Home Kyocera Phones Kyocera 2325 Updated : Jan 15, 2010, 9:40 AM Kyocera 2325 Specs Description This CDMA phone features high-speed data transfers, GPS, speakerphone, voice dialing, voice commands and polyphonic ringtones. I want it 0 users I have it 0 users I had it 1 user Popular Comparisons The Kyocera 2325 is most commonly compared with these phones: Kyocera 2325 vs Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra Kyocera 2325 vs Google Pixel 8 Kyocera 2325 vs Samsung Galaxy S23 FE Kyocera 2325 vs Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra Kyocera 2325 vs Motorola Edge 40 Specs Compare Battery Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable Design Size comparison Dimensions: 4.72 x 1.89 x 0.95 inches (120 x 48 x 24 mm) Weight: 4.34 oz (123.0 g) Features: Numeric keypad Cellular AMPS: 800 MHz Connectivity & Features Location: GPS Other: Computer sync Phone features Notifications: Vibration, Speakerphone Other features: Voice dialing, Voice commands, Voice recording, TTY/TDD Regulatory Approval FCC approval: Date approved: Jun 24, 2002 FCC ID value: OVFKWC-2325 Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Kyocera 2325 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. Carrier Availability Discontinued Verizon Latest News The best Microsoft Surface Pro gets the best discount on Amazon At almost half off, this Beats Studio Pro Amazon deal is hard to beat The excellent Google Pixel 9 Pro with 512GB of storage is basically a must-get with this Amazon discount T-Mobile's spectrum deal improves the carrier's 5G Nationwide service in several markets Samsung’s cheapest 5G phone is now even cheaper on Amazon Samsung might have pushed back One UI 7 rollout in the US Popular stories T-Mobile extends another peace offering to customers after uproar over rate increase [UPDATED] Consumers already making AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon pay for price hikes It’s a difficult time to be a T-Mobile customer or employee AT&T rep crosses the line by doing something unimaginable using customer's phone Customer is mistakenly accused of text spamming for repeatedly replying STOP to political texts A Verizon customer stayed for 20 years, now they're rethinking everything