Motorola RAZR-V3c Cell Phone User Reviews
Pros: Durable, nice photo quality, great sound quality for ringtones. Cons: Lack of memory card slot, short battery life. Summary: I've had this cell phone for 2 years and I would definitely recommend this for others. It's physically durable (I've dropped mine many times) and the visuals are great. The speaker allows you to buy great ringtones that sound great and the camera takes decent pictures and video. In the last few months of my two years with this phone, my main issue now is the battery life. If I don't charge it every night, it will be dead in 24 hours. If I text or use the alarm clock, it will drain the battery. Pros: Nice slim design. Decent reception. Great picture quality. Cons: Poor battery life. Screen freezes. Overall phone construction is very poor. Prone to hinge breaks. Summary: Very disapointed in general. Purchased (2) of these phones. Between my daughter and myself, the both of us have had a total of 6 phone replacements with this model. Issues ranging from hinges falling apart to freeze up resulting in lock down of the phones, along with keypad peel off. I've heard the newer motorola models have corrected some of these issues. 1 out of 1 people found this review helpful Pros: It has a nice design, a kid may need this phone more than an adult because it is meant for kids. The fun games make it hard to put down, and it isnt too fragile. Cons: the battery life is pretty short so youll have to charge it whenever you get a chance. Summary: I love this phone and its style. if you are looking for a phone...than buy the razr prepaid phone. (but only if you have the time to charge it) 24 out of 47 people found this review helpful Pros: It has a nice design, a kid may need this phone more than an adult because it is meant for kids. The fun games make it hard to put down, and it isnt too fragile. Cons: The battery life is pretty short so youll have to charge it whenever you get a chance. Summary: I love this phone and its style. if you are looking for a phone...than buy the razr prepaid phone. (but if you have the resposabillity to chrge it often) 24 out of 45 people found this review helpful Pros: Lightweight, slim and easy to carry Cons: No external antenna. Summary: Great phone for metropolitian areas. Not so good for rural areas; like where I live. 10 out of 23 people found this review helpful Pros: It has a big screen,it has blue tooth,has good camera,very thin, Cons: unlike the v3m it dosent have a slot for a memory car,no flash for the camera Summary: Its a nice phone, it come with a camera,but doesent have a flash, it comes with blue tooth .its light wieght and can do all the media functiuon like picture messageing and go on the internet if your carrier has that option.its also very thin 23 out of 54 people found this review helpful Pros: Pretty clear signal, slimness, takes pretty decent amount of abuse without breaking, clean aesthetics (etched keypad is lovely), beautifully clear polyphonic ringtones. Cons: Does not stay in back pocket, slippery, too wide for petite hands, memory gets low relatively quickly, batteries can be problematic, no flash, no "always-on" outside display Summary: I owned the V3c for a year before losing it. During the first month, I replaced two batteries which caused my RAZR to freeze up and turn unresponsive; this indicated to me that OEM batteries may be problematic. While I enjoyed the slimness of this phone, it proved problematic because I would stick it in my back pocket automatically, and thanks to its sleek aluminum case, as soon as I sat down, it would slip out and I was consistently losing it. I do think the phone is a bit too wide for smaller hands but for the average/older American who is used to a land-line handset, they love it. The camera LACKS a flash and picture quality is only so-so. Voice activated dialing is a blessing, as is the quick sync with Motorola Bluetooth headsets, but you have to keep them relatively close together - as in, your back pocket to your headset. Ringers are loud and polyphonic, so your MP3 ringtones will sound great. Displays are colorful, large, and clear, but the outside display will *not* stay on, you must push a button to see what time it is, which is a pain. Even cheaper phones tell you time and date from the outside display, as well as have a flash, but this stupid, expensive phone does not. I had a gimpy Audiovox 8910 from 2005 that had better features than my 2006 RAZR. I do have raves about the durability though. I have dropped my V3c on the pavement, watched it fall and bounce across parking lots, and down wooden flights of stairs. My phone was chipped and dented on all the plastic parts, but it still managed to work. While I don't recommend being abusive, because your phone might not take it, it's good to know that it is pretty durable. Battery life gets steadily worse over time, at most you will usually get 1 day of standby by the time you hit a year of use. Memory is pretty low, and if you have a penchant for text messaging, video, ringtones, or pictures, expect it to fill up relatively quickly. There are no included accessories to this phone beside the home charger, so expect to pony it up for car charger, wrist strap, and cases/belt clips. V3c and V3m prices on auction sites (eBay) are pretty comparable, if you are a media-heavy person, pay extra and pick up a V3m, which has expandable memory up to 1 GB. That is the one improved aspect of the V3m over the V3c, otherwise, nothing much has changed between the two models. One last note: Verizon cripples its V3c(s) from full-media functioning, while Alltel does not, plus there can be activation issues if you are buying a second-hand phone, so make sure you buy the correct company and from a reputable seller. So: It's a good, somewhat trendy phone, and after awhile, you'll get used to its lack of basic necessary features (flash/always-on outside display/crappy battery life) and fall in love with its quality features (voice activated dialing, bluetooth, slimness, anticipatory responsive text-messaging). Worth a year of use, at least 'till they com 14 out of 31 people found this review helpful Pros: I can put it in my pocket when I'm wearing tight pants. battery life is pretty good in the first 3 months Cons: It lags like CRAZY & cheap design. Battery life on the decline. Summary: I gave into peer pressure and bought this phone since it (was) trendy. Anyway, I was super excited when I first bought it, but it didn't take long for me to start hating it. You have to memorize the menu options becuase it lags so long/freezes sometimes. I feel like I am using 56k internet on this thing! It seriously takes F O R E V E R to even go through the contact list to make a phone call. AND All the buttons are peeling off! Don't know if it's my makeup that makes it happen, but it's annoying & looks weird/gross. 15 out of 35 people found this review helpful Pros: Thin & Phat all at the same time - It'd cut like a knife through butta Cons: Sucks the life outta the battery - it's a little wobbly like a booble head on it's hinge after a year Summary: Vowels are great on Wheel of Fortune - but Motorola struck it rich by leaving them out of the RAZR. The rest of the line just doesn't have the same panache as the original. This is a great little phone, thin light and totally phat. The keys are great for playing usa today sudoku to my heart's content and the display is great for searching for my favorite wildkittens scores on yahoo. Really, to tell you the truth. I like it, but I'm looking to replace it with the U740 and it's full keyboard action. I donno about the small number keys tho, bro. 10 out of 22 people found this review helpful Pros: Easy to use contact lists and easy to download games and ringtones. Cons: Constantly drops calls whenever i'm around computers and the video recording only lasts 15 seconds. Summary: As part of the Razr family, the Motorola Razr V3c for Verizon casts the same slim profile that has made it the most popular cell phone. At 3.9 by 2.1 by 0.6 inches and 3.5 ounces, the V3c is a hair bigger and heavier than the original Razr, but you don't notice the difference at all. In fact, it slips so easily into a pocket that it can be difficult to feel the vibrating ring. I liked the pink coloring. The external display and controls and the location of the camera lens are the same on the first Razr. And here again, there's no camera flash. 11 out of 15 people found this review helpful Pros: easy to use. Looks good Cons: doesn't always respond to verbal commands Summary: I like the phone. 6 out of 11 people found this review helpful Pros: Light weight Cons: Too small to hold Summary: The phone is good except that battry time is very short, the display constanly needs cleaning and a phone holder is needer to comfortlby grip the phone. 40 out of 64 people found this review helpful Pros: Light, fits into your pocket easily, generally gets a good signal, voice activated features easy to use and come in handy Cons: Battery life is terrible, keypad is extremely awkward and takes a long time to get used to. Text messaging with the keypad is difficult and the layout of the buttons often leads to cancelling a message in the middle of typing it. Sending picture messages often takes forever on this phone. Summary: I wish I could say I was happier with my Razr phone. The battery life on mine is pathetic. It barely lasts a couple of phone calls and even needs to be charged within 24 hours if it's not used at all. It is nice to look at though, and very easy to carry around. Hopefully they'll figure out how to improve battery life and enhance the keypad for easier use on their next slim phone. 39 out of 67 people found this review helpful Pros: slim design - can fit in your tight jeans Cons: glass lens - breaks easily Summary: I hate my razr. My husband dropped it the first day I had it and the screen cracked because it was glass - it wasn't too expensive to fix ($50) though. Another thing I don't like is the volume. It is way too low. If I could, I would return my razr for something else. 8 out of 14 people found this review helpful Pros: Great styling, lightweight, long talk time, good reception, decent tools offering Cons: Charger port location is odd - makes it difficult to charge in a stand-up, desktop charger. Summary: This is a great phone. I'm a Motorola fan, and they've done well this time. The hinge is solid, and does not rock back and forth as some other flips do, the buttons are large and easy to press, and the smart buttons on the side are well-positioned and thought. Voice-activated dialing works well (better than previous versions), even through my bluetooth headset. Can be charged with USB-B cable to USB port. Overall, I give it a 4.99 out of 5. 59 out of 90 people found this review helpful
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