Telstra F852

By Joseph Hanlon on 19 March 2008

Don't expect the world from the F852. This isn't the best Next G phone available, but it looks good and the price is right.

Editor's rating:5.8 User rating:4
  • Good: Smart looking design • Next G data speeds • Affordable price tag
  • Bad: Display has poor viewing angle • Poor internal speaker • Keypad has cheap toy-like feel
  • Specs: Flip • Bluetooth, Next G, 3G, HSDPA • 60 MB • Numerical keypad • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$439.00

Design
Close your eyes, we want you to imagine a phone. Actually, keep them open, you need to read on. Now imagine a Next G flip phone released by Telstra a few months back called the EasyTouch.

If you're familiar with the Telstra EasyTouch then you are, in fact, also familiar with the F852. Beyond a change to the colour scheme — from silver to black — and the addition of three external music control buttons to the F852, these phones are almost identical. If you compare the physical dimensions for both phones you'll notice that each of these measurements differs by a single millimetre.

Under the F852's flip we find exactly the same components found in the EasyTouch; the same two-inch QVGA TFT colour display and the same recessed plastic keypad. Below the screen is a 0.3-megapixel camera for video-calling, with a 2-megapixel camera on the outside for standard pics.

The recessed keypad lays flat against the bottom half of the handset, with thin raised plastic strips to differentiate the location of the various buttons. The keypad is well spaced and easy to use, but the plastic components help to give the entire handset a cheap, toy-like feel.

Features
After reading through the F852's spec sheet we were tempted to copy-and-paste the features section from our EasyTouch review, as the similarities are many. This was before we realised that Chinese manufacturers ZTE have left out our favourite feature of the EasyTouch interface: the news headlines ticker.

What remains for Telstra's F852 is a standard Next G user experience. HSDPA (3.6Mbps) data speeds give access to BigPond services including BigPond TV, Foxtel and Whereis Maps, as well as video-calling. The F852 has the latest NetFront browser installed, which is fine for sifting through mobile sites but certainly doesn't offer a Web 2.0 comparable experience.

Beyond Next G services, the F852 offers the standard range of calling and messaging functionality, including POP3 and IMAP e-mail. The F852's internal memory is expandable with T-Flash (microSD) memory cards, and can transfer data using Bluetooth (v1.2). The F852 also features a multimedia player capable of playing MP4 and 3GP video files, as well MP3 music files.

Performance
The first feature we test on a Next G phone is always mobile TV. If you thought we'd get sick of watching Jerry Springer on tiny mobile screens after a while, you'd be wrong. Like the EasyTouch, the two-inch screen is too small to make the service truly impressive. In addition to the size of the screen, the viewing angle on our F852 review unit was dismal with the picture turning negative on very subtle angles. This is terrible for watching long, hand-held sessions of mobile TV. Audio through the internal speakers, while tinny, was loud enough to hear easily.

That said, the data speeds are excellent. With good reception, mobile TV buffers once then streams flawlessly. Similarly, accessing Web sites is as fast as the HSDPA speeds suggests. Of course, this is accessing mobile Web sites, which are typically 5 or 10 percent of the page size of a standard Web site.

During our testing call reception was good, but the earpiece speaker sounded terrible. Voices sounded hollow and, even with the volume at its lowest setting, parts of our conversations were distorted. The people we spoke with told us they also had difficulty hearing us clearly. We're not suggesting the F852 is unusable for making calls, but the speaker isn't as clear as we would expect.

Overall
Telstra isn't known for it's bargain pricing so perhaps the F852's greatest asset is its AU$439 price tag. For the money you'll get a attractively designed, Next G ready clamshell phone. Don't expect the best of any particular feature, and the speaker quality isn't amazing, but for people who prefer Telstra as their mobile carrier, and who have a basic list of mobile needs, the F852 could fit the bill nicely.

Topics: mobile phone, telstra, zte, f852, basic, foxtel, mobile tv, phone, speaker, keypad

Comments (6)

  • wnsswd gave 10/10 on 19/12/2008 02:31 Report abuse

    • Good: None
    • Bad: The fact they were made at all & sold to people.

    I used to work for ZTE at a Telstra office in sydney australia. Let me tell you that ZTE is a CRAP brand of phone in every sense of the word. we had hundreds of calls every day and the phones are so cheaply made we'd send every a customer a refurbished handset. literally thousands were faulty & they are still the same, cheap sh*t! take my advice - DONT BUY THEM & IF U HAVE ONE GET RID OF IT!

  • sfdgsd gave 1/10 on 28/10/2008 19:58 Report abuse

    • Good: None what so ever
    • Bad: I cant even make calls, the other person can hear me but i cant hear them.

    What the hell is this? It's hardly a F***ing phone!

  • Jan gave 4/10 on 30/09/2008 12:44 Report abuse

    • Good: Battery life
    • Bad: Camera picture quality, PC software unavailable

    The JoinMe software would not install - either from the CD ROM supplied or as a download. On the other hand, Battery life is twice that of its Motorola Razr predecessor in my life.

  • TechSpecific gave 2/10 on 20/09/2008 00:43 Report abuse

    • Good: It would make an adorable paperweight. In cases of utter emergency, this phone could be used, although I seriously doubt the reliability of this phone would facilitate this. Because of this phones low-quality/low-weight approach, this phone will travel far when thrown from a cliff-face.
    • Bad: This device is a Cheap Plastic-y phone that lacks any form of substance. This phone, as with many from ZTE has an outdated and labyrinthian layout and menu system, poor speaker, bluetooth & reception.

    This phone exemplifies the problems with many ZTE devices. This particular device lacks Durability, Substance & Power.

  • sentinel88 gave 5/10 on 27/07/2008 09:31 Report abuse

    • Good: Excellent reception.
    • Bad: Lack of standard Nokia type features which when located are hard to use.

    This is a basic no frills phone with some of the features hard to access through the menus.

  • tin gave 2/10 on 06/04/2008 23:19 Report abuse

    • Bad: its a joke

    this is not bad, if u love stupid phones that is. just let me say this is a low quality cheap phone, maybe for a tween to have as a novelty, certainly not for anything else. telstra must of been kidding with this

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