Motorola RAZR V3 Pink Phone
Saturday, March 13th, 2010- Razor-thin aircraft aluminum case
- Bluetooth wireless technology
- MPEG4 video playback
- Built-in speakerphone
- Includes: Battery, Charger and User’s Manual
Product Description
The Moto Razr V3 is expertly crafted to deliver exceptional performance. Inside the ultra-thin design are advanced features like MPEG4 video playback, Bluetooth® wireless technology, a digital camera and more. And with the precision-cut keypad, minimalist styling and metal finish, the V3 looks just as beautiful as it performs. The real difference is in the details. See who’s calling, in color, without opening your phone — the large internal display is complemented by an impressive external display. The precision-cut metal keypad reacts to the lightest of touches. And the features you can’t always see are equally impressive, like quad-band GSM — for global calls where GSM network coverage and roaming agr… More >>


moviegirl86 says:
March 13th, 2010
7:10 pm
ok let me just say that i am a very clumsy person. I drop my phones all the time. I had this phone for about 4 years. I dropped it all the time and it still lasted me four years. I used to work in retail and i would drop it on the hard concrete work floor so hard that the back would come off and the battery would fly out, and it still lasted me four years!!!! It finally died on me for good back in april of this year. I got a new the lg slide and i hate it. I miss my razr phone so much that im looking into buying a new one. This phone was great. It never froze up on me, the volume was loud, the battery life lasted long and it was easy to text on.
Rating: 5 / 5
Michael T. Callihan says:
March 13th, 2010
7:41 pm
For the low price of free or nearly free for a 2 year contract or extension, this phone is a steal. We’ve probably owned about a dozen cell phones since the mid-90s ranging from the give away units to high end smart phones – Nokia, Motorola, Ericsson, and RIM. This Razr is among the best phones we’ve used. The main strength is voice call quality on both ends. This is as good as I’ve heard on the AT&T/Cingular network. In fact, my wife sounds better when she calls my office from this phone than when she calls from our new 5.8Ghz Panasonic cordless home phone. As for the other features, they are all secondary to me compared to call quality, but the Razr offers real music ring tones, a good digital zooming camera, the familiar Motorola user interface, and a cool, slim form factor. My wife carries this (hence the reason we bought the pink one) and it rides in her purse without taking up much room and without randomly dialing and redialing phone numbers as her candy bar style phones have done when the keyboard wasn’t locked. I’ve always felt that flip phones are more comfortable to hold and sound better anyway since the ear piece and mouth piece are positioned closer to your ear and mouth respectively while using it. The build quality seems a step above the recent Nokia flip phone she used. Missing features include 3G support (I believe the Razr 3xx offers this) and voice dialing. Also, Motorola seems to have stopped using a dedicated headset jack; instead the mini-USB power jack is multi-purpose with an available (not included) adapter for a wired headset. If you use a Bluetooth headset, this isn’t an issue. I remember how pricey the Razr was when it first came out. This V3 edition makes it as great a phone as ever and now that it’s not the latest and greatest, it’s a tremendous value. Highly recommended. Note: if you want to get this phone as an upgrade to your current phone with AT&T, you will have to do it through AT&T – Amazon doesn’t seem to be able to process phone replacement/upgrade to existing AT&T accounts.
Rating: 5 / 5