![]() ![]() The built-in speaker is loud, but it's on the back, which isn't my favorite location. The music player will play WMA files-protected or not-and unprotected AAC and MP3 files, and it sounded good with a standard pair of headphones. T-Mobile includes a 1GB card, but the phone accepted our 8GB SanDisk card without a complaint. One way to get your tunes onto the phone is via microSD card-the slot is inconveniently located under the back cover, but at least it isn't under the battery. The 5310 is a good voice phone, but its real forte is music. Ringtones were of medium volume, but the vibrate alert felt a bit weak. Its slender form means the 5310 has a small battery, and the 7 hours 6 seconds of talk time we got in our rundown test is low for a T-Mobile phone. Nokia's voice-dialing system is usually poor, but the 5310 is set up so that you can't use voice dialing until you have trained the phone, by reading a list of names supplied by Nokia this seemed to increase the phone's accuracy at guessing what I was trying to dial. ![]() The phone is bundled with a pair of earbuds with a microphone and shirt clip. There wasn't much noise cancellation in the microphone or speaker.īeing a music phone, the 5310 features a standard 3.5mm headset jack on the top, and also supports mono and stereo Bluetooth headsets. The speakerphone is fairly loud, but it's located at the bottom of the phone on the back, so it's way too easy to cover with your hand. During testing, I experienced some network-related voice issues like extreme compression. Transmission through the microphone was generally good, but was heavily dependent on an at-times-wobbly network. ![]() They're loud, clear, and as reliable as you can get on T-Mobile's network. Voice calls on the tri-band (850/1800/1900 MHz) 5310's earpiece sound terrific.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2023
Categories |