good
      2GB memory
      Music, YT videos, Text, Games and ok calling (everything i wanted. dont care about camera)
    • Bad: battery life isnt great any more
      ugly
      you can tell its low quality but i look after it so that doesnt matter

    had this for like 3 years since next g started and i got booted off CDMA, pretty good but not spectacular. never had any problems ith it but its not full featured. (my friend and cousin have N95's) i listen to music but dont use the camera and download youtube videos off my computer to it which is good but the battery is pretty crap after 3 years and telstra wants 60 dollars for a new one. yes im 12 so things like texting internet music games is all good they work but are not perfectly spectacular.

    still dissapointed i had to get rid of my RAZR V3c CDMA version

  • sewme gave 10/10 on 10/01/2009 11:40 Report abuse

    • Good: Good mobile. Does what I need it to do. Make phone calls, music, photos, video calls. Battery life is excellent.
    • Bad: I hate the unchangable 24 hour time format.

    Had my ZTE for 23 months worked fine. Error message popped up one day. Couldn't use it. Contacted ZTE Australia, who told me to send it to them. Within a week they had expressed posted a brand new one back to me. Great company! Never had any other problems with it.

  • Mick gave 1/10 on 07/12/2008 15:08 Report abuse

    • Good: It's a mobile telephone...You make calls from it without being tied to the wall by an electrical/'phone cord.
    • Bad: Everything else...Especially the predictive text (The only other thing I could be bothered to use this 'phone for.)

    What a cheap and nasty piece of crap. And fancy telstra being stupid enough to supply this to us. Even worse is the fact that I was conned into signing up for it.

  • benjoh gave 2/10 on 20/11/2008 08:36 Report abuse

    • Good: None
    • Bad: Poor battery life. Phone also has problems can't hear caller part way through call but caller can hear me.

    Poor battery life
    Help from Telstra nearly non existent.

  • F850-Rubbish gave 1/10 on 14/11/2008 19:00 Report abuse

    • Good: very cheaply made. i have nothing good to say about this phone at all!
    • Bad: battery life is rubbish i was forever charging it up, even in standby when the phone wasn't being used it had to be regularly charged what rubbish. Sound is crap could never hear the bloody thing ring on maximum volume, not good at all

    hum well i wish i had read these reviews before purchasing this piece of junk, i bought this new and had nothing but problems with it from about a month after using it, this is the worse phone ever stay away from it. I won't ever buy any type of Telstra phone again, this phone is just cheap junk like Teac and other cheap junk you buy from Junk Shops. i have gone back to my z530i temporarily as i got sick and tired of charging F850 up all the time least my z530i doesn't need charging daily if i leave it on and not use it. looking at either nokia 6220 classic or Nokia E71. my true rating for this phone is 000000000 out of 10

  • petergaskin gave 5/10 on 27/09/2008 15:29 Report abuse

    • Good: Simple to use
      Works at a simple level
      On a $20 per month - with $20 free calls included per month plan - very cheap
    • Bad: Poor battery life
      Difficult to use features like emailing photos
      Not very sturdy
      Had to exchange phone within a day of setting it up
      Not good coverage in country areas
      Still got 4 months left on 24 month contract

    It works - as long as I recharge it every 12 hours unless you try to watch video. After 30 minutes of watching videos, the phone is down to 1 bar.

  • TechSpecific gave 1/10 on 20/09/2008 00:51 Report abuse

    • Good: A Cheap Emergency Solution, However More Reliable Phones Exist Within The Same Cost-Range.
    • Bad: Oh Where To Start. This phone is poorly constructed and over its less than average lifespan has been known (frequently) to drop call, drop reception, drop general functions & literally fall to pieces. Weak Hinges in this model allow the screen to easily detach from the body of the phone, rendering the phone useless & inoperable. Deciphering the ZTE interface is as easy as reading Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs, and the Sub-par battery life leaves many users stranded without a phone... Period

    A Stand-Out failure of a phone.

  • susanm4242 gave 1/10 on 14/08/2008 11:43 Report abuse

    • Good: Negative
    • Bad: Everything.

    Piece of junk. Had to use a photo of a blank wall to replace phone wallpaper which was so busy I couldn't read the icons. My son went out and bought himself another phone rather than use the 3rd free replacement of this phone after battery problems, screen problems, power problems. I couldn't believe Telstra were willing to put their names to this rubbish. I now use my old phone - at least it doesn't need to split the SMS into three parts in order to send!

  • Andyg gave 1/10 on 05/08/2008 21:20 Report abuse

    • Good: ?
    • Bad: "Re-entrant Abort * to reset # for dload"
      crap battery.
      just plain terrible

    What a disgust peice of crap - ZTE should be ashamed of themselves as should telstra

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