Home Kyocera Phones Kyocera 3225 Kyocera 3225 Specs Description This dual-band CDMA phone features BREW application support, custom graphics, custom ringtones, digital TTY/TDD, EMS picture messaging, GPS location, 1xRTT high-speed data, speakerphone, voice dialing and wireless Internet. I want it 0 users I have it 0 users I had it 0 users Specs Compare Battery Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable Design Size comparison Dimensions: 4.37 x 1.96 x 1.02 inches (111 x 50 x 26 mm) Weight: 4.23 oz (120.0 g) Features: Numeric keypad Cellular AMPS: 800 MHz Connectivity & Features Location: A-GPS Other: Computer sync Phone features Notifications: Vibration, Speakerphone Other features: Voice dialing, Voice recording, TTY/TDD Regulatory Approval FCC approval: Date approved: Nov 26, 2002 FCC ID value: OVFKWC-3225 Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Kyocera 3225 specifications, there is always a possibility of admitting a mistake. If you see any wrong or incomplete data, please LET US KNOW. If you are interested in using our specs commercially, check out our Phone specs database licensing page. Latest News Don't get your Pixel 9 and Galaxy S25 satellite hopes high unless on T-Mobile Google Play announces a new chapter and evolution: AI, gaming, rewards and more Garmin's Forerunner 945 is now $171 cheaper and a fantastic choice for triathletes The $500 HMD Skyline is the modern Nokia of your dreams - and they (literally) killed it Galaxy Z Flip 6 camera scores massive hardware upgrades, but modest quality improvement Parents are helping HMD co-create the perfect phone for children Popular stories Refusing to let T-Mobile off the hook, customers have filed class action lawsuit against it T-Mobile users have only now discovered sneaky change made in May Latest T-Mobile freebie is waiting to be picked up by you but be careful Google's fancy Pixel Tablet becomes a no-brainer with this sweet post-Prime Day discount T-Mobile customer is paying higher amounts every month for what he suspects is "internal fraud" Some T-Mobile stores repackaged returned phones and sold them off as new