PCS Phone Samsung A460 (Sprint)


Compras Nikon
Bluetooth
If you liked the Samsung A400, you’ll love the A460. With the A460, Samsung has kept all the great attributes of the A400 while adding a few polishes that make the A460 one of the sleekest phones on the market. Like it’s predecessor, it’s packed with easy-to-use features, such as voice-activated calling and one-touch Web access. It also retains the elegant two-tone silver finish. But it’s both lighter and more compact and includes an outside LCD screen, which allows you to see the time, date, and battery life without opening the phone.

About the size of a deck of cards, the phone weighs 3.4 ounces and measures 3.4 inches by 1.81 inches by 0.83 inches. Despite its size, the phone has a solid construction and opens and closes easily without feeling flimsy. The extendable antenna seems a bit fragile and thin, but with a bit of care most callers should have no problems with it. Also handy are the volume and ringer controls on the side of the phone, which let us adjust the phone volume instantly while waiting in line at a coffee shop.

When we opened the phone and switched it on, we were pleased to see that it powered up and was ready to use in about 10 seconds--an impressive feat given the graphic-rich content of the start screen. The keypad is practically flawless, leaving enough space between keys for error-free dialing for those with bigger fingers. The directional key, situated top and center, is a bonus, letting us browse through the phone’s many menus and options without a hitch, which was especially handy while using the wireless Web. The eight-line screen is nicely proportioned and easy to read, both in text size and image clarity, and the four-color gray lends depth to the screen images, giving them a polished look. The soft electric-blue backlighting made dialing a taxi a breeze in a dimly lit lounge. Changing the phone’s ring tones was simple too--the hard part was choosing one of the 23 tones offered. Eventually we settled on a rather psychedelic version of Ludwig Van Beethoven’s Fuer Elise. Ringer volume is also easily adjustable, with eight levels of sound and a vibrate mode that ensures you won’t miss a call. The phone is also equipped to work with downloadable ring tones, available from Sprint for a minimal fee.

One of the best features the SPH-A460 offers is its one-touch wireless Web access. The OpenWave Mobile Browser connected quickly and information from the phone’s preprogrammed news, weather, and entertainment sites loaded smoothly and were easily navigated. Built-in GPS technology lets the phone access location-based and 911 emergency location services (where available)--handy for accessing driving directions or pinpointing where you are when lost. Best of all, the phone is enabled for voice dialing, and we were able to program and call numbers within minutes of picking up the phone. Voice-activated dialing worked well whether we whispered or yelled into the phone, but understandably, it did seem to have a slight problem with our commands as a garbage truck rolled past. Calls were clear and a bit on the loud side, even with the volume turned to the lowest level, but we’ll take too loud over too quiet any day.

Besides the excellent calling features, the e-mail, voice-memo recorder, fax, address book, calendar, and two-way text messaging make the phone an ideal tool for business trips, keeping you connected in more ways than with just a phone call. Or, if you find yourself stuck in an airport or on the train, you can pass time trying to master one of the three rather enigmatic games: Push Push, Fly Ribbon, and Spider Hunter.

We were quite happy to see the battery life exceed Samsung’s guidelines in our testing. The phone held a call for more than 3 hours, and remaining on for 180 hours in standby mode, as compared with its manufacturer rating of 2.4 hours digital talk time and 170 hours of digital standby time.

Once again, we’re thrilled with this solid new addition to the Samsung legacy, and can only look forward to what they’ll come up with next.

--Steve O’Neil

Pros:

Cons:

How We Tested Battery Talk/Standby Time

When reading our reviews, you should view the test results of mobile-phone battery talk time and standby time as relative information only. Many variables, including carrier signal strength at your location, signal consistency (including incoming and outgoing calls), display and ringer settings, and battery charging methods and history, will affect performance. When handset manufacturers and mobile phone carriers list talk-time and standby-time ratings, they usually include disclaimers about variable performance and often refer to the times they publish as maximum times. Some quote expected battery life ranges, and in this case you're probably safe to assume you'll experience at least the minimum rated range. Note that manufacturers of dual-mode digital and analog handsets publish battery-life rates for both digital and analog modes, as analog mode consumes much more power than digital mode.

Our Tests: We tested digital-mode talk and standby times with each phone. Prior to each test, we fully charged the phone's battery according to the manufacturer's directions. To test digital-phone talk time, we turned the phone on, established a digital carrier signal, dialed a number in our test lab, and, when the call rang through, took the receiving phone's handset off the hook. When all went well, we didn't do anything else except record the time when the phone died. In a couple of cases, the phones lost the signal and dropped the calls. If we were right there and could redial, we did so immediately and continued running the test. Otherwise, we halted the test, recharged the battery, and started the test over. Assuming consistent carrier-signal strength, this test should represent best-case talk time. And it's worth noting that several phones' talk-time performance significantly exceeded the manufacturers' ratings.

To test digital-phone standby time, we turned the phone on, established a carrier signal, and left the phone in standby mode. We checked the phone every few hours (for what was often days on end) until the phone finally cut out. Since no outgoing or incoming calls occurred during testing and because the phone was not moved, this method should represent best-case standby time, again assuming consistent carrier signal strength.


1 Wonderful Phone - screen goes dead after a year
Like the other reviews on here, I too love this phone.

It's small (small enough to fit into your pocket), has a loud ringer and the call volume is amazing. I'm never saying "What? What did you say?"

I received this phone for free for a replaecment of my previous cell phone from Sprint. I was pleased.

About a year and a half after receiving the phone, the display went blank. This included the display on the outer side of the phone.

I took it back to my local Sprint store to find out that it was a defect in the phone and could be repaired for free.

The panel was replaced and worked again for another two months before it went blank yet again.

Sprint was good on replacing the phone and I received a new one.

I have no complaints on the phone itself, only that the screen is defective.
2 Standout in the second generation phones
This phone is now sitting in the closet of my home. It worked for a little more than two years before it had display problems. I had to turn it off and on again in order to retrieve my phone book entries. During its prime, the phone worked well for me. I will miss it!
3 good phone
this was a good phone i gave it five stars because i dropped it in a pool and it still works
4 Works well except one thing:screen goes dead in about a year
Overall, I am satisfied with A460 phone. It's easy to use, light and small. Picks up call well. But there is one problem, and I've seen a lot of complains about it. I have used two A460 phones in two years, both showed exactly the same end: screen goes dead while the phone is working. All happened at about after 12 months use(just be out of warranty). Once power off then back on, the screen is OK for a while. Then it goes blank, especailly after fliping the phone. Sprint and Samsung acknowlodged this is a known problem. Wish Samsung hasn't carried this problem into other phones, because we really like Samsung's phone: light-weight, stylish and does the job well......
5 Good phone
I had mine for 20 months, granted the display just partially died but it received some hard shocks, water... and really, I did not expect to last for so long anyway. I got it for $49 and I think it is good phone, light, sleek, good microphone. 20 months of good services, it's time to upgrade anyway!
6 BEWARE!! The screen dies quickly
This phone has a display problem, the display on my phone abruptly died within 24 hours, after only 14 months of ownership (which was coincidentally 2 months past the warranty). Several friends had the same experience and I found numerous other people online with the same problem. It seems that a wire connecting the flip open to the display breaks, and it seems to happen anywhere between 7-14 months after ownership.
Do not buy it.
7 Never Again
This has been THE worst phone i have ever had!! I have had this phone not once but twice the first time it went awry I should have been concerned but sprint replaced it (my guess it was "refurbished...USED) the second phone started acting weird and erased every phone number ,download and ringtone on the phone needless to say I was pissed off. Then believe it or not my husbands did the same thing no LED readout no caller id ...nothing THIS PHONE SUcKS...BIGTIME!! and I would never buy anything Samsuks I mean SAMSUNG makes I am definitely going with Sanyo
8 Good basic Flip Phone
I have had A460 for more than an year and it is only recently that I replaced it with Motorala V600.
For this one year, while I subscribed to Sprint PCS, A460 came in handy. It is a small, cool looking flip phone with large, back and white display and a number of useful features like voice dialling, web access and games (I loved playing "push push" while my wife shopped!).
Positives:
1) A little 1"x1" LCD display at the top to show you who is calling without having to flip it open
2) Voice Dialling: Say the name and it will dial the number of your friend.
3) Large internal display
4) Web enabled
5) Very light and compact
6) Some cool games to keep you occupied

CONCLUSION:
If you do not want to spend a lot of money, like flip phones, and don't care about phone cameras (that don't work anyway since picture is usually grainy and small), A460 is a good buy.



Saturday, 06-Sep-2008 11:04:38 CDT
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