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Motorola razr (2020) Specs
Description
Motorola razr (2020) specs include a 6.2-inch main display, Snapdragon 765G processor, 8GB RAM, and 256GB storage. The phone is powered by a 2800mAh battery and Android 10. The main camera is 48MP, while the front one is 20MP. Motorola razr (2020) is 5G ready and costs $1400.
This device is also known as Motorola razr 5G
Popular Comparisons
The Motorola razr (2020) is most commonly compared with these phones:
Specs
DisplayBenchmarks |
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Size | 6.2-inch |
Resolution | 2142 x 876 px, 21:9 ratio, 373 PPI |
Technology | OLED |
Screen-to-body | 83.24 % |
Features | Ambient light sensor, Proximity sensor |
Additional display | 2.7 inches, 800 x600 px, OLED |
Hardware |
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System chip | Qualcomm Snapdragon 765G SM7250-AB (7 nm) |
Processor | Octa-core, 2400 MHz, Kryo 475, 64-bit |
GPU | Adreno 620 |
RAM | 8GB (LPDDR4) |
Internal storage | 256GB, not expandable |
OS | Android (11, 10) |
Device type | Smartphone |
Battery |
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Capacity | 2800 mAh |
Type | Not user replaceable |
Charging | Motorola TurboPower |
Max charge speed | Wired: 15.0W |
PhoneArena Battery Test | |
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Battery Life Estimate: | Untested |
Browsing: | Untested |
Gaming: | 5h 5min |
Video: | 5h 53min |
Find out more details about battery and charging for all phones we have tested on our
PhoneArena Battery Score page.
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Camera |
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Rear | Single camera |
Main camera |
48 MP (OIS, Laser and PDAF) Specifications: Aperture size: F1.7 Focal length: 26 mm Sensor size: 1/2" Pixel size: 0.8 μm |
Flash | LED |
Video recording |
3840x2160 (4K UHD) (30 fps), 1920x1080 (Full HD) (120 fps), 1280x720 (HD) (240 fps) Features: Time-lapse video, Hyperlapse, EIS |
Front | 20 MP (HDR, Slow-motion videos), Video capture: 1920x1080 (Full HD) |
Design |
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Dimensions |
6.66 x 2.86 x 0.31 inches (169.2 x 72.6 x 7.9 mm) |
Folded | (91.7 x 72.6 x 16 mm) |
Weight | 6.77 oz(192.0 g) |
Materials |
Back: Glass (Corning Gorilla Glass 5) Frame: Aluminum |
Resistance | Splash |
Biometrics | Fingerprint (touch) |
Colors | Polished graphite, Liquid mercury, Blush gold |
Cellular |
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5G | Bands n2, n5, n25, n41, n66, n71, n78, Sub-6, mmWave |
4G (FDD) | Bands 1(2100), 2(1900), 3(1800), 4(AWS-1), 5(850), 7(2600), 8(900), 12(700 a), 13(700 c), 14(700 PS), 17(700 b), 18(800 Lower), 19(800 Upper), 20(800 DD), 25(1900+), 26(850+), 28(700 APT), 29(700 d), 30(2300 WCS), 66(AWS-3), 71(600) |
4G (TDD) | Bands 38(2600), 39(1900+), 40(2300), 41(2600+), 46, 48(3600) |
3G | Bands 1(2100), 2(1900), 4(1700/2100), 5(850), 8(900) |
Data Speed | LTE-A Pro Cat 18 (1200/150 Mbit/s), HSDPA+ (4G) 42.2 Mbit/s, HSUPA 5.76 Mbit/s, UMTS |
Dual SIM | Yes |
SIM type | Nano SIM, eSIM |
This device has different variants: View all |
Multimedia |
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Headphones | No 3.5mm jack |
Speakers | Earpiece, Loudspeaker |
Screen mirroring | Wireless screen share |
Additional microphone(s) | Noise cancellation |
Connectivity & Features |
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Bluetooth | 5.0 |
Wi-Fi |
802.11 b,g,n,ac,dual-band Wi-Fi Direct, Hotspot |
USB | Type-C (reversible), USB 3.1, Features: Charging, Headphones port |
Location | GPS, A-GPS, Glonass, Galileo, Cell ID, Wi-Fi positioning |
Sensors | Accelerometer, Gyroscope, Compass, Barometer |
Other | NFC |
Regulatory Approval |
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FCC approval |
Date approved: Mar 08, 2021 FCC ID value: IHDT56ZB2 |
Measured SAR |
Head: 0.38 W/kg Body: 0.93 W/kg Simultaneous Transmission: 1.59 W/kg Wireless Router: 0.93 W/kg |
Buyers information |
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MSRP | $ 1400 |
In The Box | TurboPower 15 charger, USB Type-C cable, 3.5mm headset adapter, guides, SIM tool, accessory pouch |
This device has different variants: View all |
Availability |
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Officially announced | Sep 09, 2020 |
Alternative variants
Differences from the main variant: | |
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5G | Bands n1, n3, n5, n7, n28, n41, n77, n78, n79, Sub-6 |
4G (FDD) | Bands 1(2100), 2(1900), 3(1800), 4(AWS-1), 5(850), 7(2600), 8(900), 12(700 a), 13(700 c), 17(700 b), 18(800 Lower), 19(800 Upper), 20(800 DD), 26(850+), 28(700 APT), 66(AWS-3), 71(600) |
4G (TDD) | Bands 34(2000), 38(2600), 39(1900+), 40(2300), 41(2600+), 42(3500), 46 |
3G | Bands 6(800), 5(850), 8(900), 4(1700/2100), 2(1900), 1(2100) |
In The Box | TurboPower 15 charger, USB Type-C cable, 3.5mm headset jack adapter, (select countries) DENON premium headset, guides, SIM tool, accessory pouch |
Carrier Availability
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User Reviews
I've had the Motorola RAZR for almost 2 months now and I love it.... The external display gets way more use than I thought and even runs most apps with no issues... It really comes in handy when video chatting and using Google maps... The camera takes nice pics both day and night and as always the moto actions works great (chop twice flashlight& double twist camera).... Battery life is ok but could be or rather should be improved.... Only thing I dislike is how physically the phone is slippery when placed down it slides off of anything that's not perfectly flat and level.... Oh and if you can't find it it's in your pocket lol feels really small when folded
- App use on external display, how small it feels even folded,,
- External display full usage but just for notifications
- Fast charging
- Battery life could be better, phone is really smooth and slides off anything that's not perfectly flat and level
My use case might be different than most, but thanks to that I am having an incredible time with this phone.
Use case:
- Trying to lessen my screen time with phones.
- Use Razr 5G for daily driver and old phone (Galaxy S10) for media consumption.
The main selling point for the phone is to quickly and efficiently manage: viewing and replying to notifications, music/Audible controls, and swapping connected devices (earbuds/headphones).The small external screen handles all of that beautifully.
Thanks to that, I find myself trying to avoid opening the main screen for something other than Googling.
- Good for quick efficient notification management
- Battery is long if you stick to using external displayForm factor is fun and portable
- Able to use main camera as selfie camera with no issues
- Battery is long if you stick to using external display
- Not a lot of bloatware
- Extended use of main screen gives me anxiety since it feels fragile. Need warranty/insurance for this phone
- Early generation of folding phones means lots of kinks to iron out
- Lack of online resources for help due to lack of adoption (some forums available tho)
- Crease is more visible than other phones
- Widgets out of proportion due to tall screen
- heats when extended use
The decision to buy the Razr really comes down to how much you want the form factor.
As stated, it is no flagship device. The price is all due to the technology and form factor required to make this work. The original "new" razr had an issue with the folding mechanism that made it super easy to break. That is no longer the case, so you can own and use this device without it breaking in the first three months. The question then becomes, do you want to? If you are spending far too much time on your phone, this phone makes way more sense than a Palm phone (which they are still advertising for some reason) or another mobile detox device. You will only want to use it in portrait, so many of those landscape time killers become a thing of the past. In portrait mode, especially in bed, it will become a chore to use, making you want to put it down as well. If you are the type of person who loves using your cell phone and doesn't want it to change, this is a mere novelty. I found that the novelty wears off after 17 days, about two days too long to return the device. I do like talking on the phone, which is what I use my phone for the most. Text entry with the stock keyboard is a chore, and switching to swiftkey will disable your ability to type with the screen closed. Even with swiftkey screen accuracy and touch response is a reoccurring and annoying issue to live with. You will likely respond less to messages and be less engaged via text than with an iPhone or something with accurate touch screen calibration to type on.
Lets talk about stability, this processor is no screamer, apps sometimes take a second to get their stuff together, and coming from an iPhone 11, this seems way slower. There are bugs since the device is so new, most of them are connectivity bugs. I think the device heating issue is from the design and is just another sacrafice you have to live with on the device.
At this point you are probably wondering, why the rating of the seven then? Sounds like this phone isnt that great? Well as a daily driver, if you are a cell phone addict, which lets face it, you're reading this review, I'm probably describing you. This is the first phone I have had that has actually felt like a new idea, a new device. Everything else has been so incremental in the update cycle that my note 10 didn't really feel like that big of a difference to my last samsung. I guess the near perfection took away the fun and without a need to adapt to something new felt like more of the same. The razr definitely breaks away from that mold, but I think it does prove that the clamshell was a great novelty when we used our phones for speech, but as the world transitions away from talking and into typing it really misses the mark there. However as an aggregate of all the factors phone arena uses for ratings the average was 7.1, there are just low marks in critical usability segments that would make it a pass for most.
- 5G connectivity
- Great reception
- Good version of Android
- Motorola updates
- Great and clear screen
- Classic flip phone design
- Battery Life
- Ease of Landscape viewing
- touch screen response
- text entry not great on stock keyboard
- device heats excessively when used
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