Nokia Wiki
Nokia 2600

Model Reference

Nokia 2600

2004 • - • 2G

Nokia 2600 matters as a Nokia feature phone in 2004 because it helps document what the brand was offering in that part of its lineup. On this site, the model is especially useful as a reference point for 820 mAh battery and 2G support.

Specifications

Release year2004
Typefeature_phone
Network2G
Display1.5" / 1.5 inches, 7.3 cm / 128 x 128 pixels, 1:1 ratio (~121 ppi density)
Battery820 mAh
MemoryRAM -, Storage 4 MB
Body94 g / 107 mm x 46 mm x 20 mm
Network technologyGSM
2G bandsGSM 900 / 1800
EDGENo
Announced2004, Q2
StatusDiscontinued
SIMMini-SIM
Card slotNo
Internal memory4MB
Main camera textNo
LoudspeakerYes
3.5mm jackNo
WLANWLANNo
BluetoothNo
GPSNo
RadioNo
SensorsV1
Battery typeRemovable Li-Ion 820 mAh battery (BR-5C)
ColorsIron blue, Tree green

Why This Model Matters

Nokia 2600 matters as a Nokia feature phone in 2004 because it helps document what the brand was offering in that part of its lineup. On this site, the model is especially useful as a reference point for 820 mAh battery and 2G support.

Descriptions

Nokia 2600 is a Nokia feature phone released in 2004. In this catalog, the model is most closely associated with 2G connectivity, 1.5" display, 820 mAh battery, and 4 MB storage.

Nokia 2600 fits into Nokia's lineup as a feature phone focused on everyday communication and practical hardware choices. Support for 2G helps place it within the network standards of its generation. Notable details include 94 g body weight, which helps explain how this device compared with nearby Nokia models in the same period.

For buyers or researchers comparing Nokia devices from 2004, Nokia 2600 is useful as a reference point for what a feature phone typically offered in that period. Key reference points include 4 MB of storage and 820 mAh battery capacity.

On this page, the specifications table and descriptive notes help place Nokia 2600 within the wider Nokia catalog. Details such as 1.5 inches, 7.3 cm and 107 x 46 x 20 mm and 94 g provide extra context for understanding the device's design priorities and day-to-day usability.