Here’s a Motorola candybar you’re not going to want to miss. This is the first Motorola device to be carried by Virgin Mobile, and the biggest and by far the most impressive Android handset you’re going to be able to purchase off-contract for under $300. Not only that, this device is unlike most Motorola devices in that it’s not running Motorola Motoblur, a user interface that we’ve been told by many of our community members is certainly not their favorite. Instead you’re going to get a Vanilla (aka essentially untouched) look at Android 2.2 FroYo. Is it a winner?

Before we begin, let’s get a tiny bit of hands-on time in a couple of videos. First there’s an unboxing of this device as performed by yours truly just a few days ago. Here you’ll see the actual unit we’re working with for the review actually coming out of the box it actually came in.

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Then you’re invited to take another look at the device as it existed several weeks ago when we were introduced to it at a Motorola event in NYC:

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Now on to the review! Enjoy this slab of Motorola excellence.

Hardware

This device is what you’d get if you had a Motorola DROID and took all the hard plastic and sharp edges, replacing them instead with soft plastic and slightly more rounded corners. It’s extremely simple in its form and makes no qualms about being a relatively thin box with a big screen. The display is a 4.1-inch 800×400 pixel resolution WVGA touchscreen that looks generously bright and sharp – it’s no Super AMOLED, but it’s certainly ready to beat out every mid-range device display we’ve ever seen.

When I first got my hands on this device, I looked at it and thought – what is is? There’s gotta be something special about this device, it’s not the best! It doesn’t have the biggest display, the processor is only a single core 1GHz Snapdragon, even the cameras are less than the best at VGA on the front and 5-megapixels on the back. Was it the HDMI port? No, though that certainly was a plus. Was it the Virgin Mobile Live 2.0 app that allows you access to its Virgin Mobile branded music stream as outlined in our original announcement release? I say thee nay! Each of these items certainly makes the phone what it is, but what the phone represents is much more than its physical form.

Instead, what you’re looking at here is the best little Android top-tier device to be offered off-contract for under $300 in the USA and Canada today, hands down. This device is weighs in at 143g (5.04 ounces), and its dimensions are 4.8” x 2.5” x 0.4”, it being neither a very larger nor a very small phone, and with a standard set of Android menu buttons at the bottom of the portrait screen, Motorola at the top, a notification light inside the speaker grill above that, some more speakers for entertainment and speakerphone down at the bottom at the left and right sides (unique!) and a great feel in the hand.

This device is rough and tough, won’t need a case unless you’re the sort of person who bashes their phone in the door regularly, and has a really nice color to it – just so long as you like black. The speakers, again, are excellent. I’m always complaining about how the speakers on a device such as this should, without a doubt, not be pointing BACKWARD as most of these handsets are prone to have happening. This device takes them half way to the correct location planting them on the sides of the device. Yes I realize the speaker grilles are not actually the speakers themselves, but they certainly look and feel like they’re nearly, not quite, but nearly in the perfect location for some screen-up, back-down, awesome tunes action.

Again there’s a notification light behind the top speaker grille, the power button is on the upper left-hand side of the device while the volume up/down is on the opposite side – strange and welcome locations, and you’ve got both your microUSB and HDMI plugs at the bottom of the device, right where they should be. Inside you’ve got that single-core 1GHz Snapdragon and it’s crackin.

Software and Performance

Inside the device you’ve got a full Google experience, with all your regular 20 or 30 Google-required apps sitting right where you expect them, the Android Market in place right beside them. Then there’s some Virgin Mobile apps that’ll connect you to your Virgin Mobile account in various ways, a Virgin Mobile Live, an app with some sweet official Virgin Mobile music and sounds, and a few apps like WHERE, SCVNGR, Poynt, and a shortcut to the airG Chat webpage – each of these apps or shortcuts are essentially invisible to your everyday Android user, and upon tapping them if you’re a user new to smartphones, you’ll find them relatively difficult to get into, as they’re all more advanced applications for those willing to put forth some extra effort to participate.

These apps and the set of only a few portals to Virgin Mobile environments are the only additions Virgin Mobile seems to have added to a very basic Android experience. You’ll open this device up and find Vanilla Android 2.2 FroYo staring you right in the face. Imagine our surprise when we realized the simplicity of the truth. There is no spoon – or should I say, there really isn’t any UI spam. This system runs on a 1GHz processor which, if you’re used to a dual-core now that they’ve been out for a few months, might seem a little sluggish to you. However, because you’re on a nude version of Android, the sluggishness you’re feeling is only because you’ve been cruising so very hard with that next-gen device. In reality this little ditty is going just as fast as you please with basically any app or piece of media you please.

Again you’re not going to be beating all your friends like Simms22 at any benchmark battles, but you’re no small customer with this device either. Have a look at some general results we got with several updated tests:

Linpack Pro

Quadrant Advanced

SmartBench 2011

AnTuTu

Vellamo

Get a bit more information on Vellamo and why it’s awesome right here.

Camera

The back-facing camera is a VGA-grade photo and video camera, and isn’t worth using unless you’ve got some plans to enter into some video chat. Beyond that you’ll probably never use it ever. The back-facing camera is a 5-megapixel photo and 720p HD video shooter, and it’s pretty darn nice. Have a look at a couple examples shot out of a hospital window on a nice summer day this past week:

5-megapixel Photo

HD Video Example

Phone and Battery

Phone call quality is perfect, no complaints, Virgin Mobile doesn’t have the largest coverage area in the nation, even with their parent company’s coverage, but we’ve rarely gone to a place where service wasn’t still full bars – and it’s 3G for data incase you hadn’t guessed, again not the fastest, but still relatively nice. The battery has lasted approximately a day at a time from full charge to nothing with medium use, par for the course for all modern mid to top-tier handsets.

Carrier Coverage

You’re going to want to know all about what you’re getting into here for cash per month since Virgin Mobile has made this phone at least in a large bit all about the fact that you can purchase it off-contract. What does that mean for you when you’re purchasing data from Virgin Mobile by the month, month to month? Have a look at how you’ll be paying $55 for unlimited everything per month, but beware the data throttling starting in October – important only if you plan on using your data a LOT – or a medium amount, depending on the kind of person you plan on being.

Wrap-Up

This is an Android device for people who want to experience the very center of Android regularity, not the nicest in the world, nor the worst by any means, and with a no-contract deal, easy to abandon in favor of a different device should one want for a much more extravagant device. This handset is a really excellent path into Android for absolutely anyone, giving the user the full Android experience without breaking the bank or turning them away due to shotty cheap hardware. This is a device you’ll very possibly keep for several years before you upgrade, and more than likely you’ll still keep it around for some odd Android Wi-Fi-only activities after that – music, games, movies, and photos, anyone?

This device is extremely important for Virgin Mobile as it’s not just another trackphone that people will easily toss out when they don’t want to work with it anymore. Instead is a product that people will want to use and will want to continue to use paying for Virgin Mobile service as they do so. While devices like the LG Optimus V may linger, it’s this top-tier device at a mid-range price that’ll dominate Virgin Mobile’s sales ranks for Android in the near future.

13 COMMENTS

  1. First of all this Motorola Triumph is not all that is cracked up to be!!!!!!!!!!!  The volume is very low, I can barely hear the person I’m speaking with.  The bluetooth disconnects on it’s own and only re-connects when it’s ready.  There is a low signal strength.  My phone doesn’t have HDMI output!  Did I get the defective phone.

    • Every android generally has a pretty low battery life. With all the phones I’ve had, reducing the brightness extends this time a TON. There’s a quick-settings widget you can put on one of your home screens, so the brightness can be adjusted easily to your liking.

  2. The Motorola Triumph is a thing of beauty and comes closest to the handheld device I’ve been dreaming of. Ever since the days of the Palm T/X I’ve longed for a versatile PDA that could also make phone calls in a pinch. Using Wi-Fi to communicate makes so much more sense to me. Since then, I’ve watched communication devices increasingly become locked down money makers. (I get that you love your idroid, or whatever, but for me, I just don’t see the value of paying a hundred bucks a month for what I always had for practically free.)

    So for me, the biggest advantage of the Triumph is the very reasonable cost of ownership thanks to Virgin Mobile. VM has cut their service to the bone, but like other savvy tech providers, has set up a
    mechanized operation that works on its own. If you need help from Virgin, as a general rule for tech, stay away from the phone line and go to the forums, or use email. Virgin Mobile Facebook is all you need to get over the hump of confusion caused by new adoption.

    I have had no problems with the Triumph once I got dialed in. The signal matches my LG Optimus V and both data and calls are clear even indoors in my suburb digs. The Triumph has a larger screen, easier to use data entry, longer battery life, and a front facing camera for those “free” video chat calls. All of that makes it worth the initial cost to me. Once the setup (rather challenging at times) is over, it
    all works like a champ.

    Thanks to Motorola, Google, and Virgin, my dream of a handheld device that doesn’t make me feel like I’m being gouged by the big providers has been comfortably sublimated. Every time I pick up the
    Triumph, I feel like I’m sending another kind of message: a wake-up call to the big providers. Triumph indeed.

    *** P.S. If you will buy the Triumph I suggest you have to compare prices before you decide at: http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listing/B005DTSBEU?ie=UTF8&ref_=dp_olp_new&condition=new&ie=UTF8&tag=androidcommunity.com-offer-20&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=390957

  3. I love my motorola triumph. So fast running sweet cm7. Quadrants rate it
    to be one of the fastest phones on the market currently. Quadrant of
    3400 ! Yay.
    i am very fond of searching news update about motorla mobile.i would definitely say i am very fond of searching news update about motorla mobile.i would definitely say http://androidcommunity.com help me alot.i would like to share another big source of motorla mobile http://www.motoask.com

  4. Sending my 2nd one back. It can’t open large attachments so it’s useless to me. I’ll go back to my LG Rumor Touch, at least that always worked. 

  5. my ports for headphone and charging are of poor quality. charging it must be monitored because the cable is now loose with a bad connection and the headphone volume is nil

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